Ken,

First of all, send the list of who in Washington has $10 M and wants to
spend it on geoengineering.

Second, recall the line in the AMS AGU Policy statement calling for "study
of historical, ethical, legal, and  social implications of geoengineering"
Since the greatest risks seem to include rending the social fabric if
someone actually deploys geoengineering, I think research on the social
dimensions is paramount.

I would be happy to convene some social science meetings for $ 0.1-1 M

Jim

James Rodger Fleming
Professor and Director
STS Program, Colby College
5881 Mayflower Hill
Waterville, ME  04901
Ph: 207-859-5881
Fax: 207-859-5846
http://www.colby.edu/profile/jfleming
http://web.colby.edu/jfleming





From:  Ken Caldeira <[email protected]>
Reply-To:  <[email protected]>
Date:  Mon, 18 Apr 2011 08:08:25 -0700
To:  geoengineering <[email protected]>
Subject:  [geo] How would you allocate US$10 million per year to most reduce
climate risk?

Folks,

There is some discussion in DC about making some small amount of public
funds available to support SRM and CDR research.

In today's funding climate, it is much more likely that someone might be
given authority to re-allocate existing budgets than that they would
actually be given significantly more money for this effort. Thus, the modest
scale.

If you were doing strategic planning for a US federal agency, and you were
told that you had a budget of $10 million per year and that you should
maximize the amount of climate risk reduction obtainable with that $10
million, what would you allocate it to and why?

Best,

Ken

___________________________________________________
Ken Caldeira

Carnegie Institution Dept of Global Ecology
260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
+1 650 704 7212 [email protected]
http://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab  @kencaldeira

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