Hi Neil,

nice to hear that someone in this group is dealing and welling to look
for biotechnology means to fight climate change. I m working on
climate chnage impact of Mediterranean forests and preparing a paper
on forest biotechnology as a way to mitigate climate change and REDD.
I would like to read your paper and send some feedback
warm greeting
happy xmas
Abdetif El Ouahrani

On Dec 18, 5:40 pm, Neil Farbstein <[email protected]> wrote:
> HI everyone. I wrote a brief report on genetic engineering and biotech
> means of reducing methane and CO2 levels in the atmosphere. especially
> in the arctic permafrost. If you are willing to sign a nondisclosure
> agreement I will send you copies. I want scientists to review it and
> tell me what prospects of it working are.  It covers the fields of
> soil microbiology, ecology  and oceanographic ecology. Contact Neil
> Farbstein at [email protected]
>
> On Dec 18, 10:28 am, Dan Whaley <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >http://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/post.cfm?id=owning-the-climate...
>
> > Dec 17, 2009 08:00 AM in Energy & Sustainability | 2 comments
> > Owning the climate: Will geoengineering help combat climate change?
>
> > By David Biello
>
> > e-mail print comment
>
> > 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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