Note that Boeing, which designed the system to scrub carbon dioxide out of the 
air in the International Space Station, has an engineering group in southern 
California that thinks the system could be scaled up to remove carbon dioxide 
from the atmosphere for approximately $100/metric ton.

Charles H. Greene
Ocean Resources and Ecosystems Program
Department of Earth & Atmospheric Sciences
4120 Snee Hall, Cornell University
Ithaca, NY 14853-2701


On Mar 2, 2013, at 7:15 AM, Nathan Currier wrote:

Just to note, re Ken's initial reply, and some of the subsequent discussion, 
that, controversially, NASA's mission was altered twice during the Bush years:
so, first it was quietly added in 2002 to its mission (which had been much as 
Ken says) that it was also "to understand and protect" the earth, but then this 
was removed, in 2006, making quite a stir........it was an intentional swipe at 
climate science, surely.....probably something Obama could reverse very 
easily....

It would certainly make tons of sense to have a drive now to quickly reverse 
this mission change, yet again.....and then - whether Ron is right or not about 
doing things best
in a widely diversified way, given the nature of the climate beast -  let NASA 
be a "billboard" player & show off its new protector prowess by removing 10 or 
15Gt/yr through various CDR techniques.......

cheers, Nathan

here's from Union of Concerned Scientists on NASA mission -

At NASA, Earth is Removed from Mission Statement

In February 2006, the phrase "to understand and protect the home planet" was 
quietly removed from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)'s 
official mission statement. Because agency mission statements are routinely 
used to justify research and funding decisions, many scientists were not only 
surprised to discover the change, but also concerned that the change meant more 
funding would be shifted away from studies of Earth, including climate change 
research, and redirected to NASA's planned new series of manned space missions.

A NASA atmospheric chemist commented, “We refer to the mission statement in all 
our research proposals that go out for peer review…as civil servants, we’re 
paid to carry out NASA’s mission. When there was that very easy-to-understand 
statement that our job is to protect the planet that made it much easier to 
justify this kind of work.”1  NASA scientists responding to a Union of 
Concerned Scientists survey also expressed concerns that changing priorities 
and lack of funding were seriously undermining the agency’s ability to continue 
with high-quality research into climate change.2

The agency’s current mission statement calls on the agency “to pioneer the 
future in space exploration, scientific discovery and aeronautics research.”3  
It is the first time since NASA’s founding in 1958 that the mission statement 
does not explicitly include mention of the Earth. A NASA spokesperson was 
quoted in the New York Times as saying that the mission statement was rewritten 
“to square the statement with President Bush’s goal of pursuing human 
spaceflight to the Moon and Mars.”4

Scientists’ funding fears are already more than hypothetical. A 2006 report by 
the National Research Council (NRC, a part of the National Academy of 
Sciences), noted that funding cuts currently in place at NASA will mean 
canceling or not replacing several of the agency’s Earth observation 
satellites. This will, in the words of the NRC report, cause a “severe deficit” 
in Earth observation capabilities and compromise the government’s ability to 
“fulfill its obligations in . . . [the] Climate Change Science Program”5

NASA’s previous mission statement was adopted in 2002 in an open process with 
input from across NASA’s 19,000 employees. In contrast, NASA researchers said 
the new mission was revised with no discussion or public announcement of any 
kind.6

________________________________


1. Revkin, A.C. “NASA’s Goals delete mention of home 
planet,”<http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/22/science/22nasa.html?ex=1311220800&en=74c926c8939e58e0&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss>
 New York Times, July 22, 2006.
2. Union of Concerned Scientists and Government Accountability Project, 2007. 
Atmosphere of 
Pressure<http://www.ucsusa.org/scientific_integrity/interference/atmosphere-of-pressure.html>,
 p.22.
3. 2006 NASA Strategic 
Plan<http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/142303main_2006_NASA_Strategic_Plan_sm.pdf>.  NASA 
Mission Statement on p. 3.  Accessed March 8, 2007.
4. Revkin.
5. National Research Council, 2006. Space studies board annual report 2005. 
Washington D.C.
6. Revkin.



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