Re: [geo] Population control, emission cuts, but geoengineering?The Nobel 
Laureate Thomas Schelling in his lecture to the World Bank "What Development 
Economists Need to Know About Climate Change." said that this was not a case 
where we should apply conventional cost benefit analysis. The bad was just so 
bad that we had to solve it. I agree.
The lecture is still available at 
http://info.worldbank.org/etools/bspan/PresentationView.asp?PID=2201&EID=994 It 
is quite long- about an hour but he is a super lecturer covering the whole 
subject really clearly. He is not a scientist. He is an economist.

He also suggests, that the bad being so bad means that it is not sensible to 
demand unequivocal proof of the bads. (or to point to possible goods like 
Greenland replacing the cornbelts of the USA -maybe)

John Gorman
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: William Fulkerson 
  To: [email protected] ; Hawkins, Dave 
  Cc: John Gorman ; Google Group ; Oliver Tickell 
  Sent: Friday, December 11, 2009 5:08 PM
  Subject: Re: [geo] Population control, emission cuts, but geoengineering?


  Dear John Nissen:
  How important is it to avoid loosing summer sea ice in the Arctic?  The bads 
from it include: positive feedback on warming due to albedo lowering and 
increased input of GHG emissions from permafrost melting and hydrate 
decomposition causing some acceleration of the impact of warming on the 
Greenland ice sheet, damage  to ecosystems (including iconic species) and 
social systems, possible harmful impact on northern latitude weather patterns, 
and perhaps others that I don't know about.  There are some goods to like the 
Northwest passage I suppose.  To your knowledge has anyone or any group tried 
to quantify these bads or do a rough cost/benefit analysis. One important part 
of your arguments, with which I am in agreement, is that the bads are pretty 
bad, and, therefore, there is an urgency to do something. If that can be shown 
unequivocally, then it argues for finding out if  some form of SRM can reduce 
the bads; i.e. Initiating an urgent, focused and comprehensive RD&D program.  
Perhaps the first step in the program is to do the cost/benefit as best it can 
be done.
  With best regards,
  Bill
  Bill Fulkerson, Senior Fellow
  Institute for a Secure and Sustainable Environment
  University of Tennessee
  311 Conference Center Bldg.
  Knoxville, TN 37996-4138
  [email protected]
  865-974-9221, -1838 FAX
  Home
  865-988-8084; 865-680-0937 CELL 
  2781 Wheat Road, Lenoir City, TN 37771- 

      
  On 12/11/09 11:18 AM, "John Nissen" <[email protected]> wrote:



    Hi Dave,

    I'll deal first with John's case from the "back of the envelope" 
calculation, and then with the scientific reticence.

    The case is even stronger than John Gorman has put it.  Even if emissions 
were stopped overnight, the mean annual temperature in the Arctic would 
continue to rise, and with an acceleration, due to the positive feedback of the 
sea ice - as ice (with high albedo) melts it gives way to open water (with low 
albedo) which absorbs most of the sunlight.  This albedo effect is thought to 
be part of the basic mechanism of polar amplification.  

    Now for the scientific reticence.

    It's not quite the entire scientific community who are reticent.  There are 
some good folks on this list who have stood out for geoengineering, David Keith 
for one.  He gave an excellent presentation on geoengineering, at the Royal 
Geographical Society, here in London.  He pointed out the ginormous quantity of 
CO2 mankind had dumped in the atmosphere, and he pointed out that some of this 
CO2 would last thousands of years - worse than nuclear waste!  It was quite 
clear that the associated global warming would last a time longer than the 
Arctic sea ice.

    The fear that academics have of their own peers is quite understandable.  
Paul Crutzen had enormous difficulty in publishing his seminal paper on 
geoengineering with stratospheric sulphate - and then received a lot of flack 
from colleagues after it was published - so much flack that he seems to have 
retired from the scene.

    The other fear, which is more forgiveable, is that academics, and 
scientific advisers generally, didn't want to disrupt the Copenhagen process. 
They have strained every ounce of intellect to persuade the politicians to get 
the best possible deal at Copenhagen.  This has meant that government advisers 
(like ex-IPCC Bob Watson in the UK) who perfectly understand the dangers of 
Arctic sea ice, have been telling the government that cutting emissions is the 
top priority.  What the advisers have not acknowledged is the speed of retreat 
of the sea ice - that is until their "Copenhagen Diagnosis" report [1].  The 
sea ice summer extent has been 40% below the IPCC models predictions for three 
years in a row!  So the summer sea ice is now expected disappear by 2040 - and 
there is the possibility of it disappearing end summer within a few years, 
especially because of the natural variability of Arctic weather.  The sea ice 
is indeed the "elephant in the room".

    However now that the politicians seem committed to obtaining good 
Copenhagen results, we could see everything change, and scientists will point 
out that, not only do we have to reduce emissions, but we have to do other 
things to save the planet.  It is already accepted by some leading climate 
scientists, such as Jim Hansen, that geoengineering will be required to suck 
CO2 out of the atmosphere.  It must also be accepted that SRM geoengineering is 
needed to save the Arctic sea ice - since nobody can dispute the argument.

    Cheers from Chiswick,

    John

    [1] http://www.copenhagendiagnosis.org/ 

    ---

    Hawkins, Dave wrote: 


      Come on folks.  There is no reason to dismiss the entire scientific
      community as afraid to publish a paper due to concerns about political
      correctness or impact on careers.  I don't buy this slur on an entire
      profession. 

      -----Original Message-----
      From: John Gorman [mailto:[email protected]] 
      Sent: Friday, December 11, 2009 3:33 AM
      To: Hawkins, Dave; [email protected]; [email protected]
      Subject: Re: [geo] Population control, emission cuts, but
      geoengineering?

      this is a case where the correct answer is that "there isnt any peer
      reviewed reference because it wouldnt be politically correct to say it
      and to do so would be to risk ones career"
      However the back of an envelope  calculation  is simple; The area of sea
      ice  has halved in little more than a decade. Whatever scenario one
      takes it will be gone in 30,40,50 years. Even with no further emissions
      from today the CO2 will stay at 380 and the temperature in the arctic
      will stay at 3 or 4 deg C above 50 years ago. The sea ice will continue
      to melt. With any conceivable emissions limitation scenario it will be
      gone much sooner.

      This is partly why I included that quote from Schumaker in my submission
      to the parliamentary committee. All this talk of tree rings, computers,
      models etc is just stopping us from recognising the obvious.
      Vick Pope would say " can you prove that this will happen?" no of course
      i cant. Its in the future.

      john Gorman
      ----- Original Message -----
      From: "Hawkins, Dave" <[email protected]> <mailto:[email protected]> 
      To: <[email protected]> <mailto:[email protected]> ; 
<[email protected]> <mailto:[email protected]> 
      Sent: Thursday, December 10, 2009 10:06 PM
      Subject: Re: [geo] Population control, emission cuts, but
      geoengineering?


        
       


        Hi John,
        In your note you say,  "The undisputed fact that emissions reduction 
        cannot save the Arctic sea ice, at its current rate of retreat..."
        Can you provide a reference or two that reaches this conclusion?
        (I'm not asking to dispute what you say but would like to see what you
            
         



        
       


        have in mind as support for the proposition.)
        Thanks
        David

        ----- Original Message -----
        From: [email protected]
            
         


      <[email protected]> 
<mailto:[email protected]> 
        
       


        To: Geoengineering <[email protected]> 
<mailto:[email protected]> 
        Sent: Thu Dec 10 16:46:31 2009
        Subject: [geo] Population control, emission cuts, but geoengineering?


        Hi all,

        Two excellent programmes on the environment and mankind's impact:

        David Attenborough:

            
         


      http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00pdjmk/Horizon_20092010_How_Many_
      People_Can_Live_on_Planet_Earth/
        
       



        Iain Stewart:
        http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00jf6md/Hot_Planet/

        Unfortunately, although Iain had sympathetic mention of Klaus
            
         


      Lackner's
        
       


        artificial trees, solar radiation management was represented by
            
         


      sulphur
        
       


        being fired into the stratosphere by guns - mention of ozone
            
         


      disruption
        
       


        - and the programme ended with punch line "geoengineering is too
        expensive and too dangerous".  This was an unwarranted dismissal of
            
         


      the
        
       


        technology with probably the best chance of saving the Arctic sea ice.
        The undisputed fact that emissions reduction cannot save the Arctic
            
         


      sea
        
       


        ice, at its current rate of retreat, was not mentioned.

        Cheers,

        John



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