I guess this means we gonna perish.  From his other appointments, however, I 
get the feeling that Obama is not likely to put all his eggs in one basket, in 
spite of what geo-hater Joe Romm thinks should be done.  What do you think 
Steven Chu's views are on geo?  The Science Advisor has an office.  The head of 
DOE has a budget.

The reason I posted the one about the blanket is that the narrator says they 
have been covering the glacier with snow and the "anti-glare" blanket for the 
last 14 years.  I think the blanket only began being used about 5 years ago.  
But this brings back up again (at least to me) the idea of filling in the 
moulins in Greenland with ice and snow.  I'll be providing something more 
substantive on that idea later.

http://videos.howstuffworks.com/reuters/2105-saving-a-glacier-with-a-huge-blanket-video.htm

Saving a Glacier with a Huge Blanket
Related Article: How Global Warming Works
Watch this video about glaciers and global warming on HowStuffWorks. The 
glacier on the Zugspitze, Germany's highest mountain, is retreating. The 
Zugpspitze was 80 meters thick in 1910, but is now only 45 meters thick. So 
engineers are working hard to keep their glacier alive, using tons of loose 
snow and anti-glare shields. See how glaciers and global warming work in this 
news video from Reuters. 

http://climateprogress.org/2008/12/18/obamas-strongest-message-on-climate-yet-john-holdren-to-be-named-science-adviser/

Obama’s strongest message on climate yet: John Holdren to be named Science 
Adviser
Science magazine is reporting today that “Strong indications are that 
President-elect Barack Obama has picked physicist John Holdren to be the 
president’s science adviser.”

I have known Holdren for over a decade and have discussed energy/climate issues 
with him many times. He probably has more combined expertise on both climate 
science and clean energy technology than any other person who could plausibly 
have been named science adviser. You can see a video of an excellent talk he 
gave here (along with talks by Chu and me). For a more recent BBC interview, 
see “The Climate Quote of the Week“.

I would say that if Holdren is named (on Saturday), it is an even stronger 
signal than the terrific choice of Steven Chu for Energy Secretary that Obama 
is dead serious about the strongest possible action on global warming. After 
all, the science adviser works out of the White House and oversees science and 
technology funding, analysis, and messaging for all federal agencies.

Holdren ain’t in the “do something but not enough to avoid catastrophe” crowd 
that the NYT’s Andy Revkin keeps on touting (see here and here). In fact, 
Revkin quoted him last year as an anti-moderate:


  Some experts, though, argue that moderation in a message is likely to be 
misread as satisfaction with the pace of change.

  John P. Holdren, an energy and environment expert at Harvard and president of 
the American Association for the Advancement of Science, defended the more 
strident calls for limits on carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases.

  “I am one of those who believes that any reasonably comprehensive and 
up-to-date look at the evidence makes clear that civilization has already 
generated dangerous anthropogenic interference in the climate system,” Dr. 
Holdren said. “What keeps me going is my belief that there is still a chance of 
avoiding catastrophe.”

As I’ve said many times, the more you know about both climate and energy, the 
less moderate you are. Economists, who know little about either, can be found 
in Revkin’s murky middle, but not serious climate scientists, and especially 
not ones who understand as much about energy as Holdren.

Holdren has said many times that we must choose between serious mitigation or 
serious misery — geo-engineering isn’t the answer:

  “The ‘geo-engineering’ approaches considered so far appear to be afflicted 
with some combination of high costs, low leverage, and a high likelihood of 
serious side effects.“

It is true that the science adviser has not been a particularly powerful player 
in recent Administrations, but Obama has already articulated his desire to 
elevate the importance of science and technology in his administration. As PEBO 
said of his choice of Chu, “His appointment should send a signal to all that my 
administration will value science.”

Another crucial role for the science adviser is to help educate the public on 
climate science and solutions. As Holdren says, it is too late to prevent 
dangerous human-caused warming. But after eight years Bush spreading 
disinformation and muzzling scientists, putting Holdren in charge of the “bully 
pulpit of science” is just what the nation and the planet need if we are to 
have any chance of avoiding catastrophic warming.

Kudos to Barack Obama for another terrific choice. Here is the rest of today’s 
Science piece:


  A top adviser to the Obama campaign and international expert on energy and 
climate, Holdren would bolster Obama’s team in those areas. Both are crowded 
portfolios. Obama has already created a new position to coordinate energy 
issues in the White House staffed by well-connected Carole Browner, former head 
of the Environmental Protection Agency, and nominated a Nobel-prize winning 
physicist, Steve Chu, to head the Department of Energy. That could complicate 
how the Office of Science and Technology Policy, which Holdren will run, will 
manage energy and environmental policy. “OSTP will have to be redefined in 
relation to these other centers of formulating policy,” says current White 
House science adviser Jack Marburger.

  Holdren had been planning to attend a staff meeting this morning with 
colleagues at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at 
Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, where he heads the technology and 
science program. But instead, he flew today to Chicago to meet with the 
transition team and prepare for the announcement; initial plans are to release 
the official news of the appointment on a weekly radio program that Obama 
records and will be broadcast on Saturday. The transition office declined to 
comment.

  Holdren is well known for his work on energy, climate change, and nuclear 
proliferation. Trained in fluid dynamics and plasma physics, Holdren branched 
out into policy early in his career. He has led the Woods Hole Research Center 
for the past 3 years and served as president of the American Association for 
the Advancement of Science (which publishes Science) in 2006.


--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

<<inline: holdren.jpg>>

Reply via email to