http://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/post.cfm?id=owning-the-climate-will-geoengineer-2009-12-17

Dec 17, 2009 08:00 AM in Energy & Sustainability | 2 comments
Owning the climate: Will geoengineering help combat climate change?

By David Biello

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Mt. Pinatubo volcano above paddy fields in the philippines
COPENHAGEN—The controversy at this climate summit revolves around two
simple issues: Who cuts? Who pays? Of course, climate change does not
distinguish between a ton of carbon dioxide emitted from cutting down
a peat forest in Indonesia versus a ton emitted as a result of burning
coal in Germany. Therefore, a relatively new term is beginning to stir
some controversy here in the Danish capital outside the direct
negotations: geoengineering.

That's in part because the "Conference of Parties" negotiations have
taken so long. After 17 years, the basic issues remain to be
addressed, and overall emissions have grown since 2000—the year
enshrined in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
treaty as the peak year of greenhouse gas emissions for the developed
world (the U.S. signed this agreement). With little hope of reducing
emissions in the near term—some scientists, such as geochemist Wally
Broecker of Columbia University think we'll be lucky to stop at
concentrations of 550 parts per million in the atmosphere—more radical
solutions are on offer: artificial, eternal volcanoes; using saltwater
mist to increase cloud cover; even flotillas of mirrors in space.

"Geoengineering is plan B," says oceanographer John Shepherd of the
U.K's Royal Society of plans to deliberately tinker with the planet's
climate. "It's not to be adopted unless absolutely necessary."

After all, "geoengineering is technically possible," Shepherd adds.
But "in most cases, it's still on the backs of envelopes and there are
very many things to be concerned about, like environmental impacts."

It's not just environmental impacts from filling the skies with sulfur
dioxide to mimic the cooling impact of a massive volcanic eruption,
like Mount Pinatubo in 1991, among other plans on offer. "This will
have vast human rights implications, on self-determination, on the
right to food," says Diana Bronson, program manager at the ETC Group.
"We're talking about technologies that would modify the entire
planet."

And though building a sulfur dioxide smokestack to the stratosphere is
an expensive proposition, there are simpler and cheaper ways to
accomplish these ends, including dumping such particles from a
helicopter. "It would take 10 Howitzers firing a shell a minute a year
to get sulfates into the atmosphere," says Jason Blackstock, an
analyst at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis.
"Fifty to eighty countries in the world are capable of this."

Already, Russian scientist Yuri Izrael has begun to experiment and the
Chinese routinely seed clouds to produce rain or snow. The Indians and
Germans have conducted scientific testing of dumping iron in the ocean
to attempt to promote algae growth and thus carbon sequestration.

"We aren't going back to the climate we had before," says Jane Long,
associate director for energy and environment at Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory. "We are going to be managing the environment, not
just the climate but also hydrology, soils. We have to learn how to do
that."

Of course, there are geoengineering options that are not as dangerous,
such as mechanical devices to suck CO2 out of the air. Physicist Klaus
Lackner of Columbia University and others are working on such devices
and believe they could be accomplished for $300 per metric ton of CO2
removed. And others advocate restoring organic carbon to the soil in
the form of so-called biochar (charcoal), which could sequester as
much as 900 megatonnes of carbon over the next several decades.

But still questions of governance remain. For example, who will
determine the appropriate level for CO2 concentrations in the
atmosphere? Freezing Russians or sweltering island states? Who will
control the global thermostat?

"Reducing emissions should remain the top priority for the foreseeable
future," Shepherd says, "but serious research is needed rather than
enthusiasts working in their spare time." Perhaps control of the
world's climate shouldn't be trusted to basement tinkerers or
scientists.
Read More About: geoengineering

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