Posters note: I felt this was interesting in particular due to the
different attitude to AGW in Africa

http://eftngr.com/opal/news/1-latest-news/1549-can-geoengineering-help-africas-climate-fight.html

Can geoengineering help Africa’s climate fight?

Friday, 24 August 2012 14:39 Godwin Nnanna

Ours is a planet on fire.  Does that scare you?  If it does, then you will
probably be one of those wondering why the last few months have been hotter
than any you’ve experienced in your entire life time.  Many scientists will
simply give one answer – global warming.Though there still exists some
strong opponents, consensus on global warming has grown in the last decade
that many who once opposed it have become converts of some sort.A report
put out in November 2007 by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) stated that around mid-2005 the world crossed a vital and dangerous
climate threshold.  James Hansen of the United States’ National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA), whose findings supported the IPCC report
described climate change as ‘great moral issue’ at par with slavery.
 "We're in an emergency: you can see what's on the horizon over the next
few decades with the effects it will have on ecosystems, sea level and
species extinction."Hansen, called the ‘godfather of global warming’ by
some, is a controversial figure.  In a 1988 testimony to the U.S. Senate,
Hansen predicted then that Washington DC, the US capital city, would
experience nine days per year of high temperatures of 95 degrees or more
this decade if greenhouse gases continued to rise. This year, even before
August, Washington had 23 such days." When I testified before the Senate in
the hot summer of 1988, I warned of the kind of future that climate change
would bring to us and our planet. I painted a grim picture of the
consequences of steadily increasing temperatures, driven by mankind’s use
of fossil fuels.  My projections about increasing global temperature have
been proved true. But I failed to fully explore how quickly that average
rise would drive an increase in extreme weather," Hansen wrote in the
Washington Post early this month.One of those who share Hansen’s worry
about human-induced climate change is Prof. Aberra Mogessie, president of
the African Geological Society.  According to Mogessie, those who suggest
climate change might not be happening are not heretics, but are guilty of a
staggering lack of intellectual rigour.  The Ethiopian professor was one of
the participants at a meeting of African scientists in Senegal aimed at
xraying the science of solar geoengineering and its implication for
Africa.For the over 25 eminent African scientists that attended the
workshop from at least 14 African countries, the debate wasn’t whether or
not climate change is happening.  “The tendency to doubt climate change
here in Africa is almost non-existent because we see its impact everyday on
the continent, said Prof. Berhanu Abegaz, Executive Director of AAS, whose
organization was the lead organizer of the workshop.“There is no dearth of
consensus on the fact that climate change is real; what we have in short
supply are innovative ideas on how to mitigate its impact, and that’s why
we are gathered today,” Abegaz said as he opened discussions on the issue
of solar geoengineering, a nascent science for which there are as many
proponents as there are opponents.The science mostly refers to the
deliberate and large-scale engineering and manipulation of the planetary
environment to combat or counteract changes in atmospheric chemistry.
 Geoengineering techniques are very controversial: while some climate
scientists believe they may prove a quick and relatively cheap way to slow
global warming, others fear that when conducted in the upper atmosphere,
they could irrevocably alter rainfall patterns and interfere with the
earth's climate.According to Andrew Parker of UK’s Royal Society, the term
geoengineering covers everything from mundane methods for increasing carbon
storage in plants, soils and oceans to solar-radiation management (SRM)
techniques — for example, creating haze in the stratosphere to act as a
cheap layer of sunscreen.Scientists say rising atmospheric concentration of
greenhouse gases are the main causes of warming of the physical climate
system.  “By removing greenhouse gases from the atmosphere it would be
possible to reduce the speed at which the planet is warming,” Parker
explains.Speaking on the controversy over geoengineering, Ahmadou Lamine
Ndiaye noted that objective assessment of the merits and demerits is
necessary if any progress would be made on the subject.  “While we must not
take the expressed fears about geoengineering for granted, it is important
that fears do not lead to inaction.  Global warming is happening and
happening fast irrespective of the global politics around it.  For us in
the science community, what is required is a separation of the politics
from the science,” said Ndiaye a former Senegalese minister who doubles as
the president of AAS.Prof. Oye Ibidapo-Obe, former Vice Chancellor of
University of Lagos and president of the Nigeria Academy of Science,
believes Africa needs to tap into growing interest in the science.  “It is
important that Africa is not left behind in this science.  We must
encourage research in this area as a necessary step to building continental
consensus,” he said.In the absence of adequate reductions in anthropogenic
CO2 emissions, geo-engineering has been put forward as a major option that
might fix the world’s rapidly changing climate. Geoengineering proposals
are divided into two main groups: carbon dioxide removal (CDR) and solar
radiation management (SRM).  CDR methods are carbon capture and storage
systems that remove CO2 from the atmosphere without distorting natural
systems.  They are considered safe, sustainable and less controversial
aspect of geoengineering and come in the nature of bioenergy, biochar and
reforestation among others.  CDR methods are generally considered slow to
reduce global temperatures.SRM, described by some critics as the ‘quick
fix’ approach, remains the most controversial geoengineering method.  It
aims to produce a reduced net radiative forcing by balancing the positive
forcing of greenhouse gases with a negative forcing introduced by reducing
absorbed solar radiation.The Dakar workshop was an attempt by AAS and its
partners to galvanize African perspectives on SRM. Ideas for SRM include
increasing the amount of aerosols in the stratosphere, which could scatter
incoming solar heat away from earth’s surface, or creating low-altitude
marine clouds to reflect these same rays.“To take geoengineering methods
like solar radiation management seriously, we need to build realistic
models,” said Prof. Ibidapo-Obe. He maintains that while it is premature to
consider testing SRM at a very large, “it is not premature to understand
what we can learn from such tests.”Despite disagreement on when or whether
geoengineering technologies should be used, participants generally agreed
on the need to identify a responsible way forward for geoengineering
research.Given the nascent state of geoengineering technologies, it is
unlikely that they may be applied in Africa soon.  It may take a while
before the likes of Wade Youssou sees the kind of experiment the Bill
Gates-funded scientists plan for New Mexico next year, but some
participants at the Dakar workshop say any large-scale application of the
technology is likely to impact Africa directly or indirectly.Despite the
surge in interest at present, no SRM proposal has been tested or even
subjected to preliminary trials.  As the workshop participants agree, there
is a need for some form of regulation of SRM at the global level. One quick
trial in any part of the world may lead to some unilateral trials in
different other countries, a situation some fear might not augur well for
the entire global community.“As the effects of SRM are not currently
predictable with respect to their magnitude, location or details, such
unilateral efforts could lead to international tension or even conflict.
This is especially true since it will be difficult to establish whether any
specific drought, flood or heat wave was or was not the consequence of SRM
deployment,” warns Alex Hanafi of the Environment Defense Fund, whose
organization is one of those in the forefront of campaigns for global
governance of geoengineering.

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