Recently appearing on the web - an article, presumably by Michael Tobis,
the geophysicist [1]:
http://theenergycollective.com/TheEnergyCollective/49963
Cheers from Chiswick,
John
[1] http://www.ig.utexas.edu/people/staff/tobis/
(Correct me if I have the wrong Michael Tobis!)
To answer Ron's question, I think biochar should be called a
"sequestration strategy" and not a "geoengineering strategy".
It is my opinion that there are two very different categories of
proposal covered by the Royal Society report, and often confused under
the rubric of "geoengineering". One is intervention in the carbon
cycle at a global scale, and the other is intervention in the
radiative balance at a global scale.
I have very strongly different views about the two classes of
intervention, and recommend that they not be conflated into a single
category.
Intervention in the carbon cycle is already happening; accordingly
further intervention is necessary, whether by reducing emissions or by
constructing new sequestration paths. Presumably both are necessary.
Intervention in the radiative balance by any other means will be
imperfect. It perhaps merits study as a desperation maneuver, but it
does not seem prudent, to say the least, to deploy it in any
foreseeable circumstances. My own preferred usage is to refer to only
this class of intervention as "geoengineering". As such I am opposed
to geoengineering.
On the other hand, I think every plausible "sequestration strategy"
should be pursued with utmost vigor until something successfully
emerges at scale.
I'm here to advocate for the proposition that these are ethically and
practically very distinct strategies.
This was the main point of my blog article. I'm glad to see it getting
some attention.
best regards
Michael Tobis
Dear Mr. Nissen, Thank you for your letter. I agree with you that the Copenhagen Conference of the Parties is a very important conference, and that we must act quickly to address the threat presented by global warming. I also agree with you that carbon stock management, heat transfer and radiation management present promising prospects. This is why we have included geoengineering for consideration in the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report. Geoengineering will be dealt with as a mitigation option. With kind regards, R. K. Pachauri *************************************************************** R K Pachauri, Ph.D Director-General, TERI Habitat Place, Lodhi Road New Delhi 110 003 Tel: +91 11 24682121 or 2122 Fax: +91 11 24682144 or 2145 www.teriin.org
1) Given the tripartite organization of IPCC: mitigation, adaptation,
and impacts, it's reasonable to include geoengineering under
mitigation.
2) The Royal Society report which I referenced:
http://initforthegold.blogspot.com/2009/10/geoengineering-quandary.html
does include point-source carbon capture and sequestration.
3) I think the CRS vs SRM nomenclature is sufficient for technical
purposes; however it is likely to fail to be understood by the public
due to abbreviation overload. "Carbon management" and "sunlight
management" might be clearer.
===
On the advisability of CRS and CCS:
It is absolutely necessary. Development and prototyping is urgent.
===
On the advisability of SRM:
I really doubt it. The aspect of the problem where SRM makes most
sense is the sea level issue. There are likely hystereses there and a
relatively abrupt failure is plausible especially in West Antarctica,
but the time scale of that event is very hard to pin down.
I am new here and could be wrong about this, but I have the suspicion
that people advising this approach don't have a strong grasp of
geophysical fluid dynamics. Large scale regional perturbations will
have global effects. The science is probably not robust enough to
predict what those would be with great confidence.
Some interesting issues are raised here:
http://rabett.blogspot.com/2009/10/so-2-stinks-well-it-really-does-and-it.html
The fact that the two classes of idea have been lumped together risks
that the (at best) highly speculative SRM ideas are interfering with
consideration of the evidently sound CRS/CCS ideas.
mt