Dear John,

 

I, for one, do not assume that SRM will be costly. I am uncertain about its 
future costs, but I doubt that they will come anywhere near those of even an 
economically optimal emission abatement strategy - let alone the much higher 
costs of Gore or Stern type crash GHG reductions. 

 

Many others on this forum have noted the off-setting difficulty with SRM. 
Namely, that it is not risk free and is only a partial response to some of the 
potential hazards that may be associated with climate change. In fact, it is 
because SRM is not a complete solution that I have always regarded as much 
exaggerated the fear that it will replace GHG controls as a climate strategy. 
So SRM seems to be a somewhat imperfect solution, but one that may be available 
at a very low price.

 

Conversely, GHG controls cannot, themselves, cope with some of the more abrupt 
high-impact scenarios much more effectively than SRM will halt ocean 
acidification. In any case, a great deal of adaptation is likely to be required 
under almost all scenarios. Those who claim that society must rely primarily on 
GHG controls - and damn all worries about cost and practicability - are not, it 
seems to me, being very responsible. (Of course, I do not suggest that you have 
ever said anything of the kind, but one reads such views from others even on 
this site.)

 

That being said, those of us who would like to deal with the real choices are 
left with the question that Mike and David were discussing. That is, what 
institutional rules should govern the finance and management of SRM? I think 
that the question is a valid one and that the work of Ronald Coase has 
something to add to the discussion - and to the way that we talk about AGW in 
general. I hoped to clarify one aspect of the discussion by making this point 
rather than to suggest that SRM was costly.  
 
Best regards,

Lee Lane


________________________________

From: [email protected] on behalf of John Nissen
Sent: Fri 12/12/2008 3:56 PM
To: [email protected]; Lane, Lee O.
Cc: Geoengineering
Subject: [geo] Re: Cap and Trade Haters Recommend Incentivizing Geo


Gentlemen,
 
Your arguing makes it seem that SRM is terribly expensive.  It is peanuts in 
relation to its use in saving the Arctic sea ice, which has acted as a global 
thermostat throughout the Ice Ages until we just broke it.  The signs are that 
the whole climate system is now heading for a new super-hot state, unless we 
are careful. Thus the future of civilisation hangs in the balance.  Now can you 
see that the SRM cost, being no more than a few billion dollars per annum, is 
peanuts?
 
The enormity of the problem we have to face is difficult to grasp.  But for 
other more tangible benefits of SRM (stratospheric and tropospheric techniques 
working together or individually) which I compiled for my submission to the 
Royal Society yesterday:
 

1.      SRM in the Arctic can help to save an entire ecosystem for animals and 
sea creatures, with their food chain having repercussions elsewhere; 
2.      SRM in the Arctic could restore a way of life for Inuit people. 
3.      Marine cloud brightening can be used regionally or for particular 
ecosystems, such as corals. 
4.      SRM for halting global warming would much reduce the need for extremely 
expensive adaptation measures. 
5.      SRM for halting global warming could save millions of lives otherwise 
lost through the affects of climate change or inability to adapt, regardless of 
the Arctic sea ice. 
6.      SRM for halting global warming could prevent a mass extinction event. 
7.      SRM might be applied in the Antarctic to halt the decline of the WAIS, 
detachment of ice shelves and ecosystem stress (for penguins, etc.). 
8.      SRM applied to both Arctic and Arctic might prevent a significant sea 
level rise this century, and hence avoid mass emigration from low-lying 
regions, cost of flood defences, etc. 
9.      SRM for halting global warming would protect oceanic and terrestrial 
carbon sinks, whose efficacy reduces with temperature. 
10.     SRM for halting global warming, or perhaps just for mountainous 
regions, could maintain glaciers and associated water supplies for millions of 
people, their crops and livestock. 
11.     SRM and cloud seeding techniques could be combined regionally for 
reducing droughts or countering desertification. 
12.     Note that the use of both stratospheric and tropospheric techniques 
together offer advantages in terms of balancing cost, the targeting of specific 
regions, reduction of side-effects, etc. 

If these aren't "public good", I don't know what is.  If anybody pays for SRM, 
it is because they have the public interest - and/or their own survival - at 
heart.
 
If SRM had to be "incentivised", the motives of any funding could be criticised 
(as you get for ocean iron fertilisation - OIF).  Whereas, at present, any SRM 
financial support that materialises from the private sector can be seen to be 
ultruistic and self-preserving, rather than of narrow commercial interest.
 
I would see this as a positive advantage of SRM.
 
But we need to see ultruistic people with money stepping forward, where 
governments fear to tread.  Has anybody worked on Bill Gates?  Here's a chance 
to save the world!
 
Cheers,
 
John

        

        

        

        

        

        

        

        

        

        

        

        

        

        ----- Original Message ----- 
        From: David Schnare <mailto:[email protected]>  
        To: Lane, Lee O. <mailto:[email protected]>  
        Cc: Geoengineering <mailto:[email protected]>  
        Sent: Friday, December 12, 2008 7:27 PM
        Subject: [geo] Re: Cap and Trade Haters Recommend Incentivizing Geo

        Lee:
         
        Nicely put.  Keep in mind, however, Coase assumes a perfect market for 
these tradeoffs.  As there is a free-rider problem, I'm not sure the balance 
between the parties is sufficiently free from market imperfections as to allow 
an appropriate (government free) trade.  There is also the problem that this is 
not merely about temperature, but CO2 as well (ocean impacts).  Thus, SRM is, 
at best, only going to deal with the temperature effects, which is to say, 
those living by the ocean should not pay full price for SRM as it does not deal 
with the loss of ocean chemistry.
         
        In this case, those who want carbon emission reduction are not willing 
to allow anyone to pay for SRM, although a few of them are beginning to put the 
potential for catastrophic impacts ahead of their desire for carbon emissions 
reductions at a size that they think would be necessary to prevent the harm.  
(e.g., Hansen).
         
        David.
        
        
        On Fri, Dec 12, 2008 at 2:04 PM, Lane, Lee O. <[email protected]> wrote:
        

                Dear David and Mike,
                
                
                
                I wonder about part of this discussion. As Nobel laureate 
Ronald Coase pointed out long ago, what are referred to as external costs are 
more clearly thought of as negative interactions among various activities. The 
doctor's demand for quiet in his consulting room could impose noise control 
costs on the nearby factory just as clearly as the noise from the factory could 
impose costs on the doctor's practice. (This was, as I recall, an actual court 
case cited in the famous Coase article, "The Problem of Social Cost".)
                
                
                
                Attempts to categorize some actors as perpetrators and some as 
victims miss the whole point. That point is, Coase teaches, that it is the 
interaction that causes the costs. Move the doctor's office to another location 
or move the factory, and the social cost disappears. Therefore, it may be 
possible to reduce these costs by changing the behavior of either of the actors 
(or both of them). The policy maker's job is to define the property rights, or 
other social rules, so as to minimize the losses that stem from the negative 
aspects of some interactions.
                
                
                
                In the case of climate change, we can reduce the potential harm 
by keeping people from building flimsy structures in hurricane-prone areas. And 
we can also reduce it by curtailing emissions from coal-fired power plants. 
Both of these activities are raising the total social costs from climate 
change. The net cost-minimizing solution is almost certainly to do some of 
both. Trying to cast the problem in moral terms does not just cause confusion. 
It may lead us to miss less expensive opportunities to reduce the total social 
harm from climate change.
                
                
                
                This error seems to me to be one of the main harms likely to 
spring from the current tendency to treat near-term greenhouse gas emission 
controls as the only tool, or overwhelmingly the preferred tool, for curbing 
the potential damage from climate change. This narrow attitude encourages an 
under estimate of the potential value of adaptation. Indeed, the neglect of SRM 
is, in a real sense, merely an extension of the neglect of adaptation.
                
                
                
                Thank you both for raising interesting points.
                
                
                
                Best regards,
                
                
                
                Lee Lane
                
                ________________________________
                
                From: [email protected] on behalf of David Schnare
                Sent: Fri 12/12/2008 12:26 PM
                To: Geoengineering
                
                Subject: [geo] Re: Cap and Trade Haters Recommend Incentivizing 
Geo
                
                
                
                Gents:
                
                I think you are on the wrong track.  Incentives are intended to 
change behavior.  One does not pay victims to continue to be victims.  One pays 
the perpetrator to quit perpetrating the bad act.  So, one penalizes a person 
who lives in the flood plain the increased amount needed in the insurance pool 
to pay for his damages when the flood comes.  An incentive to prevent his home 
from flooding would be to give him a low cost loan to build above the flood 
plain.
                
                Hence, who's behavior do you want to alter.  Surely the person 
living in the flood plain is not the person who's behavior you want to alter, 
at least with regard to carbon emissions.  He may suffer the consequences, but 
he is not (in the main) the cause of the problem.
                
                The correct question is:  Who would make money out of 
geoengineering, and is now causing the problem?  Not merely who would benefit 
from it, but who would actually have an incentive to create wealth out of it.  
That would be the folks working on planetary scale carbon sequestration.  I 
don't see anyone making money out of SRM.  Hence, if you want an incentive for 
SRM, you need to link it to something else that will make money.
                
                Begin from this point for your discussion.
                
                David.
                
                
                On Fri, Dec 12, 2008 at 11:50 AM, John Nissen 
<[email protected]> wrote:
                
                
                
                       Hi Mike,
                
                       Perhaps we should try insurance companies, or even 
better, reinsurance.  They are interested in avoiding disasters, however they 
are caused.  Does anybody have good contacts?
                
                       I have a particular interest in avoiding sea level rise, 
tidal surges and high precipitation floods, living by tidal Thames.  Hey, what 
about the former mayor, Ken Livingston?  (The new mayor wouldn't be interested.)
                
                       Cheers from Chiswick
                
                
                       John
                
                
                
                               ----- Original Message -----
                
                               From: Mike MacCracken 
<mailto:[email protected]>
                               To: [email protected] ; Alvia Gaskill 
<mailto:[email protected]>
                               Cc: Geoengineering 
<mailto:[email protected]>
                
                               Sent: Friday, December 12, 2008 4:22 PM
                               Subject: [geo] Re: Cap and Trade Haters 
Recommend Incentivizing Geo
                
                               Hi David-Your proposal is just the reason why 
there is resistance to geoengineering. The idea is to not have geoengineering 
slow the needed rapid reduction in GHG emissions, but to be in addition to 
it-for given how rapidly the environment is changing we will need to have 
geoengineering as well as aggressive mitigation.
                
                               We really need to find another alternative to 
incentivizing geoengineering-for example, having funding for it come out of 
what would otherwise need to be going to defending the coasts against sea level 
rise-so like an insurance premium of coastal homeowners-you only get insurance 
if you live along the coasts if you pay an additional amount for geoengineering.
                
                               Mike MacCracken
                
                
                
                               On 12/12/08 9:13 AM, "David Schnare" 
<[email protected] <http://dwschnare <http://dwschnare/> @gmail.com/> > wrote:
                
                
                
                                       You would link it to carbon emissions , 
allowing greater emissions in direct trade with investment on mass scale carbon 
sequestration and a premium (lesser but still real emissions allowances) for X 
years for SRM.
                
                
                
                
                
                                       On Fri, Dec 12, 2008 at 7:30 AM, Alvia 
Gaskill <[email protected] <http://agaskill <http://agaskill/> @nc.rr.com/> > 
wrote:
                
                
                                               How would you "incentivize" 
investment in geoengineering?
                
                                               
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/BU0812/S00286.htm
                
                                               Coalition Warns Governments 
Against Emissions Cap
                                               Friday, 12 December 2008, 3:33 pm
                                               Press Release: New Zealand 
Business Roundtable
                
                                               EMBARGOED UNTIL 1:00PM FRIDAY 12 
DECEMBER
                
                                               Climate Change Coalition Warns 
Governments Against Global Cap on Emissions
                
                                               As the eleven thousand 
participants in the United Nations Climate Change Conference descend on Poznan, 
Poland, this week, a coalition of 50 civil society organisations from 38 
countries is warning governments against opting for strategies that would "do 
little to protect humanity against the threat of climate change but would 
drastically increase the threat of global economic catastrophe."
                
                
                                               The Civil Society Coalition on 
Climate Change (www.csccc.info <http://www.csccc.info/>  
<http://www.csccc.info/>  <http://www.csccc.info/> ) of which the New Zealand 
Business Roundtable is a member, has today released a new report with a stark 
message to governments about the economic flow-on effect, particularly on 
poorer countries, of adopting a global cap on emissions.
                

                                               Describing the idea as "economic 
lunacy", the report's author, Professor Julian Morris, said a global cap would 
divert resources into "low carbon" technologies and away from more productive 
uses.
                
                                               "This would slow economic growth 
and harm the ability of the poor to address the real problems they face every 
day, such as diseases, water scarcity, and inadequate nutrition", said 
Professor Morris.
                
                                               The report canvases policy 
options available to governments and concludes that adaptation, coupled with 
improving the institutions that enable economic growth, is likely to be the 
best response to gradual warming. It further suggests that one approach to 
addressing the remote but possible threat of catastrophic warming would be to 
incentivise investment in geoengineering, and advises governments 'hell bent' 
on limiting carbon emissions to consider a tax on emissions rather than a cap 
and trade scheme.
                
                                               Business Roundtable executive 
director Roger Kerr said the report, titled Which Policy to Address Climate 
Change? was a timely and valuable addition to the debate on what constitutes an 
appropriate response to climate change.
                
                                               "We have long held the view, as 
set out in the attached submission, that a cap and trade scheme of the type 
being considered in New Zealand would impose heavy costs on households, 
businesses and the economy. It is also likely to discourage investment and lead 
to losses in business confidence and jobs.
                
                                               "It is to be hoped that common 
sense will prevail in Poznan and that a few European ministers will not succeed 
in imposing further pain on countries already struggling with much more serious 
problems", said Mr Kerr.
                
                
                                               ENDS
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                               
                
                
                




        -- 
        David W. Schnare
        Center for Environmental Stewardship
        
        
                
        


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