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On Nov 2, 2023, at 8:31 AM, H simmens <hsim...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Nov 2, 2023, at 8:47 AM, H simmens <hsim...@gmail.com> wrote:
injection of massive amounts of sulphate aerosol into the stratosphere (euphamistically called "solar radiation management"). And this desparate action is motivated by what I consider to be a fallacy
7. Finally, I'm deeply troubled by this throwaway line in the paper:
Temporary solar radiation management (SRM) will probably be needed
This is policy advocacy, and misguided policy advocacy in my view.
But in terms of what we can expect in the decades ahead, there is no reason, based on the collective evidence from the paleoclimate record, to expect a climate trajectory substantially different from what current generation (i.e. IPCC) models predict. And there is no reason that we can't prevent dangerous levels of warming through concerted efforts to decarbonize the global economy. The obstacles, at least at present, are political, not physical or even technological.
I feel that this latest contribution from Jim and his co-authors is at best unconvincing. I don’t think they have made the case for their main claims, i.e. that warming is accelerating, that the planetary heat imbalance is increasing, that aerosols are playing some outsized role, or that climate models are getting all of this wrong. And I certainly don't think that they've made the case for engaging in potentially disastrous planetary-scale geoengineering projects.
On Nov 2, 2023, at 10:14 AM, H simmens <hsim...@gmail.com> wrote:
Here’s a response/rebuttal from Michael Mann to Hansen. The game is now on between the two most prominent US climate scientists. Let’s see if the mainstream media pick up on it
https://michaelmann.net/content/comments-new-article-james-hansenLet’s hope that Michael is correct with regard to the science and not Jim’s SRM advocacy which he labels a ‘gambit’.Herb
Herb Simmens
Author of A Climate Vocabulary of the Future“A SciencePoem and an Inspiration.” Kim Stanley Robinson
@herbsimmens
HerbSimmens.comOn Nov 2, 2023, at 8:47 AM, H simmens <hsim...@gmail.com> wrote:
The key language on cooling in the paper:Third, we must take action to reduce and reverse Earth’s energy imbalance. Highest priority is to phase down emissions, but it is no longer feasible to rapidly restore energy balance via only GHG emission reductions. Additional action is almost surely needed to prevent grievous escalation of climate impacts including lock-in of sea level rise that could destroy coastal cities world-wide. At least several years will be needed to define and gain acceptance of an approach for climate restoration. This effort should not deter action on mitigation of emissions; on the contrary, the concept of human intervention in climate is distasteful to many people, so support for GHG emission reductions will likely increase. Temporary solar radiation management (SRM) will probably be needed, e.g. via purposeful injection of atmospheric aerosols. Risks of such intervention must be defined, as well as risks of no intervention; thus, the U.S. National Academy of Sciences recommends research on SRM [212]. The Mt. Pinatubo eruption of 1991 is a natural experiment [213, 214] with a forcing that reached [30] –3 W/m2. Pinatubo deserves a coordinated study with current models. The most innocuous aerosols may be fine salty droplets extracted from the ocean and sprayed into the air by autonomous sailboats [215]. This approach has been discussed for potential use on a global scale [216], but it needs research into potential unintended effects [217].This decade may be our last chance to develop the knowledge, technical capability, and political will for actions needed to save global coastal regions from long-term inundation. (My bolding)Herb Simmens
Author of A Climate Vocabulary of the Future“A SciencePoem and an Inspiration.” Kim Stanley Robinson
@herbsimmens
HerbSimmens.comOn Nov 2, 2023, at 8:31 AM, H simmens <hsim...@gmail.com> wrote:
This appears to be the real thing. The long awaited paper by James Hansen and colleagues:
<m_kgad008f1.jpeg>
A description of the paper in Phys.org:
<climatechange.jpg>
Herb Simmens
Author of A Climate Vocabulary of the Future“A SciencePoem and an Inspiration.” Kim Stanley Robinson
@herbsimmens
HerbSimmens.com
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Game on! It'll be interesting to see how
Hansen responds, if indeed he does. For us lesser mortals, it
seems quite important that these titans sort this out because
such critical differences at this level can only undermine
policy progress in whatever direction it should be taken.
Robert
Here’s a response/rebuttal from Michael Mann to Hansen. The game is now on between the two most prominent US climate scientists. Let’s see if the mainstream media pick up on it

On Nov 2, 2023, at 11:34 AM, robert...@gmail.com wrote:

On Nov 2, 2023, at 11:47 AM, H simmens <hsim...@gmail.com> wrote:
The only direct interaction between Mann and Hansen I’ve been able to find is this brief exchange in July (Mann’s tweet is at the top)
Ahhhh... I am seeing something now that I have missed with the zero warming commitment hypothesis. Mann played his hand in his rebuttal to Hansen. This statement that once emissions cease, warming ceases, has always been incredulous based on the much larger body of findings from many different lines that have supported warming in the pipeline for a generation. This is what Mann says about the understanding of the zero commitment hypothesis, "This understanding goes back more than a decade... It is the basis of the concept of a “carbon budget”, including the widely-cited rule of thumb that we must reduce carbon emissions to zero by 2050 to avoid more than 1.5C warming." This conundrum of zero committed warming is scenario biased, of course... The scenarios tell us that if we hold to our carbon budget, we get no more warming than 1.5 C. Because we are so close to 1.5 C now, this means no more warming if we meet our carbon budget goals.
Mann has always been a creature of the scenario bias. This is why
he cannot conceive of restoration or direct cooling. This makes
perfect sense as so many others are afflicted with the inability
to conceive of solutions other than emissions eliminations and
further warming to 1.5 C -- these things are two of the basic
tenets of the scenario bias in climate science.
MeltOn
Here’s a response/rebuttal from Michael Mann to Hansen. The game is now on between the two most prominent US climate scientists. Let’s see if the mainstream media pick up on it
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There’s nothing incredulous about ZEC being plausibly near-zero; that’s a perfectly reasonable first-order guess.
People constantly confuse zero-emissions with constant-concentrations.
The latter of course has considerable warming in the pipeline. But just as the planet isn’t yet in thermal equilibrium with current forcing, the ocean CO2 isn’t yet in equilibrium with atmospheric CO2. And both of those are driven in part by the long time-scales of ocean mixing. So zero emissions means atmospheric CO2 goes down, with a reasonable guess that that might be roughly fast enough to balance the committed warming, with emphasis on words like “guess” and “roughly”.
And, at least in models, the ZEC isn’t strongly scenario dependent (that is, not strongly dependent on how much you emit before you get to zero or how fast); it’s a statement about physics.
What Mann gets completely wrong is any grasp of the concept of uncertainty. ZEC might be near zero, but it might not be… the other factor required for it to be near zero is for the warming from methane to roughly balance the cooling from tropospheric aerosols, but that second is highly uncertain, and my rough understanding of Jim Hansen is that he estimates a much larger masking of warming by aerosols, which would imply that ZEC may not be small.
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Mann might be out of his mind to quote the toy model output from
the 2018 special report 15 as his first major point. I hope he
simply never looked into that model and had no hand in making
those graphs. I hope he is simply being busy and overwhelm to
have a moment to think for himself.
I did an analysis and critique of
that toy model and "data massaging" to get the <1.5C
output by 1) choosing the wrong input (low end of distribution)
for the magnitude aerosol forcing and 2) shifting of baselines.
Time mark 10:00-10:40
Ye
Here’s a response/rebuttal from Michael Mann to Hansen. The game is now on between the two most prominent US climate scientists. Let’s see if the mainstream media pick up on it
--
This post by Mann demonstrates that he lacks an understanding of time-dependent dynamics: things like impulse and step response function. Or maybe he does, but is playing into the general ignorance of the public regarding such things.
Not sure which one is worse and what that says about how we
choose academic leaders.
Ye
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Hansen et al’s long awaited paper Warming in the Pipeline was finally published on 2 November after several revisions following its prepublication appearance towards the end of last year. This allowed Professor Michael Mann to get his rebuttal in a day early. With Hansen challenging the ‘orthodox mainstream’ view that rapid cuts in carbon emissions are no longer a sufficient policy response, with Mann claiming they are, the stage is now set for a mighty battle between these two titans of the science of climate change. I am a mere spectator in this. I’m not qualified to be in the ring, but I am qualified to judge the fight.
Mann’s rebuttal wins him few points in this opening round. Rather than critique Hansen et al’s work, he sets out his own opinions and supports them with many references (of varying quality) to what he refers to as the orthodox and mainstream position and several straw man arguments. This amounts to little more than a claim that his facts are bigger and better than Hansen’s. Much like an old fashioned pissing contest. This is a level of argumentation that does no justice to the gravity of the issues at stake. Until their differences are resolved, policymakers will understandably sit on their hands genuinely not knowing what to do in the best interests of humanity and the rest of life with whom we share this planet. It is critical that that resolution be achieved without undue delay because if Hansen is right, it will be vital to lose as little time as possible in coming to terms with the policy implications.
Hansen et al’s paper, like most such academic works, consists of an argument in the form of a series of premises linked together by logical reasoning to reach a set of conclusions. To rebut the argument and demonstrate that the conclusions are unsound, it is necessary to show either (or both) that one or more of the premises is untrue, or the reasoning is invalid. Mann does neither.
Restating his own argument, however well referenced, is not a rebuttal of Hansen’s because it does not allow for the possibility that there are problems with the premises and reasoning of his own case. He ignores the possibility of systemic bias and groupthink that often characterises such orthodox and mainstream positions before they crumble in the wake of paradigm shifts. The history of knowledge is replete with such instances. Indeed, were that not so, we’d still be living in caves.
Two critical factors that will need addressing are risk and uncertainty both of which contribute to our sense of urgency. Both Mann and Hansen agree that rapid deep cuts in emissions are essential and not yet happening at anything like the necessary pace. But what Mann does not make clear is the nature and extent of the risk of that continuing not to happen at sufficient pace, and how that impacts urgency. If the risks of under-reacting are not too great, then we have the luxury of waiting to see how things unfold. However, if the risks of under-reacting are severe, even existential, there is considerable urgency, and prudence dictates that we should overreact. A proper risk analysis of our situation and options is essential if policymakers are to act in our best interests.
It is to be hoped that either directly or through their champions and proxies, Mann and Hansen will sort this out in the very near future so that the rest of us know what best to do.
In the following paragraphs I give a brief
review of Mann’s
rebuttal in terms of the quality of his argumentation. This is not about which of
Hansen and Mann has
a better grasp of the climate science, but solely whether Mann’s
rebuttal of
Hansen’s position is presented in a convincing manner. I hope that Prof Mann will read
this and take
the opportunity to produce a more robust critique of Warming
in the Pipeline
that in turn will provoke a resolution of these two currently
conflicting
positions. It is vital
that these issues
are resolved at the earliest opportunity.
Mann gives seven ways in which he considers Hansen et al to have failed by ‘a longshot’ to have met the necessary standards to challenge ‘the prevailing scientific understanding’. Let’s have a quick look at Mann’s arguments.
1. No warming is in the pipeline – Mann argues that the zero emissions commitment (ZEC) clearly shows that on achieving net zero emissions, surface temperatures stop rising. He therefore claims that there would be no warming in the pipeline once we get to net zero. Whatever one’s view of ZEC being at or close to 0oC, Hansen et al do not discuss it other than briefly to dismiss net zero as likely to be achieved any time soon. It seems perverse to criticise their paper on these grounds since they are clear that their case is built on constant atmospheric GHG concentrations. As Mann acknowledges, in that scenario there would be considerable warming in the pipeline. A more coherent criticism might have been to argue for the unsoundness of the premises that net zero emissions would not be achieved sufficiently soon or that atmospheric concentrations would not remain at their current level. Mann doesn’t do that. This is a straw man argument.
2. EEI is not increasing – Mann refutes Hansen et al’s claim by citing a competing source of which he was a co-author. He does not explain what is wrong with the sources on which Hansen et al base their claim that EEI has doubled since 2000, one of which is titled ‘Satellite and ocean data reveal marked increase in Earth’s heating rate’. There is no examination of why his source is better than Hansen’s.
3. Surface warming is not accelerating – Mann goes to great lengths to show that there is no evidence of surface warming accelerating due to the recent changes in aerosol emissions. This rebuttal was unnecessary because Hansen et al did not claim that there had been. They explicitly refer to ‘predicted’ warming as being an inevitable consequence of these aerosol changes. Another straw man argument from Mann.
4. IPCC models not under-predicting human caused warming – here Mann’s refutation implies that Hansen et al wrongly claim that that models have under-predicted the warming. Again, they make no such claim about past warming. Their claim in this regard concerns future warming, which self-evidently is not yet evident. Another straw man argument from Mann.
5. No evidence that recent reductions in ship aerosol emissions ‘have played any substantial role at all in recent warming trends’ – Mann cites two sources to support his rebuttal of Hansen et al’s predictions in this regard. Mann’s first authority is a paper published in 2009, before the recent changes in shipping emissions. His second authority is a 2023 Tweet from Hausfather that just refers back to the same 2009 paper. It is difficult to see how research undertaken before the aerosol emissions were reduced could show evidence of what had not yet happened. Mann needs to provide a more convincing rebuttal than this.
6. Paleoclimate records have climate sensitivity about right – Mann supports his rebuttal of Hansen et al’s interpretation of paleoclimate evidence in assessing equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS) by citing his own non-peer reviewed article in New Scientist. He then asserts that ‘there is no reason, based on the collective evidence from the paleoclimate record, to expect a climate trajectory substantially different from what current generation (i.e. IPCC) models predict’. If there is one thing that Hansen et al do do, it is to explore in considerable detail the implications of new evidence from the paleo record. Mann makes no attempt to engage with this material, seemingly summarily dismissing it as valueless. This is not a worthy response from someone of Mann’s standing..
7. Solar radiation management is potentially dangerous and a need for it is ‘motivated by what [Mann] consider[s] to be a fallacy, advanced by the article, that large-scale warming will be substantially greater than current-generation models project’. Mann’s views here reflect the difference at the heart of this debate, namely, how much risk is associated with the predictions of those models. Risk is generally understood to be the product of the probability of a peril occurring and the costs (monetary and otherwise) arising from that peril. For Mann’s critique to have any purchase, he needs to flesh out the detail in this regard. This will require a broadly based investigation of the various possible perils from different plausible climate change scenarios and their cost. Mann has to do more than just assert his own opinion on these questions.
I close with a comment on Peter Eisenberger’s contribution below in which he says:
We certainly are facing a great threat but there is no science basis for arguing that [emissions reductions and removals alone (ERA)] are not adequate.
We all need to ponder the full implications of this statement. First we must note that there being no science basis to argue that emissions reductions and removals alone are not adequate is the complement of there being no science basis that they are. If you don’t know it’s inadequate, you can’t know that it's adequate . Conversely, if you know it’s adequate, then you also know it’s not inadequate. The sum of the probabilities of it being one or the other will always be 1 – it is logically certain that ERA will be either adequate or not. Peter’s statement can thus be rewritten as:
We certainly are facing a great threat but there is no science basis for arguing that [emissions reductions and removals alone] are adequate.
Given Peter’s claim that we don’t have a science basis for arguing that ERA is adequate, should we not be looking for something else to create a portfolio of responses that in aggregate would have a science basis to support their adequacy?
There are many good reasons, from basic physics
to the
analogue of volcanic eruptions, to know with certainty that there
are ways to directly cool the climate to reduce the risk of
excessive global warming. The
issue is whether this can be done in
ways that reduce that risk while not creating unacceptable risks
elsewhere. The question
that Prof Mann and Peter might
want to reflect on is, given that we don’t know whether ERA is
sufficient, and
moreover, that there are some good reasons to believe that it
might be
insufficient, albeit that these reasons might not be conclusive,
why would we
not want to begin the process in earnest of developing and
deploying direct climate cooling in a controlled and responsible
manner such that it can
be terminated if it emerges that its beneficial potential cannot
be realised
without overwhelming offsetting negative effects? How does that
make scientific sense?
Robert Chris
Most importantly we are in fact all on the same team and we all agree time is running out.
Mann and Hansen are each acting in the best tradition of scientific disagreement.From my perspective they both seem to fail to take CDR into account into their scenarioseven though the majority of the scientific community including the IPCC has acknowledged it needs tobe part of the solution. Net emissions -amount removed from the atmosphere minus the amount emittedis the critical variable and this is critical because the poor on this planet need to have their basic needs met. Zero emissions means to them a reduced rate of eliminating poverty . One is left to speculate whether the people focussed on eliminating fossil fuels is a result of their long and important battle with the energy industry in the past. The energy industry has recognized climate change and they are acting to address it which was not the case even five years ago. They still remain critical to economic prosperity in the global south. In my opinion it is time to move on beyond demonizing the energy industry. To be clear I greatly respect the efforts of Mann and Hansen both scientifically and because being a whistle blower is never easy - in fact it is always hard and gets personal.
My concern about the response of the SAI community is that it does seem to depend on arguing we are facing a doomsday futureand the inadequacy of alternative paths. We certainly are facing a great threat but there is no science basis for arguing that the alternative paths are not adequate. At its core it depends on creating fear about the future. We know the fight or flight response to fear and that fear has caused many conflicts. I am certainly not suggesting that advocates for SAI do not believe what they are saying.
My view for what it is worth is that we all have to come together in the spirit of Manns response to JIm and togetherdetermine the best path forward based on the knowledge we have. We need to make the hard choices about the best path forward. We need to agree to focus our talents and energy on the path selected. In this sense the real limitation is not what distortions the external world has that prevents acting but it us for our failure to make the hard choices and provide them to the decision makers.Let me end as I b egan -Most importantly we are in fact all on the same team and we all agree time is running out. .Peter
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On 11/3/23 4:17 PM, Robert Chris wrote:
given that we don’t know whether ERA is sufficient, and moreover, that there are some good reasons to believe that it might be insufficient....
This precisely pinpoints the main flaw I found in the Mann rebuttal. He opened and closed by restating, without support (even from IPCC), that ERA will be sufficient and therefore no CDR or SRM should be necessary.
But see:
Randers, Jorgen, and Ulrich Goluke. "An earth system model shows self-sustained thawing of permafrost even if all man-made GHG emissions stop in 2020." Scientific Reports 10.1 (2020): 18456.
(appended)
According to Randers and Goluke, we need at least 33 GtCO2e CDR per year. "In other words, building 33,000 big CCS plants and keep them running forever."
We should also be thinking about slowing permafrost melt.
See also:
Lenton, T. M., Rockström, J., Gaffney, O., Rahmstorf, S., Richardson, K., Steffen, W., & Schellnhuber, H. J. (2019). Climate tipping points—too risky to bet against. Nature, 575(7784), 592-595.
-Albert Bates
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Hi Peter,
Thank you for trying to create consensus, in spite of the the
disagreement resulting from a key visible person, for one reason
or another, deciding to sacrifice logic and reason for ideology
and abhorrence for the fossil fuel industry.
On a side note about you statement that: "We certainly are facing a great threat but there is no science basis for arguing that the alternative paths are not adequate." Whether or not your statement holds depends on how one defines "adequate". Let us define "adequate" =: avoiding global average temperatures surpassing 2C by2060. For this definition, we have ample scientific and engineering knowledge to definitively show that 1) 100% rebuildable energies, 2) a global campaign for one trillion trees, 3) a global wartime mobilization towards direct air capture of CO2, and 4) ocean based carbon capture schemes, are NOT "adequate" either in isolation or in any linear combination constrained by global available resources and energy flux.
Ye
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Michael Mann’s rebuttal (see below) to Hansen’s contention that “surface warming is currently accelerating” is simply based on his (Mann’s) (1) definition of over what time period “currently accelerating” is most important (2) definition of what “statistically-supportable evidence” means, and (3) which dataset is used for the analysis. I analyzed the data that Mann said he used (https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/monitoring/climate-at-a-glance/global/time-series/globe/land_ocean/ann/12/1880-2023 - see actual data below), using Excel’s “Slope function” to determine the slope of the temperature change between two specific years. I found the following:
Data set | Start Year | Middle Year | End Year | Slope from Start Year to Middle Year | Slope from Middle Year to End Year | Change in Slope | Change/ decade | Percent Change |
NOAA | 1970 | 2008 | 2022 | 0.0171 | 0.0283 | 0.0112 | 0.112 | 66 |
NOAA | 1970 | 2010 | 2022 | 0.0172 | 0.0261 | 0.0089 | 0.089 | 52 |
NOAA | 1970 | 2012 | 2022 | 0.0167 | 0.0242 | 0.0075 | 0.075 | 45 |
NOAA | 1993 | 2008 | 2022 | 0.0218 | 0.0283 | 0.0065 | 0.065 | 30 |
Mann's | 1993 | 2008 | 2022 | 0.0230 | 0.0280 | 0.0050 | 0.050 | 22 |
I reached the following conclusions:
1. The decadal average temperature increase from the period 1970 to 2022 changed significantly around 2010 (from around 0.17°C to about 0.26°C per decade) and was most significant (a 66% increase) if 2008 is used as the “inflection point”
2. The decadal average temperature increase from the period 1993-2008 to the period 2008-2022 was about 0.065°C/decade, an increase of about 30%
I compared the data that Mann recommended to his chart and found serious discrepancies
The NOAA data shows a larger increase than Mann found (0.0065 vs 0.0050)
Even the change that Mann reported (0.0230 to 0.0280) looks significant to me – why does Mann conclude that it is not?
The NOAA data shows that the surface warming has increased by about 30% in the past few decades (from 0.218°C/decade for 1993-2008 to 0.283°C/decade for 2008-2022) –How does he conclude that the warming rate has been remarkably constant for the past few decades? What does Mann mean by “remarkably constant”?
3. We know that the decadal average temperature increase has risen significantly since the period 1970 to 2010 (likely by 50-60%). Given the unprecedented temperature increase this year, I would think that discussing whether not the temperature increase is currently accelerating is a distraction from a much more important discussion - what is the current rate of warming and when will the temperature increase likely reach 1.5°C.
Bruce Parker
==========================================================================================================================
NOAS temperature data
1993 | 1994 | 1995 | 1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 |
0.27 | 0.32 | 0.48 | 0.35 | 0.5 | 0.63 | 0.42 | 0.43 | 0.55 | 0.62 | 0.63 | 0.55 | 0.7 | 0.66 | 0.66 | 0.55 | 0.66 | 0.73 | 0.63 | 0.66 | 0.68 | 0.77 | 0.91 | 1.03 | 0.95 | 0.86 | 0.98 | 1.01 | 0.86 | 0.91 |
==========================================================================================================================
Michael Mann’s rebuttal:
3. There is, furthermore, no statistical support for the climate that surface warming is currently accelerating. It is certainly true that the rate has increased since the 1970s, but that's related to changes in aerosol forcing at that time that are not relevant to the warming of the past few decades. Over the past few decades, there is no statistically-supportable evidence of an increase in the rate of surface warming. Surface warming has continued at a remarkably constant rate for the past few decades, as I recently showed in this thread on twitter (see plot below). The warming of the planet (and all of the worsening impacts associated with it including extreme weather events and intensified hurricanes) will continue until we bring carbon emissions to zero. The truth, once again, is bad enough.
Mann’s “tread on twitter” responds to an opinion piece by Zeke Hausfather in the New York Times which argues for an acceleration of recent surface warming: https://nytimes.com/2023/10/13/opinion/climate-change-excessive-heat-2023.html . Mann starts off by CONFIRMING the recent acceleration (Mann used the data at https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/monitoring/climate-at-a-glance/global/time-series/globe/land_ocean/ann/12/1880-2023 )
I not only reproduced Zeke's result, but found an even bigger effect, with the trend from 2008-2023 a whopping 70% greater than the trend from 1970-2008 (the difference in trend is statistically significant at the p=0.01 i.e. 99% level)
Mann continued:
In fact, why not compare trend over must recent 15 year period with the preceding 15 year period? That's what I did here. In this case, the increase in warming rate is only 28% (and the difference in trend is not statistically significant)
Surely if there is truly acceleration of warming in recent decades, it shouldn't only be evidence over the past 9 months. So I repeated the preceding analysis, but I eliminated the year 2023 data from the regression analysis
And this is what I now get. The rate for the recent period ~20% larger than that for prior period & the difference in trend is statistically insignificant. In other words, there's no statistical support here for the claim of a recent acceleration in the rate of global warming
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"This post by Mann demonstrates that he lacks an understanding of time-dependent dynamics: things like impulse and step response function. Or maybe he does, but is playing into the general ignorance of the public regarding such things.
Not sure which one is worse and what that says about how we
choose academic leaders"
Talk about moral hazard !!
I was going to quote Robert (Tulip) though now can't find his comment regarding how the US media would be covering Dr Hansen's paper (and the disagreement between him and Micheal Mann) and I just wanted to
say that I STILL haven't had the time or taken the time) to read the paper . With a google search I see it's thankfully being covered by A LOT of print media. Id+'d also like to see it covered by MSNBC (who
CONSTANTLY has Micheal Mann on the show and CNN to cover it (especially since so many Americns don't actually read news) I suggest that some of you who have read it get in touch with MSNBC and/or
specifically Chris Hayes (who we could ask to interview him !!) and CNN and ask them to please fing cover thi s !! I can do so but, as I said, I haven;t read the paper yet
It's good to see you participating here Dr Hansen. . Are you now a member of one of these groups and/or should I add your name to emails?
Regards, Dana
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On Nov 3, 2023, at 7:28 PM, James Hansen <jimeh...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Peter,I'm not leaving CDR out, I'm just pointing out that it's cost is still high. Keep up your efforts to bring the cost down and it may play a significant role. It will all come out in the wash, if and when we get a rising price on carbon. Without that, CDR, at least direct air capture, will continue to be a rather small contributor in the big picture.Best, Jim
On Fri, Nov 3, 2023 at 3:12 AM Peter Eisenberger <peter.ei...@gmail.com> wrote:
Most importantly we are in fact all on the same team and we all agree time is running out.Mann and Hansen are each acting in the best tradition of scientific disagreement.From my perspective they both seem to fail to take CDR into account into their scenarioseven though the majority of the scientific community including the IPCC has acknowledged it needs tobe part of the solution. Net emissions -amount removed from the atmosphere minus the amount emittedis the critical variable and this is critical because the poor on this planet need to have their basic needs met. Zero emissions means to them a reduced rate of eliminating poverty . One is left to speculate whether the people focussed on eliminating fossil fuels is a result of their long and important battle with the energy industry in the past. The energy industry has recognized climate change and they are acting to address it which was not the case even five years ago. They still remain critical to economic prosperity in the global south. In my opinion it is time to move on beyond demonizing the energy industry. To be clear I greatly respect the efforts of Mann and Hansen both scientifically and because being a whistle blower is never easy - in fact it is always hard and gets personal.My concern about the response of the SAI community is that it does seem to depend on arguing we are facing a doomsday futureand the inadequacy of alternative paths. We certainly are facing a great threat but there is no science basis for arguing that the alternative paths are not adequate. At its core it depends on creating fear about the future. We know the fight or flight response to fear and that fear has caused many conflicts. I am certainly not suggesting that advocates for SAI do not believe what they are saying.My view for what it is worth is that we all have to come together in the spirit of Manns response to JIm and togetherdetermine the best path forward based on the knowledge we have. We need to make the hard choices about the best path forward. We need to agree to focus our talents and energy on the path selected. In this sense the real limitation is not what distortions the external world has that prevents acting but it us for our failure to make the hard choices and provide them to the decision makers.Let me end as I b egan -Most importantly we are in fact all on the same team and we all agree time is running out. .Peter
On Thu, Nov 2, 2023 at 2:33 PM Ye Tao <t...@rowland.harvard.edu> wrote:
This post by Mann demonstrates that he lacks an understanding of time-dependent dynamics: things like impulse and step response function. Or maybe he does, but is playing into the general ignorance of the public regarding such things.
Not sure which one is worse and what that says about how we choose academic leaders.
Ye
On 11/2/2023 11:46 AM, H simmens wrote:
The only direct interaction between Mann and Hansen I’ve been able to find is this brief exchange in July (Mann’s tweet is at the top)
<image.png>
<m_kgad008f1.jpeg>
A description of the paper in Phys.org:
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On Nov 4, 2023, at 12:08 AM, Douglas Grandt <answer...@mac.com> wrote:
Jim,Glad to hear “1.5 is deader than a door nail” officially this morning!Pursuant to my 1/17/2023 email re: [CDR] Excess warming linked to reduced sulphur emissions from ships, please comment whether or not the trajectory of the dark brown curve [$] reflects Pipeline’s 50% greater rate of temperature rise if we adjust it from 0.36°C/decade (double the recent rate suggested in your newsletter a year ago) to 0.27°C/decade [^] and resize the rectangular “slope” box accordingly.Such adjustment would shift the dark brown curve down to approximately coincide with the light brown curve.Presumably the light brown curve would also shift downward a bit.The overall message of this diagram is that cooling and drawdown are both required, with the expectation that cooling and refreezing the Arctic is a logical starting point.Best,Doug Grandt
On 04/11/2023 05:29 GMT Dan Miller <d...@rodagroup.com> wrote:Hi Robert:I’ll weigh in here. I agree with your analysis showing that Mann did not provide a cogent rebuttal to Hansen’s paper.A few other points:1. First, I summarized Hansen’s paper “for the masses” in a tweet that some might find useful:2. Mann implies we can stay at 1.5ºC by reaching net zero by 2050! This is absurd. We are 1.5ºC (or very close) *this year* and will likely be at 1.6/1.7ºC next year. As Hansen points out, if we do hit that next year and El Niño going away drops temps by 0.2~0.3ºC, then we are effectively at 1.5ºC trend “for all practical purposes” next year! To claim we can stay within 1.5ºC by reaching net zero in 2050 makes me believe, as others have said, that Mann is smoking “hopium”. I believe this alone disqualifies Mann’s rebuttal.Mann: "It is the basis of the concept of a “carbon budget” (i.e. the notion that there is a specified amount of cumulative carbon emissions up to a given point in time that keeps warming below a specified level), including the widely-cited rule of thumb that we must reduce carbon emissions to zero by 2050 to avoid more than 1.5C warming."3. Note that "Net Zero by 2050" is as much of a scenario as "holding GHG concentrations constant" is.4. Hansen et al is saying that aerosol cooling is more than the IPCC says and GHG warming is also more. That’s why the Hansen and IPCC model net temps are about the same. But if Hansen is right (and I think he is), then there will be more warming when we eliminate aerosols (as part of going to Net Zero) and there will be more warming from the remaining GHGs than is assumed in Mann's ZEC scenario. Therefore, ZEC won’t result in temps that stop rising, though they will stop rising at some level above the temp we are at when zero emissions are achieved (assuming tipping points haven’t kicked in by then!). Another factor that may play out at ZEC is that the EEI is high, Hansen says. So at ZEC, the EEI (warming in the pipeline) is supposed to be canceled out by lowering CO2 levels caused by the oceans continuing to take up CO2 after emission stop. But if EEI is higher than assumed when those ZEC studies were done, then they might not exactly cancel and temps will be higher.5. Mann implies that we can stay below 2ºC and that would be OK. As Hansen has pointed out in his Young Peoples paper, 1.5 or 2ºC is dangerous if we stay above those levels too long:Hansen: "These considerations raise the question of whether 2 ◦C, or even 1.5 ◦C, is an appropriate target to protect the well-being of young people and future generations. Indeed, Hansen et al. (2008) concluded that “if humanity wishes to preserve a planet similar to that on which civilization developed and to which life on Earth is adapted, . . . CO2 will need to be re- duced . . . to at most 350 ppm, but likely less than that”, and further “if the present overshoot of the target CO2 is not brief, there is a possibility of seeding irreversible catastrophic effects.
A danger of 1.5 or 2 ◦C targets is that they are far above the Holocene temperature range. If such temperature levels are allowed to long exist they will spur “slow” amplifying feed- backs (Hansen et al., 2013b; Rohling et al., 2013; Masson- Delmotte et al., 2013), which have potential to run out of hu- manity’s control. The most threatening slow feedback likely is ice sheet melt and consequent significant sea level rise, as occurred in the Eemian, but there are other risks in pushing the climate system far out of its Holocene range. Methane release from thawing permafrost and methane hydrates is an- other potential feedback, for example, but the magnitude and timescale of this is unclear (O’Connor et al., 2010; Quiquet et al., 2015)."
6. On top of other risks that Mann ignores, we now know from Hansen and Danish researchers, that an AMOC collapse is expected around mid-century. This is the mother of all near-term tipping points. Since it is caused by fresh water inflow into the North Atlantic from a melting Greenland, it is clear that ERA will not stop a collapse. If we are lucky, Sunlight Reflection Methods (SRM) may prevent it.7. Regarding who we should believe:Imagine you are about to put your children on an airplane. But Mechanic Hansen says there is a problem with the engines & Mechanic Mann says everything is fine. Do you allow your children to take the flight?
Why do we treat the Earth, with all our children on it, differently?
Dan
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Mann: "It is the basis of the concept of a “carbon budget” (i.e. the notion that there is a specified amount of cumulative carbon emissions up to a given point in time that keeps warming below a specified level), including the widely-cited rule of thumb that we must reduce carbon emissions to zero by 2050 to avoid more than 1.5C warming."
Hansen: "These considerations raise the question of whether 2 ◦C, or even 1.5 ◦C, is an appropriate target to protect the well-being of young people and future generations. Indeed, Hansen et al. (2008) concluded that “if humanity wishes to preserve a planet similar to that on which civilization developed and to which life on Earth is adapted, . . . CO2 will need to be re- duced . . . to at most 350 ppm, but likely less than that”, and further “if the present overshoot of the target CO2 is not brief, there is a possibility of seeding irreversible catastrophic effects.
A danger of 1.5 or 2 ◦C targets is that they are far above the Holocene temperature range. If such temperature levels are allowed to long exist they will spur “slow” amplifying feed- backs (Hansen et al., 2013b; Rohling et al., 2013; Masson- Delmotte et al., 2013), which have potential to run out of hu- manity’s control. The most threatening slow feedback likely is ice sheet melt and consequent significant sea level rise, as occurred in the Eemian, but there are other risks in pushing the climate system far out of its Holocene range. Methane release from thawing permafrost and methane hydrates is an- other potential feedback, for example, but the magnitude and timescale of this is unclear (O’Connor et al., 2010; Quiquet et al., 2015)."
Imagine you are about to put your children on an airplane. But Mechanic Hansen says there is a problem with the engines & Mechanic Mann says everything is fine. Do you allow your children to take the flight?
Why do we treat the Earth, with all our children on it, differently?
Lord Rayleigh is supposed to have said that if he ever did an experiment that required statistics to interpret the result he would throw away the data.
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The quote is from Rutherford, but Rayleigh said it more pithily!
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Does anyone remember the exact quote and the famous physicist (it was not Einstein) who said, about a century ago:
"If you need statistics, you should have done a better experiment."
That is generally attributed to Arthur Eddington, who also said,
"Shuffling is the only thing which Nature cannot undo."
Hi Doug and all - Great show at HPAC Doug, thank you.
Incredulous - I referred to as; relative to the much larger body
warming in the pipeline work dating to way back.
~ ~ ~
Near 90 this week in Austin. In SW Austin we had 7 to 8 inches of rain in October, versus an inch and a half total back to July through August. The 7 to 8 inches in October is more than double our normal for October of 3.88, which is not a rare departure though uncommon. The summer total July through September is about 7 inches so our departure was quite rare. Austin's precip has increased 16 percent in the last 30 years, contrary to increased duration and intensity of drought including a new Drought of Record 2011 -2013.
Steep trails,
B
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Peter E and all,
On justice, equity and further warming... Thanks for
bringing this up Peter E. There is a mistaken philosophy that
further warming to 1.5 C reduces climate change-caused injustice
and inequity. Austin adopted what their Climate Program labelled a
Climate Equity Plan in 2020. I was one of 120 volunteers who
helped the Climate Program put together this 5-year revision to
Austin's first climate plan. It is a 1.5 C, net zero 2040 plan
with 30 percent offsets and about 6 percent of net zero needs met
by natural systems. It also conflates 1.5 C with net zero, and
offers no path to 1.5 C, only a path to net zero that includes
those 30 percent offsets because there is no other path to reach
net zero otherwise. Like all large efforts like this it was a
compromise between many shared thoughts and that 1.5 C was the
standard, and restoration was being done by nobody and could not
be considered.
The team realized that inequity and injustice were already bad
from warming, and nowhere in the Plan suggested that they will
become not just more extreme, but nonlinearly more extreme with
further warming because they are tied directly to effects that
increase nonlinearly with warming.
This is one of the pivotal arguments we should be making to
progressives or anyone who value such things. Further warming to
the accepted 1.5 C target increases injustice and inequity
nonlinearly above today's already strong levels, and requiring the
elimination by the poor and underprivileged of the simplest, most
portable and most widespread energy source ever, is grossly unjust
and inequitable via the simple concept of "we got ours, but you
can't have yours."
Steep trails,
B
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Jim and all,
There are already more than 200, 1 million plus ton per year
units committed because of the enhancements to IRS45Q in the IRA.
There is no cap on the new cash payment of $180/ton, and most of
the units committed are direct sequestration not enhanced oil
recovery. Because the three main processes being utilized
(lime-potash, amines and cryoseparation), are all 100-year old and
widely adopted in industry, and their components even more widely
adopted, and there is no cap on pay; widespread scaling will be
rapid and robust because literally trillions in revenue are on the
line.
The cost today of Kieth's lime-potash process is quite likely
below $50 a ton because his $100 a ton minimum was actually $94 a
ton with $0.03 kWh natural gas. Using renewable utility scale
energy for half the 87 percent of total costs that are energy
related, drops the price to the $50/ton range, today, with no
further process refinements or scaling from Kieth's 2018, 1
million ton per year suggestion based on scaling their
demonstration at Squamish using off the shelf components with
known scaling factors.
Below my signature is a collection of CDR commitments based on
IRS45Q.
Steep trails,
Bruce
Ongoing Industrialization of Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR), Direct Air Capture (DAC) and Sequestration ... Industrialize
Industry seems to think there is money here, lots of it. Industrialization is moving forward fast indicating that these processes are revenue generating programs.
Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) Processes - New or Mature? ... We have been using industrial processes to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere since 1907 when the recyclable lime/potash process was developed and widely used in World War II to remove CO2 from submarines to keep sailors safe from carbon dioxide poisoning, since the 1930s with cryogenic distillation, and also since the 1930s with amine chemicals (ammonia–based) where amines are now one of the most important chemicals in industry.
October 21, 2023 – National Academies, Carbon Utilization Infrastructure, Markets, Research and Development… "Carbon materials pervade many aspects of modern life, from fuels and building materials to consumer goods and commodity chemicals. Reaching net-zero emissions will require replacing existing fossil-carbon-based systems with circular-carbon economies that transform wastes like CO2 into useful materials. As requested in the Energy Act of 2020, this study will explore regional and national market opportunities as well as infrastructure and research needs to help decisionmakers better understand how carbon utilization can contribute to the nation's decarbonization effort."
Input
Requested -
https://mailchi.mp/nas/open-sessions-carbon-dioxide-utilization-markets-infrastructure-research-and-development?e=ea90c6bd4e
National Academies - Carbon Utilization Infrastructure,
Markets, Research and
Development
https://www.nationalacademies.org/our-work/carbon-utilization-infrastructure-markets-research-and-development?utm_source=NASEM+News+and+Publications&utm_campaign=1859c5e164-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2023_10_20_03_03&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_-1859c5e164-%5BLIST_EMAIL_ID%5D&mc_cid=1859c5e164&mc_eid=ea90c6bd4e
April 20, 2023 - Frontier Air Capture… Commitments
top
$1B with four new members: Autodesk, H&M Group, JPMorgan
Chase, and Workday.
Since April 2022, Frontier has facilitated purchases from 15
carbon removal
startups.
https://frontierclimate.com/writing/new-members?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email
December 3, 2022, NGK CO2 air capture – 1) Ceramic substrate and
2)
Freezing with Natural Gas excess cold from compressor
stations… 1) Ceramic substrate
like automobile catalytic
converters, unspecified capture agent, normal liberation
heating, 2) and cold
from natural gas compression to "liquefied" before
transmissionto
freeze the CO2 out of the ab-adsorbant.
Shimizu, New technology to capture CO2 from air set for Japan
trials, Nikkei
Financial,November 28, 2022.
https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Environment/Climate-Change/New-technology-to-capture-CO2-from-air-set-for-Japan-trials
November 26, 2022, One Million Tons Per Year "Hub" in
Louisiana by 2030... "Direct air capture (DAC)
company
Climeworks and Louisiana-based Gulf Coast Sequestration (GCS)
signed a
memorandum of understanding on Nov. 21 to develop the first DAC
hub on the Gulf
Coast in Louisiana. The project aims to enable the permanent
removal of one
million tons of CO2 from the atmosphere by the end of the
decade, with the
potential to expand to multi-million-ton capacity in future
years."
Doneva, Climeworks And Gulf Coast Sequestration Partner To
Launch Direct Air
Capture Hub On The Gulf Coast In Louisiana, Carbon Herald,
November 22, 2022.
https://carbonherald.com/climeworks-and-gulf-coast-sequestration-partner-to-launch-direct-air-capture-hub-on-the-gulf-coast-in-louisiana/
November 20, 2022, $882 million in carbon capture funding, 2nd
quarter 2022…
https://www.protocol.com/bulletins/carbon-capture-venture-capital-investment
September 8, 2022 - Project Bison, Wyoming, 5 million tons per
year by
2030, a Direct Air Capture (DAC) project of Frontier Carbon
Solutions and
CarbonCapture, Inc. … "A Los Angeles-based company kicked off on Thursday what it said
will be the first large-scale direct air capture (DAC) project
to capture and
store 5 million tons of carbon dioxide per year by 2030,
benefiting from new
U.S. government incentives." Stripe, Alphabet, Shopify, Meta,
McKinsey
CarbonCapture Inc.
Announces Five
Megaton Direct Air Capture and Storage Project in Wyoming…
https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220908005446/en/CarbonCapture-Inc.-Announces-Five-Megaton-Direct-Air-Capture-and-Storage-Project-in-Wyoming
CarbonCapture, Inc,
modular… "A
generalized DAC platform for solid sorbents that allows for
incremental
upgrades, minimizes obsolescence, and speeds up development
cycles."
Sorbents include amines, MOFs (metal-organic framework),
zeolites and more.
https://www.carboncapture.com/
EXCLUSIVE New law helps
U.S. firm launch
Wyoming direct air carbon capture project…
https://www.reuters.com/markets/carbon/exclusive-new-law-helps-us-firm-launch-wyoming-direct-air-carbon-capture-project-2022-09-08/
CarbonClean…
CycloneCC
– worlds smallest carbon capture tech…
https://www.carbonclean.com/industrial-carbon-capture-technology?hsCtaTracking=4d330ef7-b427-4507-ba9c-5ce011059864%7C2a75a2d9-05f6-49ca-bd6f-a63edf949004
Ebook…
https://www.carbonclean.com/industrial-carbon-capture-technology?hsCtaTracking=4d330ef7-b427-4507-ba9c-5ce011059864%7C2a75a2d9-05f6-49ca-bd6f-a63edf949004
Carbon Xprize … 1133 teams
https://illuminem.com/energyvoices/b02e09de-a3ad-41dd-8811-0bf7c7cc36cb
Carbon Engineering – Oxy, 1PointeFive
September 13, 2023 –
Amazon buys 250,000
tons CO2 capture from Oxy… Over the next ten years
Dramne, Houston Chronicle, Direct air delivery: Amazon buys
into Oxy’s big
West Texas carbon capture hub, By Amanda Drane STAFF
WRITERSeptember 13, 2023.
https://digital.olivesoftware.com/olive/odn/houstonchronicle/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=HHC%2F2023%2F09%2F13&entity=Ar02602&sk=F88217EE&mode=text#
August 15, 2023 – Oxy
contracts with Carbon
Engineering to build 100 air capture units… "U.S. oil and
gas producer
Occidental Petroleum (OXY.N) on Tuesday agreed to pay $1.1
billion for
technology supplier Carbon Engineering Ltd to help it develop a
string of
carbon-capture sites it hopes will profit from tackling climate
change. The
U.S. oil producer aims to build about 100 plants using direct
air capture (DAC)
technology that strips carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere
to bury
underground or for use in making products such as concrete and
aviation
fuel."
https://www.reuters.com/markets/deals/occidental-petroleum-buy-carbon-engineering-11-bln-2023-08-15/
May 6, 2023 - Occidental
Begins Work On The
World’s Largest Direct Air Capture Plant
Violet George, Carbon Herald… $1 billion, 500 million ton
facility 20 miles
south of Notrees, Texas.
bonherald.com/occidental-begins-work-worlds-largest-direct-air-capture-plant/
April
28,
2023 - Stratus in the Permian Broke Ground
https://www.newswest9.com/article/news/local/oxy-groundbreaking-carbon-capture-plant/513-3251a044-624a-40aa-888e-fa5ebb0b533b
March
2,
2023, 1PointFive Oxy Carbon Capture and Sequestration Hub in
Southeast Texas… The 55,000-acre site has resource
potential
to store approximately 1.2 billion metric tons of carbon
dioxide… The
Bluebonnet Hub is located in Chambers, Liberty and Jefferson
counties near
expected to be operational in 2026, will provide for CO2
captured off-site to
be securely stored in saline formations that are not
associated with oil and
gas production.
1PointFive Announces Plan to Develop a Carbon Capture and
Sequestration Hub in
Southeast Texas, NASDAQ, March 2, 2023.
https://www.nasdaq.com/press-release/1pointfive-announces-plan-to-develop-a-carbon-capture-and-sequestration-hub-in
November
9,
2022, 20% increase in first plant cost due to inflation,
number of proposed
plants up from 70 to 100 because of IRA… "Government incentives and passage of the Inflation
Reduction
Act allow it to plan 100 DAC facilities by 2035, from 70
before, Hollub said.
Land for half of them has been secured."
Valle and Soni, Occidental's project to capture CO2 takes a
hit from inflation,
Rueters, November 9, 2022.
https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/occidental-raises-costs-direct-air-capture-project-due-inflation-2022-11-09/
October
31,
2022, 1PointFive, 30 million tons per year, no EOR, 20
percent improvement in
capture efficiency …
Carbon
Engineering begins work on supporting multi-million tonne
Direct Air Capture
facilities in Kleberg County, Texas (King Ranch). The site is
expected to
provide access for the potential construction of multiple DAC
facilities that
would be capable of collectively removing up to 30 million
tonnes of carbon
dioxide from the atmosphere annually for dedicated
sequestration.
Carbon Engineering Press Release - https://carbonengineering.com/news-updates/multi-million-tonne-south-texas/
August
25,
2022 Occidental, OnePointFive, Carbon Engineering, Permian
Basin – Construction update, PH1 500,000
tons/yr
https://carbonengineering.com/news-updates/construction-direct-air-capture-texas/
06/07/22
Occidental 1PointeFive…
An oil-company spinoff wants to help build 70 direct air
capture plants by 2035
https://www.fastcompany.com/90758711/an-oil-company-spinoff-wants-to-help-build-70-direct-air-capture-plants-by-2035?partner=rss&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_source=rss
DAC1,
IEA on
Carbon Engineering , Oxy and The Permian facility… "In Q1 2021, OLCV awarded the Front
End
Engineering and Design (FEED) phase to global professional
services provider
Worley. The FEED phase of DAC 1 is focused on a first capture
train with a
planned capture capacity of 0.5 MtCO2/year; the total capacity
of the project
will subsequently increase to 1.0 MtCO2/year. The project is
supported by a
multi-million dollar investment from United Airlines, and,
upon approvals, two
key policies: California’s Low Carbon Fuel Standard and the
United States’ 45Q
tax credit."
https://www.iea.org/reports/ccus-around-the-world/dac-1
1PointFive...
https://www.1pointfive.com/
July
12,
2022, Drax, North Yorkshire UK $2 billion British pounds for
8 million tons per
year through BECCS (forest pellets)…
First unit
operational in 2024. "The company plans to invest £2bn in the
2020s in its
plans to develop two bioenergy with carbon capture and storage
(BECCS) units."
https://www.drax.com/press_release/drax-submits-plans-to-build-worlds-largest-carbon-capture-and-storage-project/
September
21, 2022, Drax commits to 12 million tons Co2 per year…
"Drax aims to deliver 12 million metric tonnes of
carbon dioxide
removals per year using BECCS by 2030 and this deal will
relate to the CDRs produced
from Drax’s North American BECCS facilities."
https://www.drax.com/press_release/worlds-biggest-carbon-removals-deal-announced-at-new-york-climate-week/
May
10,
2022, Bayou Bend Project - Talos, Carbonvert Bring Chevron
Aboard to Propel
CCUS Project Offshore Texas…
225-275 million metric tons of carbon
dioxide
from the shallow waters near Beaumont and Port Arthur.
https://www.naturalgasintel.com/talos-carbonvert-bring-chevron-aboard-to-propel-ccus-project-offshore-texas/
March
23,
2022 - Occidental and Carbon Engineering in the Permian… good
new numbers and 70 Air capture hubs, three operational by
2025.
https://www.spglobal.com/marketintelligence/en/news-insights/latest-news-headlines/occidental-to-spend-5-of-2022-capital-on-permian-carbon-removal-plant-69498606
Occidental
Chemicals and Carbon, MIT -
Temple, Why the world’s
biggest
CO2-sucking plant would be used to … err, dig up more oil? And
how it might
even be a good thing. MIT Technology Review, May 27, 2019
https://www.technologyreview.com/s/613579/why-the-worlds-biggest-cosub2-sub-sucking-plant-would-be-used-to-err-dig-up-more-oil/
Oxy
Net-Zero
Goal, December 3, 2020 -
https://digital.olivesoftware.com/olive/ODN/HoustonChronicle/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=HHC%2F2020%2F12%2F03&entity=Ar01500&sk=EFF8B3CA&mode=text#=undefined
July
25,
2022 –Air Products Cryodistillation Facility -- Announces
Additional
"Third by ‘30" CO2 Emissions Reduction Goal, Commitment to
Net Zero
by 2050, and Increase in New Capital for Energy Transition
to $15 Billion… Air products claims they will be the
world's
largest when completed. $15 billion total investment 2022
includes 30 percent
reduction in scope 3 emissions by 2030, in addition to Scope1
and 2 reductions.
https://www.airproducts.com/news-center/2022/07/0725-air-products-announces-additional-sustainability-commitments
October
14, 2021
– Air Products, 5 Million tons per year… Louisiana: $4.5 Billion, 5 million tons per year, online
in 2026
from Blue Hydrogen reformation out of natural gas. - https://www.airproducts.com/news-center/2022/07/0725-air-products-announces-additional-sustainability-commitments
https://www.airproducts.com/campaigns/la-blue-hydrogen-project
HOUSTON, Feb. 22, 2021
/PRNewswire/
-- 1PointFive announced today its selection of Worley for the
Front End
Engineering and Design (FEED) phase of its first direct air
capture (DAC)
facility in the U.S. Permian Basin—DAC 1.
https://www.prnewswire.com/in/news-releases/1pointfive-selects-worley-for-feed-on-milestone-direct-air-capture-facility-837514192.html
Carbon
Engineering Funders, March 21, 2019 – Occidental
Chemicals, Bill Gates, Murray Edwards, BHP, Chevron Technology
Ventures, Oxy
Low Carbon Ventures, LLC, Bethel Lands Corporation Ltd, Carbon
Order, First
Round Capital, Lowercase Capital, Rusheen Capital Management,
LLC, Starlight
Ventures, Thomvest Asset Management and others.
https://www.globenewswire.com/en/news-release/2019/03/21/1758562/0/en/Carbon-Engineering-concludes-USD-68-million-private-investment-round-and-proceeds-with-commercialization-of-carbon-dioxide-removal-technology.html#:~:text=CE's%20investors%20now%20include%3A%20Bill,an%20affiliate%20of%20Peter%20J.
Carbon
Engineering and Storegga, (June 23, 2021) 500,000 to
1,000,000 tons per year in
Scotland, operational in 2026…
https://carbonengineering.com/news-updates/uks-first-large-scale-dac-facility/
Exxon Mobile and Global
Thermostat, September 21, 2020
-
"Expanded their joint development agreement following 12
months of
technical evaluation… Global Thermostat's 'breakthrough
technology' using
amines… ExxonMobil has more than 30 years of experience in CCS
technology and
was the first company to capture more than 120 million tonnes
of CO2… $3
billion to advance plans for over 20 new CCS opportunities:
U.S. Gulf Coast,
Wyoming, Netherlands, Belgium, Scotland, Singapore, Qatar ."
Press Release - https://corporate.exxonmobil.com/News/Newsroom/News-releases/2020/0921_ExxonMobil-expands-agreement-with-Global-Thermostat-re-direct-air-capture-technology
MIT Technology Review, June 28, 2019 - https://www.technologyreview.com/f/613901/another-major-oil-company-tiptoes-into-the-carbon-removal-space/
May
30, 2023 - Sumitomo Corporation
invests in Direct Air Capture technology pioneer Global
Thermostat…
https://www.sumitomocorp.com › topics › group
With
our multi-patented portfolio of solutions for capturing and
removing CO2
directly from the atmosphere, Global Thermostat is working to help ...
https://www.sumitomocorp.com/en/easia/news/topics/2023/group/20230530
April 4, 2023 - Global
Thermostat unveils
one of the world's largest units for removing carbon dioxide
directly from air…
NEWS PROVIDED BY - Global Thermostat
COMMERCE CITY, Colo., April 4, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Global
Thermostat, a
pioneer of carbon removal technology to address climate change,
today unveiled
one of the largest Direct Air Capture machines ever operated.
The unit has been
capturing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere since the end of
2022 with a
capacity of over 1,000 tons a year, the threshold to qualify for
a tax credit
under the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act, and is the first of many
planned.
https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/global-thermostat-unveils-one-of-the-worlds-largest-units-for-removing-carbon-dioxide-directly-from-air-301789992.html
Amazon
665,000 tons Co2 comitted from IPointFive (Oxy), Heirloom nad Carbon Capture Inc.
$2
billion Climate Pledge
https://www.aboutamazon.com/planet/climate-pledge
Carbon
Capture, Inc. - 100,000 tons
September 12, 2023 - Amazon supports the world’s largest
deployment of direct
air capture technology to remove carbon from the atmosphere,
September 12, 2013 - Amazon supports the world’s largest deployment of direct air capture technology to remove carbon from the atmosphere, Amazon Staff
Heirloom
September 10, 2023 - Microsoft buys 350,000 tons CO2 over ten years…
King,
Microsoft signs industry impacting Heirloom CO2 removal deal,
Sustainability,
September 10, 2023.
https://sustainabilitymag.com/articles/microsoft-signs-industry-impacting-heirloom-co2-removal-deal
University
of Arizona (Klaus Lackner) and Silicon Kingdom Holdings (SKH) April 29, 2019 -https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-climatechange-carboncapture/do-mechanical-trees-offer-the-cure-for-climate-change-idUSKCN1S52CG
University
of Arizona (Klaus Lackner) Carbon Collect (formerly Silocn
Kingdom) April 15,
2022 - April 15, 2022 - Carbon
Collect’s MechanicalTree, based on the research of ASU
engineer Klaus Lackner,
will collect carbon from the atmosphere and help fight climate
change - First
'MechanicalTree' installed on ASU’s Tempe campus.
https://news.asu.edu/20220415-solutions-first-mechanicaltree-installed-asu-carbon-collect-tempe
Carbon Collect - https://mechanicaltrees.com/
Blue
Planet
and Mitsubishi
September 23, 2020 - Mitsubishi is
working to develop
technology for locking CO2 in concrete as part of a separate
project with
Japanese construction group Kajima and Hiroshima-based utility
Chugoku Electric
Power
https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Environment/US-startup-s-carbon-capture-concrete-wins-Mitsubishi-s-backing
Blue Planet and Chevron
Houston, Texas, January 14, 2021 — Chevron Corporation (NYSE:
CVX) today
announced a Series C investment in San Jose-based Blue Planet
Systems
Corporation (“Blue Planet”), a startup that manufactures and
develops carbonate
aggregates and carbon capture technology intended to reduce
the carbon
intensity of industrial operations.
https://www.chevron.com/stories/chevron-invests-in-carbon-capture-and-utilization-startup
ExxonMobil,
February 1, 2021… $3
Billion,
mostly on 20 direct air capture projects. "ExxonMobil has more
than 30
years of experience in CCS technology and was the first
company to capture more
than 120 million tonnes of CO2, which is equivalent to the
emissions of more
than 25 million cars for one year. The company has an equity
share in about
one-fifth of global CO2 capture capacity and has captured
approximately 40
percent of all the captured anthropogenic CO2 in the world."
https://corporate.exxonmobil.com/News/Newsroom/News-releases/2021/0201_ExxonMobil-Low-Carbon-Solutions-to-commercialize-emission-reduction-technology
Exxon
Labarge, Wyoming, expands
to 8 million
tons per year from 6 to 7 million tons, May 5, 2022…
ExxonMobil to Expand
Carbon
Capture and Storage at LaBarge, Wyoming, Facility
https://www.yahoo.com/now/exxonmobil-expand-carbon-capture-storage-135000912.html
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Peter--I'm rather astounded at your paragraph:
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Hi Peter--I think I'd say that, now 30+ years since the UNFCCC and with emissions still going up, it is time to admit that the present set of approaches has failed (or is at least sure to fail given how long it will take to get emissions to zero, or near there). What we ask of others is how long it will take for others to admit this--how much more damage and irreversible change must the world go through until it is agreed that mitigation alone is not occurring anywhere near fast enough to ensure a safe climate. While we are all for CDR, in the interim until it can take over, SAI can prevent rates of damage going even higher (and maybe lower them a bit) while mitigation and CDR are built up to get things under control so that SAI can be phased out.
Best, Mike
Dear MikeWe do not disagree about the severity of the threat we are facing which your and others efforts have tried to getthe world to acknowledge. We also agree at the failure and even resistance of policy makers and governments to acknowledgehow serious it is . We agree this is the first milestone we all should work on together because time is our enemy -. In fact i have been arguing that all climate warriors should put aside their differences of how to address the climate threat and even exactly how bad it s and work together to get it acknowledged how serious the threat is and how inadequate our response currently is.
Where we seem to disagree is on what to do to meet the threat. Here I have my view and others have different viewsMy solution is to have a process like the manhattan project where different technical solutions are proposedand debated and a consensus is reached because inaction is not an option. Once the path i chosen we should like the people in Ukraine stop if needed to do what we were doing and contribute our expertise to plan chosen. We need a coherent effort if we are going to have a chance .
My main point about SAI is that getting to a global consensus on it is even more difficult than getting global mobilization
for climate. I want to be clear that I believe that research should be carried out on SAI but not based on that other approachescannot work but instead base it upon understanding better all the consequences of increasing the particles in the air or reflectors etc . Since SAI can be implemented (scaled rapidly ) that research could lead to its use later if indeed we fail to address the climate challenge rather than just dealing with its symptoms. Also as noted above by putting our solutions first we all aremaking it more difficult to have the world recognize the dire situation we are in. Without that all we are doing is rearranging the deck chairs on the titanic . WE NEED TO COOPERATE AND GLOBALLY MOBILIZE NOW !With regardsPeter
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I apologize to most people on these lists who have already
received, multiple times, these slides demonstrating the energy
infeasibility of DAC (by 2 orders of magnitude).
Ye
Exponential increases in high-temperature extremes in North America
Scientific Reports volume 13, Article number: 19177 (2023) Cite this article
Abstract
Global warming in the 21st century will alter the frequency of extreme climatic events, such as high-temperature anomalies and “heat waves”. Observations of extreme high temperatures during recent decades have detected upward trends in their frequency of occurrence, and recent state-of-the-art Global Climate Models (GCMs), e.g., Climate Model Intercomparison Projects (CMIPs), notably CMIP5 and CMIP6, have predicted acceleration of temperature trends and high-temperature events by 2100 under projected greenhouse-gas emission scenarios. Hence, the 21st century is expected to experience substantial shifts in the occurrence of extreme events, where present-day, extreme-but-rare high-temperature events will become common during the summer months. The increasing frequency of extreme heat may affect the health and resiliency of social, biological, and infrastructure systems in many regions worldwide, underscoring the need for accurate and reliable long-term assessments of climatic change across global and regional scales. So far, many investigations of high-temperature extremes have been carried out under end-point scenarios, e.g., by comparing GCM-projected changes in the frequency of high-temperature extremes expected in the late 21st century to the late 20th century. In this study, we use extreme value theory and decades of observations of high-temperature extremes at thousands of meteorological stations across North America to investigate continuous shifts in the frequency of extreme high-temperature events due to projected local warming trends. We find that the odds of exceedance of 50-year extreme high-temperature events increases exponentially with increases in mean local temperature. At a majority of the stations studied here, a local mean temperature increase of 0.5–1 ∘C can double the odds of exceedance of 50-year extreme high-temperature events. Based on time-dependent temperature projections, the odds of exceedance of 50-year extreme high-temperature events doubles approximately every 20 years (or sooner) for ∼ 96% of the stations. Moreover, we find that, for ∼ 80% of the stations in North America, investigated here, the 50-year extreme high-temperature events will be exceeded annually before 2100.
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