Pat,

 

Those of us who work on geoengineering don't generally share your rosy
optimistic view of climate change.

 

I have never encountered, nor heard any tale of someone encountering, this
strawman person that you throw up that believes that geoengineering is a
substitute for emission reduction.  Perhaps such a person exists (more
likely, I suspect, is that anyone who would take that position is someone
that wouldn't want to reduce emissions whether geoengineering existed or
not).  You are wasting your time and energy complaining about a problem that
doesn't exist, while the rest of us are worried about the real planet.

 

Those of us who are working on geoengineering are doing so because we are
not as confident as you are that the pace of emission reductions will leave
us with a world where climate change is minor, and we believe that there is
at least some possibility that geoengineering may reduce suffering of both
humans and non-humans.

 

Not that I expect you to change your beliefs. 

 

doug

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of etcgroup
Sent: Wednesday, March 20, 2013 7:41 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [geo] New blog piece by Pat Mooney, ETC Group

 

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-k
iller-plane-chiller-plane-crasher
<http://www.etcgroup.org/content/geoengineering---opium-people-pain-killer-p
lane-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 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 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 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.

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

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-t
o-stop-global-warming/.

David Hodgkinson, "Geoengineering's reckless risk," Climate Spectator, 4
March 4 2013:
http://www.businessspectator.com.au/article/2013/3/4/science-environment/geo
engineerings-reckless-risk.

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-wi
th-big-connections.html.

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