Hi Ron, 

 

My thanks for your comments too.  Re your specific concern about CDR, I
think that to the extent that those outside this list have an opinion
associated with the word geoengineering, it is most likely associated with
SRM, at least if they have negative connotations with the word.  So I would
agree that there's no advantage to CDR folk to use the word geoengineering.
And personally, I see no disadvantage to SRM to use the word geoengineering,
if that's what people already think it means.  Of course, that's my guess,
not formal research.

 

Re testing, a few comments (note of course, that we didn't script any of our
discussions in the video, so some of those comments there may have lacked
full caveats).

1.       In response to Nadine, we certainly are not proposing testing, we
simply believe that we need to understand what tests could tell us, since
they could be a part of a strategy to manage risk (if we knew we could never
test, that might alter our perspective)

2.       I do not think that "can we test it" is really even a very
well-posed question.  Of course there are things we can learn.  Of course
there are things we can't learn.  That's true for every test of anything;
the real question is what we can or can't learn and what it would take.  

3.       I do not think that anyone would ever conduct a test just because
we wanted to know what SRM might do, so that we would then have it available
as an option in case we needed it.  That was what I intended to mean in
saying that I didn't think it would ever be tested.  

4.       However, if there is ever a point at which the risks of not doing
SRM are clear and substantial to a sufficiently broad swath of population
that it seems quite plausible that they outweigh the risks of doing SRM,
then I do think that rather than simply turning things on at say 4 W/m2, it
is reasonable to start smaller, and design the initial subscale deployment
in a way that gives as much information as we can get as soon as possible.
In that sense, I do believe that testing still has the potential to be
useful as part of risk-reduction.  

5.       SRM can still be a quick response to a "climate emergency", but
only if the emergency is sufficiently severe that we are willing to accept
the risks of SRM.

6.       I don't think that anyone knows today whether the consequences of
SRM will be negative for any region (relative to not doing SRM, that is.)  I
think that most studies suggest that that is actually not likely to be the
case, but the reality is simply that we don't know (and I strongly disagree
with the folks who imply that they do know).  More research would help.  

7.       And finally, I am neither an SRM proponent nor an opponent, and
this paper was not intended to either be in favour or against it.  I am
simply in favour of sufficient research to understand it more.  I do not
personally think that anyone has sufficient information today to know
whether implementing some form of SRM will be better or will not be better
than not implementing it.  (For pretty much any useful sense of the word
better, which I acknowledge is ill-defined.)  I know there are people on
this list who disagree with me.

 

 

 

8.       And maybe one more point. There were a couple of comments last year
to the effect of geoengineering not being testable without full-scale
implementation.  If "full-scale" means 4W/m2, then I think its clear we can
learn useful information from a test that is smaller than that.  If
"full-scale" means using enough radiative forcing so that the test itself
could have unforeseen negative consequences, then I agree that any useful
test would satisfy that criterion.  In that very narrow sense, I agree with
both Jim Fleming and Alan et al.'s statements last year - but I think its
important to clear the record rather than leave impressions from
over-simplified statements, since not everyone who read those statements
would interpret them the same way.

 

doug

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ken Caldeira
Sent: Friday, October 21, 2011 7:26 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]; geoengineering;
[email protected]
Subject: Re: [geo] Can We Test Geoengineering? paper and YouTube videos

 

Ron,

 

Thank you for your substantive comments.

 

You are correct that we are talking only about SRM and Marchetti spoke only
about an approach to carbon storage -- something that today many (most?)
people would not consider to be 'geoengineering'.  

 

My own view is that the term 'geoengineering' is not particularly useful as
it refers to an odd collection of things. I think it is impossible to define
a set of properties for which there would be wide agreement that all things
with those properties are 'geoengineering' and no things without those
properties are 'geoengineering'.

 

Best,

 

Ken

 

PS. Thanks also for your stylistic comments on our videos.  We are trying
out this idea of making videos in an effort to improve communication.

I agree that the conversational style is more engaging than having one
person speak.
_______________
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

See our YouTube:
Sensitivity of temperature and precipitation to frequency of climate
forcing: Ken Caldeira <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kDRYM_5S0AE> 
Her lab, mules, and carbon capture and storage: Sally Benson speaks to Near
Zero  <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oMJJn6eP8J0> 



On Sat, Oct 22, 2011 at 9:11 AM, <[email protected]> wrote:

Ken (cc List, adding Ken's co-author, Doug and Ms Brachatzek):

   1.  This is foremost to thank you for making and supplying the short
videos.  I found both helpful and they encouraged me to also look at the
paper - unusual since I am not usually looking (lack of time, not interest)
that closely at the SRM side of Geoengineering.  

   2.  Of the 12 videos I found at your site, I believe only the second
below had two participants.  I thought that was effective - and encourage
you to do more with that back-and-forth format.

   3.  Your last few minutes in the joint dialog I thought was the most
informative, where I believe you and Doug agreed that it was very unlikely
to ever see serious SRM testing (and your reasoning seems correct).   You
both seemed to agree however that SRM could still occur - if we get to a
certain point (Doug mentioned 20 years - and this seems reasonable).  But
this reasoning seems like a reason to forget SRM altogether - as a main
rationale for SRM has been that it could be accomplished quickly.  And I
have, until this paper, been thinking it might be put in safely enough.  The
uncertainty Doug found about (for instance) rainfall impacts in India,
strikes me as pretty strong proof that the impacts are almost certain to be
negative for some groups/countries.  Did I miss something?   Is there
anything in this paper that SRM proponents would find supportive?

   4.  In the last minute, Ken called attention to the Cesare Marchetti
first use of the term "Goengineeering".   I don't have access to the main
2007 paper, but in a 2006 IIASA paper with similar title,  he used the term
only to describe CCS - and then only with ocean deposition.  The term has
changed a lot.  The Marchetti paper is at:
   http://www.iiasa.ac.at/Admin/PUB/Documents/RM-76-017.pdf

  5.  But the above required me to also look closely (again, apologies for
repeating myself) for whether there could be confusion in the paper and both
short videos on the differences between "Geoengineering", SRM, and CDR.
There was a slight mention of the second in the first, but the term CDR
never was mentioned (I think).  I fear that the (generally accepted to be
much less risky) term CDR will be assumed  to have all the same problems as
brought out in this paper by Doug etal.  This is therefore a repeat plea
that the term "Geoengineering" be slowly phased out in favor of the two
terms SRM and CDR.   (Just as Marchetti's use to mean CCS has disappeared.)
It is also to ask Doug and Ken if there is anything cautionary in this
recent paper that carries over to the world of CDR ?

   6.  I believe that my interpretation of the negative conclusion about
being likely to ever do meaningful SRM testing should overcome the several
concerns of Ms. Badine Brachatzek.  I took her remarks in this thread to be
one of concern for (the US) pushing testing - and that is not what I heard
in the joint video being discussed in this thread.

Ron

From: "Ken Caldeira" <[email protected]>
To: "geoengineering" <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, October 20, 2011 2:20:47 PM
Subject: [geo] Can We Test Geoengineering? paper and YouTube videos



Folks,

Please find attached:

MacMynowski, D. G., Keith, D., Caldeira, K., and Shin, H.-J., 2011. "Can we
test geoengineering?" Energy and Environmental Science, DOI:
10.1039/c1ee01256h. 

We also made a couple of YouTube videos about this paper:

Doug MacMynowski discussing "Can We Test Geoengineering?"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0spy0Yn_nko

Doug MacMynowski and Ken Caldeira in discussion:  Can We Test
Geoengineering?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6o8wBo4R7ME

Enjoy,

Ken

PS.  Be aware that these videos are extemporaneous talking I believe without
any internal edits, so not everything is said as carefully as one might have
liked.

_______________
Ken Caldeira

Carnegie Institution Dept of Global Ecology
260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
+1 650 704 7212 <tel:%2B1%20650%20704%207212>
[email protected]
http://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab  @kencaldeira

See our YouTube:
Sensitivity of temperature and precipitation to frequency of climate
forcing: Ken Caldeira <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kDRYM_5S0AE> 
Her lab, mules, and carbon capture and storage: Sally Benson speaks to Near
Zero  <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oMJJn6eP8J0> 

 

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