Bob etal 

Thanks for a very complete response. 

I appreciate the rationale for limit of 2 or 3 or more degrees maximum, but am 
going to still push for a 1.5 degree limit (ala Jim Hansen) - thinking we might 
thereby get 2 or 2.5. I feel we could even do 1.5 if we got serious - and of 
course we are not. I'm pretty sure the smaller temperature rises are the 
cheaper - not the more expensive - approach 

Re item 2b and a CDR analysis, I agree we need one (or more). Some LCA's are 
beginning to appear for Biochar - many PhD theses in the woks I'll bet. 

Re 1 ppm per year for 100 years - Jim Hansen is trying for a quicker response 
(in part because he starts sooner and lower). I'd appreciate a thought on the 
needed Gt C/yr to accompany your 1 ppm per annum. More or less than 3? (still 
trying to understand the way the ocean will react over 50 (Hansen's) years.) 

Re your last paragraphs and 1 W/m2 - I am going to pass, until I hear a lot 
more. You have an interesting use of "conservative" and "liberal" in here. 

Ron 

----- Original Message -----
From: "Robert Socolow" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Cc: [email protected], [email protected] 
Sent: Tuesday, June 21, 2011 12:57:14 PM 
Subject: RE: [geo] Cost of Air Capture and the APS report 




Ron, Ken, and others: 



Given that the Lima meeting is in its middle day today, let me push everything 
aside to write answers to Ron’s questions. I am speaking only for myself. 



1. Yes, there is only one change, aside from formatting, in the June 1 version 
of the APS report. We say so on the second page of the preface. As we were 
issuing the unformatted version at the end of April, David Keith identified a 
clear mistake in our report, involving the pressure drop per meter for a 
specific packing material, which we had carried forward from a 2006 paper. 
Fortunately, one member of our committee, Marco Mazzotti, was an author of that 
paper. With one of his co-authors, he updated his earlier work with new 
information from the manufacturer of the packing, additionally found an error 
in his earlier analysis, followed a hunch that there was an easy fix for us by 
substituting one packing for another, and we buttoned this up. The new packing 
is cheaper, but we verified that our initial cost estimate for packing had been 
so conservative that the new packing actually fit the assumed price better. I 
am aware at this time of no outright error in our report. People may find some, 
and if they do I hope they will tell me about them. 



2. Item a. In my view, the experts (specifically Keith, Lackner, and 
Eisenberger) were given adequate time to interact with us. Our project took two 
years. We established groundrules at the front end that there would be an 
arms-length relationship and (confirmed more than once) that as a matter of 
policy we would not learn confidential information. All three presented to us 
at our kick-off meeting in March 2009, reviewed a draft (along with almost 20 
others) in April 2010, and communicated repeatedly with us. I had the personal 
goal of being sure that the key ideas in their work were understood by our 
committee and commented upon in our report. Nonetheless, none of the three of 
them is happy with the result. One comment all three would make is that they 
would have done the study differently. They would have asked what air capture 
could cost if one were to assume success in the presence of risk; our committee 
felt that in the absence of reviewable published data, this was an illegitimate 
task. We decided to include one cost estimate based on a benchmark design, 
resulting in a system whose cost is probably quite a lot higher than $600/tCO2, 
and in the process, by careful attention to methodology, the reader can learn 
how to think about costs. Personally, I now appreciate (and the reader will too 
who works through the calculation) that the most underestimated cost factor is 
the pressure drop as air moves through the contactor, which enters not only as 
a an energy cost but also through its impact on “net carbon,” even for largely 
decarbonized power. All three experts are working on low-pressure-drop systems 
for this reason. 



Item b. I know of no comparable study. We call explicitly for some group to do 
some comparable analysis of biological air capture: afforestation, biochar, 
BECS – maybe one study for each. In that instance it will be critical to 
understand what scale-up looks like: small-scale deployment is cheap and could 
have major co-benefits. But how much planetary engineering is entailed if one 
aims for the reduction of atmospheric CO2 by 1 ppm per year for a hundred years 
– negative carbon on a monumental scale? 



3. ASAP means “as soon as possible.” I think one needs to be careful with such 
language. If one is in a car, one can slam on the brakes or brake carefully. 
Both could be called smallest-possible-distance braking, but the meaning of 
“possible” would be different in the two cases, with more conditionality in the 
second case. When Pacala and I wrote the wedges paper in 2004, we identified a 
societal goal of an emissions rate at mid-century no higher than today’s; if 
restated in today’s language, 30 MtCO2/yr in 2061. That goal is now considered 
timid by many – it is associated with “3 degrees,” while the more politically 
correct “2 degrees” is associated with 15 MtCO2/yr. My view is that we 
shouldn’t choose between these two goals now. We should make that decision in 
10 to 20 years, but concentrate now on getting on a new path. But I think it is 
also important, and will make the activist community more credible, if we 
concede in some prominent way that the world could overreact to climate change, 
undervaluing what can go wrong when “solutions” are deployed, from the 
destruction of forest ecosystems to nuclear proliferation. In short, we want to 
keep conditionality at the front of our minds, not treat it as an afterthought. 



We should be suspicious of distractions, and, to my mind, direct air capture is 
one of these. Air capture is a close neighbor of post-combustion capture at 
coal and gas power plants, a much cheaper mitigation strategy. This simple fact 
about technological neighbors tells is to be very careful always to state that 
near the top of the mitigation agenda for several decades is decarbonizing the 
global power system. There is something grotesque about pulling CO2 our of the 
air at one place while pouring it into the air at four-hundred times greater 
concentration at another place. First things first. 



The underlying irresolvable argument is political. Is a radical goal (2 
degrees) that requires instant comprehensive mitigation best suited to spur 
action, even when activists widely concede (mostly privately) that the goal is 
unachievable and has the potential to lead people to throw caution to the 
winds? Or is a liberal goal (3 degrees) -- more suited to deliberative action, 
more respectful of the legitimate needs of developing countries, and more 
matched to the building of coalitions -- a better choice? Which is more likely 
to lead to our getting started and not having our grandchildren looking at “5 
degrees”? 



I leave the Lima group with a final thought. Is SRM only an emergency strategy? 
What are the pros and cons of a continuous ground-bass deployment of 1 W/m^2 of 
stratospheric aerosol negative forcing, as an overall helper on the margin and 
as a way of learning about larger deployment? 



Rob 















From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
On Behalf Of [email protected] 
Sent: Tuesday, June 21, 2011 12:03 PM 
To: Robert Socolow 
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [geo] Cost of Air Capture and the APS report 




Robert and ccs 

1. Thanks for the added links and information. Not yet mentioned on this list 
is that your APS panel changed (added?) only one footnote (#18) - and as near 
as I can tell - changed no conclusions. Still projecting $600/tonCO2, it seems. 


2. As you may have noticed there has been some discussion this list on how we 
(Society) should be evaluating climate technologies. I do think that groups 
such as the APS have done and can do a great public service with studies of the 
type you have performed here (but I know too little of the topic to know if 
your panel or Keith should be given the higher believability rating). I thank 
you for taking on a thankless task. Two questions for you, based on my concerns 
(as at what may happen in Lima, for instance) 

a. Do you feel that the air capture experts were given adequate time to present 
to your panel - or might you now do something different procedurally? 

b. Are you aware of any other similar (highly technical, multiple and 
presumably un-biased panelists) technology assessment in the works (by 
professional societies or anyone) for any of the other field(s) of 
geoengineering? 


3 Your proposal with Prof Pacala to use the simplified concept of seven wedges 
reaching 1 Gt C each in 50 years time (and 25 Gt C each avoided) has been very 
helpful (unfortunately not yet very well followed). Several questions on that 
as related to the interests of this list: 

a. Since we all (?) are trying to get into carbon negative territory ASAP, can 
you comment on having each wedge grow twice as rapidly so as to get to zero 
fossil carbon by 2060. This being even longer than Jim Hansen desires, of 
course - so can you endorse an even shorter growth period for the (roughly 
seven? or do we need 14 now?) wedges. 

b. Have you given thought as to what a similar carbon negative wedge split 
should be on the CDR side? How much BECCS, air capture, ocean deposition. tree 
planting, Biochar, etc? Does the wedge concept still work as well? At what time 
point in the 50 year history for the "traditional" Pacala-Socolow wedge growth 
would you recommend starting the CDR wedges? Soon? 

c. Is there a way that the SRM technologies fit into a wedge description? 


Thanks in advance. Ron 
----- Original Message -----


From: "Robert Socolow" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected], [email protected] 
Cc: [email protected] 
Sent: Monday, June 20, 2011 8:33:12 PM 
Subject: RE: [geo] Cost of Air Capture and the APS report 




Ron and others: I attach .pdfs for the report (revised) and the press release. 
The links are: 



Report: 
http://www.aps.org/policy/reports/popa-reports/loader.cfm?csModule=security/getfile&PageID=244407
 . 



Press release: http://www.aps.org/about/pressreleases/dac11.cfm 



The links have not been changed. 



Rob Socolow 





From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
On Behalf Of [email protected] 
Sent: Monday, June 20, 2011 8:08 PM 
To: [email protected] 
Cc: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [geo] Cost of Air Capture and the APS report 




David - Can you provide a link to the revised APS report? (I failed.) Thanks 
Ron 



From: "David Keith" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Monday, June 20, 2011 4:38:16 PM 
Subject: [geo] Cost of Air Capture and the APS report 



Several recent posts have referred to the American Physical Society’s report on 
Air Capture. 



We posted a critique of the report and in turn the APS released an updated 
version that—using a post-facto kluge—addressed two of the errors that had 
identified. 



The our comments are posted on www.carbonengineering.com the website of our Air 
Capture startup company, the deep link is here: 
http://www.carbonengineering.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/CE_APS_DAC_Comments.pdf
 . 



We at Carbon Engineering are self-interested. Of course! But that cuts both 
ways. We have a huge incentive do to quality engineering that can be brought to 
market and not to waste our time on stuff that does not make sense. 



Speaking for myself, I have opportunities to do commercial work on both AC and 
on biomass with capture (BECCS). And I have access to high quality proprietary 
engineering and economic analysis of both. If I thought that BECCS was much 
cheaper than AC then I would not be working on AC. 



David 













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