http://bristlingbadger.blogspot.com:80/2009/01/geoengineering-ethically-unsound-says.html

Dan Whaley forced the badger out of his burrow to engage in a rather wide 
ranging discussion of points made or not made in the original posting.  
Worthwhile reading.  I note however, that no one has taken issue with the 
statement made that John Latham and others are doing experiments with "cloud 
seeding" off the coast of Chile.  Are such experiments in progress, planned or 
was this just the badger getting something else wrong in a post that was long 
on opinions and short on facts?  I recall Stephen Salter proposing a month or 
longer sea voyage to study impacts on cloud brightness similar to one just 
completed on marine stratocumulus clouds, but was unaware it had gone further 
than the concept stage.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Alvia Gaskill 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, January 23, 2009 7:50 AM
  Subject: [geo] Badgering Geoengineering


  
http://bristlingbadger.blogspot.com/2009/01/geoengineering-ethically-unsound-says.html



  geoengineering 'ethically unsound' says geoengineer 
  Last month I went to a Cafe Scientifique talk by Dr Alan Gadian. He's part of 
a team with Mike Smith at the University of Leeds and John Latham who are 
experimenting with cloud-seeding.

  Their idea is that if you whoosh up great quantities of sea water into the 
air then the salt crystals will encourage clouds that reflect solar energy, 
thereby reducing the amount of heat trapped by greenhouse gases.

  The big problem with this and other climate geoengineering projects is that 
they allow an escape route for the carbon emitters. Desperate to do anything 
other than reduce our energy consumption and attendant emissions, they fired 
off the decoys of climate denial, followed by carbon offsets and biofuels. 
Anything to distract us, to give us the hope that there'll be some swift, 
simple magic bullet.

  NOT REDUCING CO2

  The geoengineering schemes that reflect the sun have a very serious problem. 
They mean that the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will keep rapidly 
increasing. This will have serious impacts on plantlife but seemingly more 
serious is the impact on the oceans. It will cause them to acidify, killing the 
coral reefs and making many species unable to properly form shells. This isn't 
taking out one or two species, this is hacking out a huge length of the food 
chain. The knock-on effects scarcely bear thinking about.

  Dr Gadian said that the scheme, should it work, would require £1.5bn worth of 
whooshy boats. All things going well they'll make the desired sort of clouds, 
although the might make the wrong ones and actually dissolve the present level 
of reflective clouds and make the situation worse.

  He told us that it's not that dangerous a plan because sometimes 'clouds are 
naturally like that'. Hmm, taking something that naturally occurs and 
increasing the amount of it in the atmosphere, that's not a problem is it? Can 
anyone say 'carbon dioxide?'

  Dr Gadian says his scheme is less risky than other reflection schemes as if 
anything untoward is discovered it's rapidly switch-offable. All 
artificially-induced clouds should be gone within two weeks of the boats 
stopping their work.

  The problem is that by then it may be too late. Not only are there the 
unforeseen side-effects and having to get someone who's invested over a billion 
dollars to admit they're wrong and take a massive loss squarely on the chin, 
but more importantly there's what hasn't happened. We haven't cut our emissions 
because we were banking on this scheme. To stop making the clouds is to allow 
more sun in and let all the emissions from the time when we chose the scheme to 
the swithc-off date heat the climate.

  Even if it doesn't affect weather in the least and even if altered cloud 
cover has no adverse ecological effects, this will be used to delay real 
action. It means if it doesn't work well enough we're stuffed. It means we 
permit - we actually choose to cause - all the other effects of spiralling 
quantities of CO2 in the atmosphere.

  THE BREVITY LIE

  Dr Gadian said it mightn't be that much really, because that his scheme 
mightn't be long-term, it could be 'just for ten years or so until we change'.

  This is the central lie of the geoengineering lobby. They cannot argue that 
their ideas are safer or more effective than carbon cuts, so they argue that 
they're just a stopgap until we make such cuts.

  The time it takes to develop, test for effectiveness and the very high degree 
of safety, and then scale up and deploy any of their schemes is at least as 
long as it'd take to make serious carbon cuts. And who do we think would invest 
billions of dollars in a scheme that's trying to be as short term as possible?

  The investors will want something back for their money, and the benefits of 
any climate geoengineering will almost certainly be sold as 'carbon credits' to 
the polluting industries and nations. It will not be done in tandem with 
emissions cuts but instead of them. Geoengineering will not be a tool of 
mitigation but of exacerbation.

  THOSE WHO WANT IT DON'T KNOW ENOUGH

  Dr Gadian's grasp of the threat from carbon emissions was graphically 
illustrated by the astonishing declaration that 'my biggest fear is that we 
will run out of fossil fuels in two or three centuries'.

  If we get to the point of actually running out of fossil fuels as opposed to 
abandoning them then the mere running out will not be our biggest problem.

  If it gets to that stage then, given the ecological devastation and our 
inability to wean ourselves off fossil energy, it would truly be a case of 
'would the last species on earth please turn out the lights?'.

  Dr Gadian plainly said that humanity will burn all the fossils it can, so 
geoengineering is necessary to mitigate this inevitability. Like him, I'm old 
enough to remember another certainty of global politics, the inevitable nuclear 
war with the Soviet bloc. Those who treat these things as certainties make them 
more likely, when in fact they are avoidable.

  To move ahead with geoengineering is to divert efforts from elsewhere, it is 
giving up on the pressure, education and resistance that can still prevent 
those emissions. The geoengineers' main purpose is to be a tool of those who 
wish to continue burning fossil fuels.

  WHAT ABOUT CHINA?

  He fell back on the standard fossil-enthusiast's argument that 'we can't tell 
China and India that they can't have our standard of living'.

  This is bollocks. Firstly, they can sit there saying 'why should we cut back 
when you won't?'. Everyone is using everyone else's inaction as an excuse for 
their own.

  As a medium sized industrialised country nobody is better placed than the UK 
to be the leading light in showing that a swift transition to a low-carbon 
economy is possible. And as the nation with the greatest historical 
responsibility for carbon emissions, we are also the most morally obliged to be 
the leader in the solutions.

  And all this is before we start to point out that Chinese per-capita 
emissions are a fraction of ours, and that figure, in turn, is before we take 
into account that around a quarter of their carbon emissions are from 
manufacturing goods for export. Much of 'their' emissions are just us 
outsourcing ours.

  There is no need for China and India to unswervingly follow our path, instead 
they can leapfrog the high-emitting decades and go straight into what the 21st 
century should look like.

  THOSE WHO KNOW ENOUGH DON'T WANT IT

  Dr Gadian says Met Office disapprove of the cloud-seeding plan. He 
sarcastically suggested that it was because the idea came out of a university 
and it threatens their supremacy. Nothing to do with the fact that the Met 
Office do have a large and leading role in concern about climate change as 
opposed to a scientist who readily admitted that he isn't motivated by concern 
for the climate but is primarily concerned with finding out how clouds are 
formed.

  The issue is too important to let such head-in-the-sands be charged with 
solutions, and certainly too important to let such infantile catty attitudes 
have any part in dismissing as august a voice as the Met Office.

  That this scheme will undoubtedly be used to distract us from cutting carbon 
emissions; that it will not be a short-term precursor to responsible action but 
an excuse for long-term emissions; that it will allow carbon emissions to 
assault marine biodiversity that could lead to major extinction events and 
threaten food supplies for many species and peoples; that they haven't even 
asked people in Chile where they're doing their experiments what they think; 
all these things make it an outrage and something to be opposed as strongly as 
we oppose new runways or coal power stations.

  [What experiments in Chile would that be???  AG]

  His final words on the subject haunt me. After I named those reasons why the 
scheme is so wrong Dr Gadian said, 'I agree, it's ethically unsound'.

  The major crime of our culture is that we know what we're doing but we do it 
anyway. 
  Posted by merrick at 13:05   

  

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