There have been a number of members putting arguments against the
proposed board:
Alan Robock
Ken Caldeira
Dan Whaley

I'd like to see agreement as far as is possible about the best way
forward.  May I therefore ask the people who have opposed the creation
to explore how they see the subject being taken forward?

My own reasons for supporting the Board is that it allows
multidisciplinary scrutiny of projects and their context by a stable
team of experts who can establish clear criteria and standards of
review.  Right now the Board doesn't have all the experts it needs,
but that will change in due course if the idea wins further support.

I'm completely at ease with the idea that I'm potentially on the wrong
track, but at the moment I don't see a way for the geoengineering
discipline to formalise and progress without some organisational
centre.  Whilst the googlegroup and wikipedia are very useful, they
don't represent the right environment for a formal peer review process
that policy makers are going to want to see if they're to move forward
with projects that might seem pretty wild to a president, banker or
general.

Opinions please....

A
PS Benford is at UC Irvine (apologies)

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