Dear all, please find below a new piece published by ETC Group this morning. 
Link and full text pasted. Many thanks. 

http://www.etcgroup.org/content/geoengineering-%E2%80%93-opium-people-pain-killer-plane-chiller-plane-crasher

Geoengineering - The Opium of the People
Pain-killer, plane-chiller, Plane crasher
The Artificial Intelligence of Geoengineering, Part II

In the first two months of 2013, leading advocates of geoengineering have 
argued variously that researching geoengineering (as a Plan B to GHG emission 
cuts) is like helping a cancer patient manage pain while seeking a cure; or, 
that an accelerating gaggle of executive jets circling the equator could spray 
enough sulphuric acid in the stratosphere to keep the Earth’s thermostat within 
bounds; or, that a single island state could thumb its nose at the military 
might of the major powers and geoengineer the planet to its liking. So much 
lobbying and still months to go before the IPCC delivers its fifth assessment 
report – with  an anticipated treatment of geoengineering.

Pain-killer: Ken Caldeira[i] of the Carnegie Institution for Science at 
Stanford is arguing that solar radiation management (SRM) is a short- to 
medium-term strategy to ward off the worst effects of climate change while 
politicians and scientists work to mitigate emissions and address the 
fundamental causes. Specifically, Caldeira insists that geoengineering is like 
giving a cancer patient morphine to make the pain tolerable while the major 
research effort continues to find a cure for cancer. Although Caldeira notes 
that diverting research and resources to painkillers could take away money from 
addressing the climate conundrum, he insists it is only humane. The analogy may 
be  diverting but the intelligence is artificial. There has never been any 
connection between the development of painkillers and efforts to cure any 
disease. Painkillers and anti-depressants are a large and profitable market, 
but as grateful as a cancer victim may be for pain relief, the cancer’s 
life-threatening trajectory soldiers on. The patient won’t long mistake the 
respite for the remedy. Very differently, geoengineering is a painkiller whose 
purpose and profits are directly tied to the prolongation of the GHG disease. 
Plan B is a remedy for politicians and polluters who want to transfer tough 
socioeconomic decisions to another election or even another generation.

Plane chiller: Pursuing the drug-addiction analogy, physics professor David 
Keith at Harvard[ii] describes a fast and cheap SRM “solution” that requires 
higher and higher doses to achieve the same “fix.” Keith has calculated that 
if, in 2020, one or two Gulfstream business jets began flying 20 km above the 
equator blowing 25,000 metric tons of sulphuric acid into the lower 
stratosphere they could block about 1% of the sunlight within the first year. 
By 2040 however, to maintain the same temperature (“high”?), Keith estimates 
that the acid dose would need a tenfold boost (to 250,000 metric tons per 
annum) and the number of executive jets would climb to 10 or more. Around 2070, 
100 or more planes would be shooting up a million tons of acid a year at an 
annual cost in the low billions. (Business jets as usual?) At some time before 
the stratosphere clogs up with airplane wings excreting fossil fuel emissions 
we would have to figure a way to safely stuff our planet into a detox unit. 

Plane crasher: Science entrepreneur, Nathan Myhrvold recently told the Climate 
Spectator[iii] that Plan B is inevitable because an island nation like the 
Maldives – clearly threatened by sea level rise – will launch its own 
Gulfstream jets or hoist sulphate-spewing pipes into the stratosphere – to ward 
off the rising tides. Myrhvold seems unperturbed that a unilateral initiative 
by a tiny state might occasion the ire of the US, Indian or Chinese air forces 
less appreciative of the island’s sovereignty than of their own vulnerability. 
Drug addicts – and nations – have fought over less. 

The artificial intelligence of geoengineering continues. Stretched out, the 
brain’s nerve fibers can circle the globe four times but geoengineers still 
can’t get their heads around responsible climate governance.[iv]


[i] Ken Caldeira,  “We Need Symptomatic Relief,”, Earth Island Journal, 
February 2013: 
http://www.earthisland.org/journal/index.php/eij/article/hack_the_sky.

[ii] David Rotman, “A Cheap and Easy Plan to Stop Global Warming,” Technology 
Review, February 8, 2013: 
http://www.technologyreview.com/featuredstory/511016/a-cheap-and-easy-plan-to-stop-global-warming/.

[iii] David Hodgkinson, “Geoengineering’s reckless risk,” Climate Spectator, 4 
March 4 2013: 
http://www.businessspectator.com.au/article/2013/3/4/science-environment/geoengineerings-reckless-risk.

[iv] Colin Barras, “Mind maths: Small world with big connections,” New 
Scientist electronic edition, 9 February 9 2013: 
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21729032.000-mind-maths-small-world-with-big-connections.html.

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