Here it is from the Guardian.  He appears to be referring to measures to 
remove the legacy CO2, but isn't specific.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/jul/07/coral-attenborough

Coral condemned to extinction by CO2 levels, warns Attenborough
Coral is the canary in the cage as damage can be seen most quickly, veteran 
naturalist tells Royal Society

  a.. Alok Jha

  b.. guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 7 July 2009 11.02 BST

A coral seen off Jarvis Island in the Pacific Ocean. Photograph: Jim 
Maragos/AP


David Attenborough joined scientists yesterday to warn that carbon dioxide 
in the atmosphere is already above the level which condemns coral reefs to 
extinction in the future, with catastrophic effects for the oceans and the 
people who depend upon them.


Coral reefs support a quarter of all marine life including more than 4,000 
species of fish. They also provide spawning, nursery, refuge and feeding 
areas for creatures such as lobsters, crabs, starfish and sea turtles. This 
makes them crucial in supporting a healthy marine ecosystem upon which more 
than 1bn people depend for food. Reefs also play a crucial role as natural 
breakwaters, protecting coastlines from storms.


Attenborough said the world had a "moral responsibility" to save corals.


He was speaking yesterday at the Royal Society in London, following a 
meeting of marine biologists. At the current rate of increase of atmospheric 
CO2, they said, coral would become extinct within a few decades.


"A coral reef is the canary in the cage as far as the oceans are concerned," 
said Attenborough. "They are the places where the damage is most easily and 
quickly seen. It is more difficult for us to see what is happening in, for 
example, the deep ocean or the central expanses of ocean."


"Anybody's who's had the privilege of diving on a coral reef will have seen 
the natural world at its most glorious, diverse and beautiful," said 
Attenborough. "[There is a] moral responsibility one has to the natural 
world. Also you have responsibility to future generations, to your future 
grandchildren and great grandchildren."


Increasing carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has a double effect on coral. 
Global warming means warmer seas, which causes the corals to to bleach, 
where the creatures lose the symbiotic algae they need to survive. Carbon 
dioxide also makes seas more acidic, which means the corals find it 
difficult to prevent their exoskeletons from dissolving.


"We've already passed a safe threshold for coral reef ecosystems in terms of 
climate change. We believe that a safe level for CO2 is below 350 parts per 
million," said Alex Rogers of the Zoological Society of London and 
International Programme on the State of the Ocean, who helped organise 
yesterday's meeting.


Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has risen from 280 ppm before the 
industrial revolution to around 387ppm today. Environmentalists say that any 
new global deal on climate must restrict the growth of CO2 levels to 450ppm, 
though more pessimistic scientists say that the world is heading for 550ppm 
or even 650ppm.


"When we get up to and above 450ppm, that really means we're into the realms 
of catastrophic destruction of coral reefs and we'll be moving into a 
planetary-wide global extinction," said Rogers.


"The only way to get to 350ppm or below is not only to have major cuts in 
CO2 emissions but also to draw CO2 out of the atmosphere through measures 
such as geo-engineering."


Attenborough said the plight of the corals was another example of why the 
control of carbon was so important to the world's inhabitants. "Each 
ecological disaster or problem traces its cause back to carbon. To quibble 
about this is really fiddling while Rome burns. If we do not control the 
emission of carbon, this world is heading for a major catastrophe and this 
is one of the first to be staring us straight in the face."

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "DW" <[email protected]>
To: "geoengineering" <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, July 17, 2009 6:54 PM
Subject: [geo] Re: david attenborough



Can we get a link or a scan of the article?

Dan

On Jul 17, 12:13 pm, "John Gorman" <[email protected]> wrote:
> from the widely read UK weekly The Week a quote from Sir David 
> Attenborough
>
> "we're going to have to use geoengineering techniques" !!!!
>
> JOhn G

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