Dear Mr. Law: 

 

I suggest you are missing the point. The various countries are giving lip
service to reversing the global warming problem by reducing CO2 emissions or
by carbon capture. Copenhagen will produce nothing of substance. Moreover,
nothing significant will happen in the next 25 years.  I agree that re-icing
the poles is critical and that can be done best or may only be feasible by
geoengineering in the short term. This group has been giving this serious
consideration for a considerable time. You are preaching to the choir. It is
not the thinking that is lacking but funding. Moreover, even if
anthropogenic CO2 emissions were brought to zero and some reversal of CO2
concentration were achieved, there is a reasonable argument that the planet
will continue to get warmer for other reasons. (That is an off topic
discussion.)

 

I would argue based on over 50 years of experience beyond my postdoc that
the experienced people, (or those with training and willing to shift focus)
will follow the money. The most critical need right now is to get a viable
source of long term funding, then attack the polar re-icing and let the
politicians deal with restructuring energy generation to reduce carbon
emissions.

 

Eugene I. Gordon

(908) 233 4677

[email protected]

www.germgardlighting.com

 

 

From: Raymond Law [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, November 13, 2009 6:45 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected]; Geoengineering; Oliver
Tickell
Subject: Re: [geo] Rejected - a simple argument for SRM geoengineering

 

Mr. John Nissen's train of logical thinking should really deserve serious
consideration by those politicians like Al Gore that are relevant with
reversing global warming.  It is logical to consider all options,
short/quick term or long/slow term solutions, main stream or alternate ones
----  as long as they can do the job.

 

Politicians and big businesses generally prefer the main streams probably it
is the path of least resistance in getting enormous fundings.  But alternate
ones could also create huge fundings needs too ; and alternate solutions
could be more dispersed/localized, meaning that it is easier to envisage the
creation of technology-transferred localized businesses and boosting
localized jobs/economies  ---  anyone cares to identify more opportunities
for politicians to work on.  Lets face it, you might not like politicians,
but you really need them to turn your ideas into reality.

 

Your  ' urgency '  direction is pointing to the one true and real need at
this juncture is to re-ice the poles.  I think that we should pool our
brains together and give this direction serious thinking.

 

Raymond Law

 

 

 



 

On Fri, Nov 13, 2009 at 9:11 AM, Eugene I. Gordon <[email protected]>
wrote:

"Shouldn't CO2 reduction technologies be given a chance?" That is laughable.
Who is going to give CO2 reduction technologies a chance? Where will the
money come from to implement new technology on the scale needed to make a
difference. Where will the consensus come from? Russia and Canada will give
it lip service because they want the Arctic seaways open and they sell
fossil fuels.

In any case the cries of doom and gloom from the global warming advocates
especially in the absence of any credible science relating warming to CO2
levels is not going anywhere. This thing will drag on and on and Nero
fiddles while the world burns.

-gene


-----Original Message-----
From: Glyn Roberts [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, November 12, 2009 6:17 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: Geoengineering; Oliver Tickell
Subject: Re: [geo] Rejected - a simple argument for SRM geoengineering

I largely agree with your logical train of arguments.  Except I'm not
convinced on #9 (NOW!).  Given the well known risks (and unknown
ones!) of SRM, shouldn't CO2 reduction technologies be given a chance?
 What's your evidence that applying SRM a decade from now will not be
sufficient to prevent a climate catastrophe?  In a decade from now
SRMs may have matured & safer (on paper).

best regards,

Glyn

On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 5:51 PM, John Nissen <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> It is incredible. It is so obvious.
>
> 1. Global warming is driven largely by atmospheric CO2 according to the
> concentration above its pre-industrial level; and
>
> 2. After emissions are stopped it could take millenia for the
> concentration to fall back to that level, because the effective lifetime
> of some of that excess CO2 is many thousands of years.
>
> Therefore:
> 3.  Drastic emissions reduction, even to zero overnight, cannot and will
> not stop the Arctic continuing to warm for decades.
>
> Therefore:
> 4. The Arctic sea ice will continue to retreat, accelerating the warming
> due to the albedo effect.
>
> Therefore:
> 5.  The permafrost will continue to thaw releasing increasing quantities
> of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, potentially adding many degrees to
> global warming; and
>
> 6.  The Greenland ice sheet will become increasingly unstable,
> potentially contributing to an eventual sea level rise of 7 metres.
>
> Therefore:
> 7.  To avoid these two catastrophes, we need to cool the Arctic quickly
> enough to save the Arctic sea ice; and
>
> 8.  Probably the only feasible way to do this is through solar radiation
> management (SRM) geoengineering.
>
> 9.  SRM is not a last resort, it is needed now to cool the Arctic.
>
> It is incredible that people do not seem to follow this train of logic -
> it is so obvious.
>
> Yet when I challenged a panel of geoengineering experts to refute this
> argument, the response was that geoengineering (even just to cool the
> Arctic) was too dangerous - not that the argument was false! [1]
>
> So we continue to hear politicians and their advisers claiming that
> emissions reduction alone can be sufficient to keep the planet safe. [2]
>
> And we continue to hear geoengineering experts saying that
> geoengineering should only be used as a last resort. [3]
>
> How can this mindset be changed quickly, to avoid leaving geoengineering
> too late?
>
> John
>
> P.S. Apologies to those who have heard this all before and accept the
> logic as self-evident.
>
> [1]  This challenge was put to the panel at the launch of the Royal
> Society geoengineering report, on September 1st, with response from the
> team leader and panel chairman, Professor John Shepherd.
>
> [2]  For example at the geoengineering hearing at the House of Commons,
> November 2008.
>
> [3] For example at the congressional hearing on geoengineering, November
> 2009.
>
> --
>
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>
>

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