I disagree fundamentally with the premise of this article.
A decision on climate has to be made. Everyone knows it. Everyone has an incentive to avoid chaos. Therefore, people have a very large incentive to stick to a consensus process, because anyone who doesn't stick will instantly break that consensus and cause chaos - which is a guaranteed loser for all.
Same reason villagers don't burgle their neighbours when police are busy elsewhere dealing with a major incident.
A
Hey folks, the Washington Post just published an op ed on the messy politics of solar geoengineering, written by David Keith and me: http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/whats-the-right-temperature-for-the-earth/2015/01/29/b2dda53a-7c05-11e4-84d4-7c896b90abdc_story.html
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As argued in 1955:
"Present awful possibilities of nuclear warfare may give way to others even more
awful. After global climate control becomes possible, perhaps all our present
involvements will seem simple. We should not deceive ourselves:
once such possibilities become actual, they will be exploited."
-- John von Neumann, “Can We Survive Technology?” Fortune, June 1955, 106–108.

I generally believe that the concerns over potential conflict over solar climate engineering are often overblown. There will surely be disagreements among countries as to their desired temperatures. Yet often implied and sometimes explicitly stated in the CE discourse is that these disagreements would likely lead to armed conflict, and/or that they would render CE ineffective. Countries, including the powerful ones, routinely disagree over numerous things. My sense is that definitions and rules in the WTO and its agreements, for example, are much more consequential for them than CE would be. These conflicts are resolved through various sorts of bargaining. Perhaps I am excessively optimistic, but it seems that the nature of international conflict and resolution is fundamentally different (and more peaceful) than 100 years ago (to use Olaf’s WW1 example), particularly among the powerful countries. Solar CE has the advantage, like much of international trade, that the advantages of countries’ collective agreement would likely outweigh their potential, individual advantages of getting the climate which they desire. Disagreement could lead to various CE programs interfering with one another, and they would all be left worse off. That is, it is a resolvable collective action problem.
From my vantage, the biggest concern would be if there were a systematic disagreement on the type and intensity of solar CE among powerful countries versus weak ones. The Ricke et al paper (which I recommend) cited by Ken begins to get at the that, but it also assumes that all countries would desire pre-industrial climates. That may not be the case.
-Jesse
-----------------------------------------
Jesse L. Reynolds, PhD
Postdoctoral researcher
Research funding coordinator, sustainability and climate
European and International Public Law
Tilburg Sustainability Center
Tilburg University, The Netherlands
Book review editor, Law, Innovation, and Technology
email: J.L.Re...@uvt.nl
I think that the assumption of a return to pre industrial is outmoded as an intervention strategy. It's one I've heard much more from social scientists than physical scientists, who typically look to prevent or reduce future rises.
The only reason to return to pre industrial would be to reverse tipping point sea level rises, or others eg methane degassing from permafrost.
As to the issue of disagreement and conflict, I'm absolutely with Jesse in thinking this has been grossly overblown. I view this as a commonsense position, and one that's sadly lacking from the literature. I'd strongly encourage people to publish both discursive and modelling papers on the issue.
It's all too easy, apparently, for people to assume that consensus would be unusually hard to achieve - without offering any evidence for this position.
The world is not typically governed by force but by agreement.
A
I think that the assumption of a return to pre industrial is outmoded as an intervention strategy. It's one I've heard much more from social scientists than physical scientists, who typically look to prevent or reduce future rises.
The only reason to return to pre industrial would be to reverse tipping point sea level rises, or others eg methane degassing from permafrost.
As to the issue of disagreement and conflict, I'm absolutely with Jesse in thinking this has been grossly overblown. I view this as a commonsense position, and one that's sadly lacking from the literature. I'd strongly encourage people to publish both discursive and modelling papers on the issue.
It's all too easy, apparently, for people to assume that consensus would be unusually hard to achieve - without offering any evidence for this position.
The world is not typically governed by force but by agreement.
A
On 2 Feb 2015 11:24, "J.L. Reynolds" <J.L.Re...@uvt.nl> wrote:
I generally believe that the concerns over potential conflict over solar climate engineering are often overblown. There will surely be disagreements among countries as to their desired temperatures. Yet often implied and sometimes explicitly stated in the CE discourse is that these disagreements would likely lead to armed conflict, and/or that they would render CE ineffective. Countries, including the powerful ones, routinely disagree over numerous things. My sense is that definitions and rules in the WTO and its agreements, for example, are much more consequential for them than CE would be. These conflicts are resolved through various sorts of bargaining. Perhaps I am excessively optimistic, but it seems that the nature of international conflict and resolution is fundamentally different (and more peaceful) than 100 years ago (to use Olaf’s WW1 example), particularly among the powerful countries. Solar CE has the advantage, like much of international trade, that the advantages of countries’ collective agreement would likely outweigh their potential, individual advantages of getting the climate which they desire. Disagreement could lead to various CE programs interfering with one another, and they would all be left worse off. That is, it is a resolvable collective action problem.
From my vantage, the biggest concern would be if there were a systematic disagreement on the type and intensity of solar CE among powerful countries versus weak ones. The Ricke et al paper (which I recommend) cited by Ken begins to get at the that, but it also assumes that all countries would desire pre-industrial climates. That may not be the case.
-Jesse
-----------------------------------------
Jesse L. Reynolds, PhD
Postdoctoral researcher
Research funding coordinator, sustainability and climate
European and International Public Law
Tilburg Sustainability Center
Tilburg University, The Netherlands
Book review editor, Law, Innovation, and Technology
email: J.L.Re...@uvt.nl <mailto:J.L.Re...@uvt.nl>
http://works.bepress.com/jessreyn/ <http://works.bepress.com/jessreyn/>
From: geoengi...@googlegroups.com [mailto:geoengi...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Ken Caldeira
Sent: 31 January 2015 18:32
To: cushn...@gmail.com
Cc: Motoko; geoengineering
Subject: Re: [geo] Washington Post op ed
Kate Ricke's model results are often trotted out to support the 'winners and losers' meme, but if you look at her results the conflict is between people who win less and people who win more.
We did a follow-up study on political dynamics, using her results (see below).
A key point to recognize is that, under typical climate damage metrics, the optimal amount of solar geoengineering for any given region differs from the global optimum typically by about 10%. That is, people would be arguing about the second digit, not the first digit. I doubt these second digit arguments will lead to any great conflict.
The much greater conflict would likely to be whether to deploy a sulfate aerosol layer at all. If a consensus can be found to deploy, I doubt whether there will be that much conflict over subtle adjustments to the knob.
http://iopscience.iop.org/1748-9326/8/1/014021/article
Panel (a) shows on the vertical axis climate damage to different regions as a fraction of damages without solar geoengineering. The horizontal axis is th amount of solar geoengineering. Panels (b) and (c) show the optimum preferred by different regions. Note that they differ from the global optimum by only 10% or so.
_______________
Ken Caldeira
Carnegie Institution for Science
Dept of Global Ecology
260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
+1 650 704 7212 <tel:%2B1%20650%20704%207212> kcal...@carnegiescience.edu
http://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab
https://twitter.com/KenCaldeira
My assistant is Dawn Ross <dr...@carnegiescience.edu>, with access to incoming emails.
On Sat, Jan 31, 2015 at 7:54 AM, Cush Ngonzo Luwesi <cushn...@gmail.com> wrote:
I partly agree with Andy: Skepticism yes but realism is also needed. Alvin Toffler (1970) predicted the “future shock” that “change denial” will cause in the anthropocene. He used an analogy from the transmission of sound through electrical cables, which until 1875, was unconceivable by some while M. Bell was inventing the first telephone. Thence, he called for improved anticipation in governance to mitigate that future shock and ensure a smooth transition from hold practices to the new technological environment with the pace of social and technical change (Jasanoff, 2011; Stilgoe et al., 2013). Nonetheless, Toffler (1970) argued that not all technological and scientific discoveries would come out from the laboratories and take place nor would they see the light; some would just abort while others would vanish in the impasse, owing to their unfeasibility or fanciness or even disconnection to reality and disconcertion. This corroborate with the recent Royal Society’s Berlin Declaration 2014 on geoengineering.
Dr Cush Ngonzo Luwesi, PhD
Lecturer
Department of Geography
Kenyatta University
On Sat, Jan 31, 2015 at 3:24 PM, Motoko <moto...@googlemail.com> wrote:
Great reference. I want to add the following sentence of von Neumann: "All experience shows that even smaller technological changes than those now in the cards profoundly transform political and social relationships."
Von Neumann could be right in assuming that climate control will change a lot. It will change also the relationship of science and policy.
Am 30.01.2015 um 22:37 schrieb Jim Fleming:
As argued in 1955:
"Present awful possibilities of nuclear warfare may give way to others even more
awful. After global climate control becomes possible, perhaps all our present
involvements will seem simple. We should not deceive ourselves:
once such possibilities become actual, they will be exploited."
-- John von Neumann, “Can We Survive Technology?” Fortune, June 1955, 106–108.
James R. Fleming
Professor of Science, Technology, and Society, Colby College
Research Associate, Columbia University
Series Editor, Palgrave Studies in the History of Science and Technology, bit.ly/THQMcd <http://bit.ly/THQMcd>
Profile: http://www.colby.edu/directory/profile/jfleming/ <http://www.colby.edu/directory/profile/jfleming/>
On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 11:00 AM, Olaf Corry <toc...@gmail.com> wrote:
I agree with the basic idea that the politics of this will be likely to be very tricky (although - and partly for that reason - I
remain unconvinced by the other premise of the article that SPI has been overwhelmingly shown to have net life-saving potential).
Andrew, why the incredulity at a conflict scenario? The thing about international relations is that outcomes do not always reflect intentions or desired collective outcomes. History is full of consensus processes breaking down and collectively sub-optimal (to put it mildly) outcomes.
Presumably everybody had an incentive to avoid the chaos of WW1 and stick to a consensus process...
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(My highlights)
5) Also, the Harvard website "Equable Climate Dynamics-Polar Stratospheric Clouds" offers a well written oversight of PSC trapping polar heat and the reference section has a number of citations worth reading.
6) And again, we should pay close attention to the paper I originally sited for a view of the PSC dynamics within an ancient "greenhouse" world. Please pay close attention to the 'Discussion' section.
In brief summation, an intentional increase in stratospheric sulfuric acid, per SAI, will trigger a corresponding increase in the most common PSC type of formation (type 1) and thus this action would represent an intentional increase in polar temperatures. Thus, such intentional actions would constitute a knowable action resulting in the intentional acceleration of polar methane hydrate releases and the existential threat that such releases pose (i.e. Arctic Methane Tipping Point). Thus, the intentional injection of sulfuric acid into the atmosphere represents an real and significant threat to climate stability, as we know it, and will further accelerate the current trend towards an equitable (unstable) climate....intentionally.
Michael and Nathan – Many thanks for your thoughts on this!
To answer your question Nathan; yes, we need to explore this further. We have a new satellite remote sensing tool that appears to show the right conditions for “cirrus stripping” during polar winter, but these results are preliminary. Conditions for this technique could be better in the polar winter stratosphere; stay tuned…
David Mitchell
From: geoengi...@googlegroups.com [mailto:geoengi...@googlegroups.com]
On Behalf Of nathan currier
Sent: Wednesday, February 04, 2015 5:38 PM
To: Michael Hayes
Cc: Geoengineering FIPC; Oliver Morton; Andrew Revkin; John Latham; David Keith; arctic...@googlegroups.com; Dr. Adrian Tuck; Ken Caldeira; Andrew Lockley; Michael MacCracken
Subject: Re: [geo] Re: Washington Post op ed
By the way, as a follow up to that, has anyone proposed using this very same material as the source of an Arctic geoengineering idea - that is, has anyone proposed something like "cirrus stripping" but for polar stratospheric clouds instead, as a way of helping to cool the Arctic? Might there be a feasible way of doing this?
Cheers,
Nathan
On Wed, Feb 4, 2015 at 8:25 PM, nathan currier <natcu...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi, Michael & Adrian -
Thanks so much for all of this, which I personally think is very important material. I found the Sloan-Pollard paper fascinating, in spite of, and maybe partly also because of, the fact that it isn't a new paper, yet seems to inject a fresh and tantalizingly relevant paleoclimate perspective into this discussion of the role of Arctic stratospheric clouds in Arctic climate - and thus by inference how Arctic stratospheric sulfur injection could get entangled in all of that in a pretty nasty way.
Some months ago now, when Ken was asking about "bad memes of geoengineering", and I mentioned what I saw as the "Pinatubo meme" and the vague thoughts I had been having about stratospheric H2O, its role in warming, and various potential interconnections with both methane and sulfur, and thus more "hidden" positive forcings from it that went along with the often discussed and more obvious negative ones, I didn't imagine that what I was thinking of as the worst possible kinds of direct connections would be so likely as it seems from what you have just sent.
Right off the bat, one thing it suggests to me is that Arctic-only sulfur SRM in the stratosphere, which I too had thought was a good idea when I first had heard of it, might turn out to have been one of the worst geoengineering ideas proposed, potentially causing more harm than good. Add to that that Adrian had written then about how the lofting will work quite poorly in the Arctic, as discussed in his paper.
To be fair, it is still the net effect that matters, and when I first wrote about this to the group, I did my own little entirely unprofessional back-of-the- envelope calculation, in terms of global sulfur SRM issues and Pinatubo, using the Solomon et al paper on the contribution of stratospheric H2O to warming in the 90s, and hypothesized, based on some other papers describing how volcanic injection of H2O can play out in the stratosphere for ~5-10 years, a "what if" in which a large % of that 90s H2O perturbation had come directly from Pinatubo itself, how bad would that be for its overall forcing profile, and yet I found that even then (not so likely) it would it reduce the cooling efficacy by something like 50% I think it was, at most....and the amount of that positive forcing tied directly to the sulfur would be far smaller, too, since H2O is directly injected in the process.............
But in the Arctic-only stratospheric sulfur SRM case, on the other hand, it sounds as though there might be the potential for the whole idea to actually be close to being outright pernicious and entirely useless!.....very interesting......thanks again.....
Cheers,
Nathan
On Wed, Feb 4, 2015 at 5:52 PM, Michael Hayes <vogle...@gmail.com> wrote:
Oliver and List,
The primary cloud condensate nuclei for type one polar stratospheric clouds is sulfuric acid. This is a well known and established fact found in atmospheric physics.
Here I offer a few reference among the many available:
1) Theoretical and Modeling Studies of the Atmospheric Chemistry of Sulfur: Hazem S. El-Zanan
The relevance of the above book, to this topic, is found within the introduction.
1. Michael J. Mills1,
2. Owen B. Toon1and
3. Susan Solomon2
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A bit delayed in responding to this email, but Tom Wigley had a paper in Science (copy attached) basically indicating that one would have to go back to preindustrial CO2 to stop sea level rise. An interesting research question might be how long one would need to return to a much lower radiative forcing to get sea level rise stopped before conditions could return to something like the 350 ppm CO2 level, so about as warm as one can be without the ice sheets losing mass.
On this issue of “setting the thermostat,” global average temperature might well not be the most important metric to be using. Precipitation has been mentioned, but it might well be that the rate of sea level rise would in the end be seen as being of much more relevance—keeping a bit cooler only takes energy, relocating as a result of sea level rise is much more problematic (not just due to storm surge and inundation, but of salt water pressing into coastal aquifers, etc. And it might be much easier to get consensus on dealing with sea level rise than on a value for global average temperature.
Mike MacCracken
On 2/2/15, 6:59 AM, "Andrew Lockley" <andrew....@gmail.com> wrote:
I think that the assumption of a return to pre industrial is outmoded as an intervention strategy. It's one I've heard much more from social scientists than physical scientists, who typically look to prevent or reduce future rises.
The only reason to return to pre industrial would be to reverse tipping point sea level rises, or others eg methane degassing from permafrost.
As to the issue of disagreement and conflict, I'm absolutely with Jesse in thinking this has been grossly overblown. I view this as a commonsense position, and one that's sadly lacking from the literature. I'd strongly encourage people to publish both discursive and modelling papers on the issue.
It's all too easy, apparently, for people to assume that consensus would be unusually hard to achieve - without offering any evidence for this position.
The world is not typically governed by force but by agreement.
A
On 2 Feb 2015 11:24, "J.L. Reynolds" <J.L.Re...@uvt.nl> wrote:
I generally believe that the concerns over potential conflict over solar climate engineering are often overblown. There will surely be disagreements among countries as to their desired temperatures. Yet often implied and sometimes explicitly stated in the CE discourse is that these disagreements would likely lead to armed conflict, and/or that they would render CE ineffective. Countries, including the powerful ones, routinely disagree over numerous things. My sense is that definitions and rules in the WTO and its agreements, for example, are much more consequential for them than CE would be. These conflicts are resolved through various sorts of bargaining. Perhaps I am excessively optimistic, but it seems that the nature of international conflict and resolution is fundamentally different (and more peaceful) than 100 years ago (to use Olaf’s WW1 example), particularly among the powerful countries. Solar CE has the advantage, like much of international trade, that the advantages of countries’ collective agreement would likely outweigh their potential, individual advantages of getting the climate which they desire. Disagreement could lead to various CE programs interfering with one another, and they would all be left worse off. That is, it is a resolvable collective action problem.
From my vantage, the biggest concern would be if there were a systematic disagreement on the type and intensity of solar CE among powerful countries versus weak ones. The Ricke et al paper (which I recommend) cited by Ken begins to get at the that, but it also assumes that all countries would desire pre-industrial climates. That may not be the case.
-Jesse
-----------------------------------------
Jesse L. Reynolds, PhD
Postdoctoral researcher
Research funding coordinator, sustainability and climate
European and International Public Law
Tilburg Sustainability Center
Tilburg University, The Netherlands
Book review editor, Law, Innovation, and Technology
Hi Mike,
I wonder if you could explain a little more here on SLR as being a better metric to set than temperature, because it seems to me like there's a fundamental optimism behind saying this, and perhaps you can correct my overly pessimistic assumptions......
The way that I have begun to imagine it is that the recent Rignot et al study and other advances have started to make a picture where you have on-the-ground observations of the bottom-up ice sheet mechanics in real time - the grounding lines, retrograde beds, etc - and that this can be fit back in with all the more general global paleoclimatic evidence to create a pretty coherent view from which total 'sea level commitment' should be able to be estimated, even if the future rate still could not without reverting to ice sheet models, etc. Given that the Eemian level became 20-30 ft higher than current with CO2 never going much higher than the pre-industrial 280ppm, and that we have already reached a CO2 level and likely a net forcing that, if sustained, will lead to ~75-120ft higher than now, is there any real grounds for hoping that the total irreversible 'sea level commitment' is not already somewhere within 30-120 ft? Given that the signals making the +30ft of the Eemian (not even getting into the Holsteinian) were so mild, and now we've come along and put such a whopper of a signal into the system, even if we dial it back very quickly, let's say all the way back to 280, wouldn't it be hard to explain a scenario where at least that same +30 ft is not still going to come due now? If not, how could that be explained, since even the preindustrial level is nothing like that at which new ice sheets get formed? And after all, in the Rignot study, since Pine Island is so structurally vital to the WAIS, the now irreversible 4ft of rise that was mentioned everywhere when the study was published is clearly NOT the full commitment just from that area which we can see in a very granular and detailed way - and that's pretty much irrespective of global engineering of the surface temperature, too, it would seem. So, as thermostats go, it might be like telling people they can set their house between 40-55F - that is, just way far from any kind of comfort zone, even if, of course, 30 ft is still a lot better than 120.....
Now, I remember that you were once talking about some interesting measures, far less controversial than "real geoengineering", that might be helpful for SLR, like preventing icebergs from floating off from near outlets around Greenland.....I wonder whether any more work has been done on this, and whether such a technique might work well around the parts of WAIS recently recognized as being hopeless, where it is the salinity gradient driving the pumping of warmer waters down to the grounding line of the ice sheets, which you might be able to interrupt in this manner?
Cheers,
Nathan
On Tuesday, February 3, 2015 at 7:34:01 PM UTC-5, Mike MacCracken wrote:
A bit delayed in responding to this email, but Tom Wigley had a paper in Science (copy attached) basically indicating that one would have to go back to preindustrial CO2 to stop sea level rise. An interesting research question might be how long one would need to return to a much lower radiative forcing to get sea level rise stopped before conditions could return to something like the 350 ppm CO2 level, so about as warm as one can be without the ice sheets losing mass.
On this issue of “setting the thermostat,” global average temperature might well not be the most important metric to be using. Precipitation has been mentioned, but it might well be that the rate of sea level rise would in the end be seen as being of much more relevance—keeping a bit cooler only takes energy, relocating as a result of sea level rise is much more problematic (not just due to storm surge and inundation, but of salt water pressing into coastal aquifers, etc. And it might be much easier to get consensus on dealing with sea level rise than on a value for global average temperature.
Mike MacCracken
On 2/2/15, 6:59 AM, "Andrew Lockley" <andrew....@gmail.com <http://andrew....@gmail.com> > wrote:
I think that the assumption of a return to pre industrial is outmoded as an intervention strategy. It's one I've heard much more from social scientists than physical scientists, who typically look to prevent or reduce future rises.
The only reason to return to pre industrial would be to reverse tipping point sea level rises, or others eg methane degassing from permafrost.
As to the issue of disagreement and conflict, I'm absolutely with Jesse in thinking this has been grossly overblown. I view this as a commonsense position, and one that's sadly lacking from the literature. I'd strongly encourage people to publish both discursive and modelling papers on the issue.
It's all too easy, apparently, for people to assume that consensus would be unusually hard to achieve - without offering any evidence for this position.
The world is not typically governed by force but by agreement.
A
On 2 Feb 2015 11:24, "J.L. Reynolds" <J.L.Re...@uvt.nl <http://J.L.Re...@uvt.nl> > wrote:
I generally believe that the concerns over potential conflict over solar climate engineering are often overblown. There will surely be disagreements among countries as to their desired temperatures. Yet often implied and sometimes explicitly stated in the CE discourse is that these disagreements would likely lead to armed conflict, and/or that they would render CE ineffective. Countries, including the powerful ones, routinely disagree over numerous things. My sense is that definitions and rules in the WTO and its agreements, for example, are much more consequential for them than CE would be. These conflicts are resolved through various sorts of bargaining. Perhaps I am excessively optimistic, but it seems that the nature of international conflict and resolution is fundamentally different (and more peaceful) than 100 years ago (to use Olaf’s WW1 example), particularly among the powerful countries. Solar CE has the advantage, like much of international trade, that the advantages of countries’ collective agreement would likely outweigh their potential, individual advantages of getting the climate which they desire. Disagreement could lead to various CE programs interfering with one another, and they would all be left worse off. That is, it is a resolvable collective action problem.
From my vantage, the biggest concern would be if there were a systematic disagreement on the type and intensity of solar CE among powerful countries versus weak ones. The Ricke et al paper (which I recommend) cited by Ken begins to get at the that, but it also assumes that all countries would desire pre-industrial climates. That may not be the case.
-Jesse
-----------------------------------------
Jesse L. Reynolds, PhD
Postdoctoral researcher
Research funding coordinator, sustainability and climate
European and International Public Law
Tilburg Sustainability Center
Tilburg University, The Netherlands
Book review editor, Law, Innovation, and Technology
email: J.L.Re...@uvt.nl <http://J.L.Re...@uvt.nl> <mailto:J....@uvt.nl <javascript:> >
http://works.bepress.com/jessreyn/ <http://works.bepress.com/jessreyn/>
From: geoengi...@googlegroups.com <http://geoengi...@googlegroups.com> [mailto:geo...@googlegroups.com <javascript:> ] On Behalf Of Ken Caldeira
Sent: 31 January 2015 18:32
To: cushn...@gmail.com <http://cushn...@gmail.com>
Cc: Motoko; geoengineering
Subject: Re: [geo] Washington Post op ed
Kate Ricke's model results are often trotted out to support the 'winners and losers' meme, but if you look at her results the conflict is between people who win less and people who win more.
We did a follow-up study on political dynamics, using her results (see below).
A key point to recognize is that, under typical climate damage metrics, the optimal amount of solar geoengineering for any given region differs from the global optimum typically by about 10%. That is, people would be arguing about the second digit, not the first digit. I doubt these second digit arguments will lead to any great conflict.
The much greater conflict would likely to be whether to deploy a sulfate aerosol layer at all. If a consensus can be found to deploy, I doubt whether there will be that much conflict over subtle adjustments to the knob.
http://iopscience.iop.org/1748-9326/8/1/014021/article
Panel (a) shows on the vertical axis climate damage to different regions as a fraction of damages without solar geoengineering. The horizontal axis is th amount of solar geoengineering. Panels (b) and (c) show the optimum preferred by different regions. Note that they differ from the global optimum by only 10% or so.
_______________
Ken Caldeira
Carnegie Institution for Science
Dept of Global Ecology
260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
+1 650 704 7212 <tel:%2B1%20650%20704%207212> kcal...@carnegiescience.edu <http://kcal...@carnegiescience.edu>
http://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab
https://twitter.com/KenCaldeira
My assistant is Dawn Ross <dr...@carnegiescience.edu <http://dr...@carnegiescience.edu> >, with access to incoming emails.
On Sat, Jan 31, 2015 at 7:54 AM, Cush Ngonzo Luwesi <cushn...@gmail.com <http://cushn...@gmail.com> > wrote:
I partly agree with Andy: Skepticism yes but realism is also needed. Alvin Toffler (1970) predicted the “future shock” that “change denial” will cause in the anthropocene. He used an analogy from the transmission of sound through electrical cables, which until 1875, was unconceivable by some while M. Bell was inventing the first telephone. Thence, he called for improved anticipation in governance to mitigate that future shock and ensure a smooth transition from hold practices to the new technological environment with the pace of social and technical change (Jasanoff, 2011; Stilgoe et al., 2013). Nonetheless, Toffler (1970) argued that not all technological and scientific discoveries would come out from the laboratories and take place nor would they see the light; some would just abort while others would vanish in the impasse, owing to their unfeasibility or fanciness or even disconnection to reality and disconcertion. This corroborate with the recent Royal Society’s Berlin Declaration 2014 on geoengineering.
Dr Cush Ngonzo Luwesi, PhD
Lecturer
Department of Geography
Kenyatta University
On Sat, Jan 31, 2015 at 3:24 PM, Motoko <moto...@googlemail.com <http://moto...@googlemail.com> > wrote:
Great reference. I want to add the following sentence of von Neumann: "All experience shows that even smaller technological changes than those now in the cards profoundly transform political and social relationships."
Von Neumann could be right in assuming that climate control will change a lot. It will change also the relationship of science and policy.
Am 30.01.2015 um 22:37 schrieb Jim Fleming:
As argued in 1955:
"Present awful possibilities of nuclear warfare may give way to others even more
awful. After global climate control becomes possible, perhaps all our present
involvements will seem simple. We should not deceive ourselves:
once such possibilities become actual, they will be exploited."
-- John von Neumann, “Can We Survive Technology?” Fortune, June 1955, 106–108.
James R. Fleming
Professor of Science, Technology, and Society, Colby College
Research Associate, Columbia University
Series Editor, Palgrave Studies in the History of Science and Technology, bit.ly/THQMcd <http://bit.ly/THQMcd> <http://bit.ly/THQMcd>