CarnegieGlobEcology just uploaded a video:
The Great Climate Experiment: How far can we push the planet? Ken Caldeira [Scientific American]
Ken Caldeira discussing his article in the August 2012 issue of Scientific American.
The article is titled "The Great Climate Experiment. How far can we push the planet?" It extends from page 78 to page 83.
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So then the question comes to us, well, is this going to be a catastrophe or is this just something we’re going to deal with? And I think we can say with a pretty high degree of certainty that it’s going to be catastrophic for at least some ecosystems. I think the clearest is probably coral reefs are severely challenged by both ocean acidification and global warming. Arctic ecosystems are probably in big trouble, and it might also be places like rainforests and so on might also be in big trouble.
Now, what about humans? I think there’s a few things. One is that, obviously, if you’re a poor subsistence community depending on coral reefs, you’re probably in trouble. Maybe also if you’re a similar subsistence society depending on growing food in a place where you’re going to have big droughts that you’re also going to be in trouble. But it might be that for the middle classes of the industrialized world that climate change is really a secondary issue, and that they’ll still have their TV sets and their McBurgers and McNuggets to eat and that life will go on.
That said, we don’t really know that that’s true. If we look at the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis, there you had perturbations in some financial markets that led to a 5% loss in GDP throughout the world. And so our economic system can take some regional perturbation to amplify it into a global crisis. Also, these days, you have countries where you have nuclear arm nations, and if they feel they have an existential threat, there’s potential for war and so on.
So one issue is, since most catastrophic effects of climate change are likely to show up regionally, in some sort of regional drought or storms or floods or something else like that, are these social and political systems going to amplify these regional crises and form a global crisis out of it? And I think we don’t really know the answers to these questions. We know that our continued emissions of CO2 is increasing our levels of environmental risk, but it’s really hard to quantify exactly how much risk we’re facing.
--To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msg/geoengineering/-/WNHPgLBYuz8J.
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Ken
I remain concerned that the risk of ocean anoxia is missing from your video.
Anoxia appears to me to be the most likely 'unsurvivable ' climate change risk. Consequently, it is to my mind perhaps the best example of the central argument for geoengineering - existential threat (particularly if the PT extinction is anything to go by) .
Perhaps you could set out why you chose not to include it?
Thanks
A
If we are concerned mostly about anoxia caused by global warming,based on the review of Keeling et al (2010) attached, we can expect a 4% (+/- 3 %) decline in the ocean oxygen inventory over the next century. This is certainly important and should be studied more carefully, but I do not think it represents an existential threat for humans although it may be an existential threat for some marine species and is likely to exacerbate environmental problems in some regions.
For example, anoxia is certainly an issue in places like the Gulf of Mexico near the mouth of the Mississippi River, where nutrients are causing plankton blooms that result in anoxic conditions.
Climate has been hot in the Cretaceous and the oceans seem to have supported a lot of life. Ecosystems will need to adjust and organisms with high metabolic rates that live in warm water will be disadvantaged, but I do not see anoxia as limiting net primary productivity in ecosystems of the upper ocean. It may affect species composition but not overall oceanic productivity. Ocean anoxic areas in the deep ocean will expand, but it is unclear to me how that represents an existential threat to humans.
----
Part of what I am trying to communicate is that we should feel a responsibility to pass our environmental endowment on to future generations even if our damage to the environment do not represent an existential threat to humans.
We are liquidating our environmental capital so that we can increase current consumption, and this is unwise.
_______________
Ken Caldeira
Carnegie Institution for Science
Dept of Global Ecology
260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
+1 650 704 7212 kcal...@carnegiescience.edu
http://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab @kencaldeira
Our YouTube videos
Attribution of atmospheric CO2 and temperature increases to regions: Ken Caldeira <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zRh_Zfr6A08>
Climate change and the transition from coal to low-carbon electricity: Ken Caldeira <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a9LaYCbYCxo>
More videos <http://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab/Caldeira_Videos.html>
+1 650 704 7212 <tel:%2B1%20650%20704%207212> kcal...@carnegiescience.edu
http://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab @kencaldeira
Our YouTube videos
Attribution of atmospheric CO2 and temperature increases to regions: Ken Caldeira <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zRh_Zfr6A08>
Climate change and the transition from coal to low-carbon electricity: Ken Caldeira <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a9LaYCbYCxo>
More videos <http://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab/Caldeira_Videos.html>
On Wed, Aug 15, 2012 at 9:06 AM, David Lewis <jrando...@gmail.com> wrote:
Caldeira states he was asked by SciAm editors "what would happen if... we burned ALL the fossil fuels available and dumped that CO2 into the atmosphere", and he claims he took some pains with his answer so it would stand up to the scrutiny of his scientific colleagues. At minute 2:00 he then states: "it might be that for the middle classes of the industrial world that climate change is really a secondary issue and they'll still have their TV sets and their McBurgers and McNuggets to eat and life would go on...."
Matthias Honegger translated an interview Hanna Wick conducted with Ken Caldeira that was published in German and posted it for this group here <https://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering/tree/browse_frm/thread/51bdd45979ce24a3/a97348bd8422e04e?hide_quotes=no> . His translation of what Caldeira said in that interview went a bit further than in this SciAm video: Honegger translated Caldeira in this way: "My opinion is that climate change will be an ecological disaster. For most middle-class people in developed countries it will not be felt very strongly".
I wonder how these statements are received by Caldeira's scientific colleagues.
The time frame for the event, i.e. burning of all the fossil fuels, and the consequence, what would happen, appear to be different. Maybe he is thinking about the middle classes in 2050, or even by 2100, when many consequences will still be "in the pipeline", and in any case it will not have been possible to burn all the fossil fuels yet. If Caldeira actually believes it is possible to burn ALL the fossil fuels and have the average middle class person in developed countries not feel the consequences very strongly, how is it that apparently, so many of his colleagues disagree with him?
I'd like to know where I've gone wrong in my effort to understand what scientists believe.
Consider the publicly expressed views of John Schellnhuber of PIK, who stood before the audience at the 4 degrees conference held in Australia and after telling them their Great Barrier Reef was doomed even if civilization managed what seems now to be the almost impossible goal of limiting global warming to 2 degrees C, asked them if very many of them play Russian Roulette at home. He then explained that even if civilization limited global warming to 2 degrees the odds were worse than 1 in 6 that tipping points would be passed anyway which would threaten the existence of civilization.
Perhaps Caldeira assumes geoengineering research has reached a point where he can assume it will be employed, and the planet can be successfully cooled no matter if all the fossil fuels are burned, and that civilization can survive relatively unscathed as the biosphere is disrupted wholesale in the high CO2 artificially cooled world?
Is Kevin Anderson of the Tyndall Centre, who says there is "a widespread view" among top flight scientists he is in contact with that a mere 4 degrees C warming will prove to be "incompatible with an organized global community" and have a "high probability of not being stable", aware of Caldeira's views?
On Tuesday, August 14, 2012 3:22:07 PM UTC-7, andrewjlockley wrote:
CarnegieGlobEcology just uploaded a video:
The Great Climate Experiment: How far can we push the planet? Ken Caldeira [Scientific American]
Ken Caldeira discussing his article in the August 2012 issue of Scientific American.
The article is titled "The Great Climate Experiment. How far can we push the planet?" It extends from page 78 to page 83.
http://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab/ <http://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab/>
http://www.scientificamerican.com/sciammag/ <http://www.scientificamerican.com/sciammag/> more