According to this report we need -ve emissions.  Bring on the geoengineers!

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7826994.stm

World 'needs radical cuts' on CO2

By Tanya Syed
BBC News


Renewable technologies could help arrest climate change
More carbon dioxide needs to be absorbed than emitted by 2050 in order
to prevent catastrophic climate change.
That is the conclusion of a report by the Worldwatch Institute which
urges bigger cuts in greenhouse emissions.
The authors say that even a rise in temperatures of 2 degrees C poses
unacceptable risks to natural systems.
But they add that it is still possible to arrest and manage climate
change with renewable technologies and more efficient ways of living.
"Sealing the deal to save the global climate will require mass public
support and worldwide political will to shift to renewable energy, new
ways of living, and a human scale that matches the atmosphere's
limits," said Robert Engelman, vice president for programmes at the
Worldwatch Institute.
Commenting on the report, Ian Lowe, president of the Australian
Conservation Foundation, said: "It is a persuasive call to action.
Unless we take early concerted action, the impacts of climate change
will overwhelm our capacity to adapt."
Ten challenges
Global greenhouse gas emissions need to peak before 2020 and decrease
drastically until 2050, the report says.
More CO2 will have to be absorbed than emitted in the second half of
this century.
The report outlines 10 key challenges that must be adopted to avoid
catastrophic climate change.
These include long-term planning, global co-operation and innovative
solutions such as improved building design incorporating a variety of
efficiency measures.
"The report is particularly timely. It addresses climate change
concerns and provides a wide range of options for tackling this
multi-faceted problem," said Stephen Lincoln at the University of
Adelaide in Australia.
In December 2009, government representatives from 170 countries will
meet to create a global climate agreement.
The president of the Worldwatch Institute, Christopher Flavin, said:
"The outcome of this meeting will be written in the history books -
and in the lasting composition of the world's atmosphere."

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