Thanks, Andrew. As for the title's question " ..are humans the ones who are out 
of control?" the answer is obviously "yes" otherwise we wouldn't be having a 
discussion about increasing CO2 and it's global consequences and needed 
remedies. It is the ongoing failure of social, political, and cultural systems 
to deal with this problem that should force everyone to consider other possible 
solutions including "evil" technology. At the end of the day social, political, 
and cultural systems will make the ultimate decisions as to how to proceed. 
Given what is at stake it would be best for those systems and the planet to 
fully, carefully, and quickly evaluate all options rather than prematurely and 
ill-advisedly jettisoning possible solutions including those involving 
engineering. 
As for engineers as "deities", this apparently speaks to a perceived lack of 
social control over technology. Fine, let's make sure society is the ultimate 
deity and "decider". Still, whoever is going to play God here is going to need 
to know to the best they can all of the options and consequences before 
(quickly) proceeding. So let's cut the demonization of the potential 
contributors here, and get on with determining what viable social, political, 
and technical solutions we may have (if any).
-Greg



________________________________
From: Andrew Lockley <andrew.lock...@gmail.com>
To: geoengineering <geoengineering@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Fri, April 5, 2013 1:14:28 AM
Subject: [geo] Adam Corner – On geoengineering


http://www.aeonmagazine.com/nature-and-cosmos/adam-corner-geoengineering-climate-change/

Blue sky thinking
Geoengineers are would-be deities who dream of mastering the heavens. But are 
humans the ones who are out of control?
by Adam Corner - a research associate in psychology at Cardiff University. His 
latest book is Promoting Sustainable Behaviour: A Practical Guide to What 
Works (2012).
At a small conference in Germany last May, I found myself chuckling at the 
inability of the meeting organisers to control the room’s electronic blinds. 
It’s always fun when automated technology gets the better of its human masters, 
but this particular malfunction had a surreal pertinence. Here was a room full 
of geoengineering experts, debating technologies to control the climate, all 
the 
while failing to keep the early summer sun’s rays away from their PowerPoint 
presentations. As the blinds clicked and whirred in the background, opening and 
closing at will, I asked myself: are we really ready to take control of the 
global thermostat?Geoengineering, the idea of using large-scale technologies to 
manipulate the Earth’s temperature in response to climate change, sounds like 
the premise of a science fiction novel. Nevertheless, it is migrating to the 
infinitely more unsettling realm of science policy. The notion of a direct 
intervention in the climate system — by removing carbon dioxide from the 
atmosphere, or reflecting a small amount of sunlight back out into space — is 
slowly gaining currency as a ‘Plan B’. The political subtext for all this is 
the 
desperation that now permeates behind-the-scenes discourse about climate 
change. 
Despite decades of rhetoric about saving the planet, and determined but mostly 
ineffectual campaigns from civil society, global emissions of carbon dioxide 
continue to rise.Officially, climate policy is all about energy efficiency, 
renewables and nuclear power. Officially, the target of keeping global 
temperatures within two degrees of the pre-industrial revolution average is 
still in our sights. But the voices whispering that we might have left it too 
late are no longer automatically dismissed as heretical. Wouldn’t it be better, 
they ask, to have at least considered some other options — in case things get 
really bad?This is the context in which various scary, implausible or simply 
bizarre proposals are being put on the table. They range from the relatively 
mundane (the planting of forests on a grand scale), to the crazy but 
conceivable 
(a carbon dioxide removal industry, to capture our emissions and bury them 
underground), to the barely believable (injecting millions of tiny reflective 
particles into the stratosphere to reflect sunlight). In fact, the group of 
technologies awkwardly yoked together under the label ‘geoengineering’ have 
very 
little in common beyond their stated purpose: to keep the dangerous effects of 
climate change at bay.Monkeying around with the Earth’s systems at a planetary 
scale obviously presents a number of unknown — and perhaps unknowable — 
dangers. 
How might other ecosystems be affected if we start injecting reflective 
particles into space? What would happen if the carbon dioxide we stored 
underground were to escape? What if the cure of engineering the climate is 
worse 
than the disease? But I think that it is too soon to get worked up about the 
risks posed by any individual technology. The vast majority of geoengineering 
ideas will never get off the drawing board. Right now, we should be asking more 
fundamental questions.Here is a project that elevates engineers and their 
political masters to the status of benevolent deitiesGeoengineering differs 
from 
other approaches to tackling climate change not in the technologies it seeks to 
deploy but in the assumptions it makes about how we relate to the natural 
world. 
Its essence is the idea that it is feasible to control the Earth’s climate. It 
is a philosophy, then — a philosophy that characterises the problem of climate 
change as something ‘solvable’ by engineering, rather than a social phenomenon 
emerging from politics and culture.Thinking about it in this way — as a set of 
assumptions about how to tackle climate change rather than a set of 
technologies 
— makes it easier to see why the ethical issues embedded in the concept are 
trickier than any scientific disputes about the side effects of this or that 
piece of machinery. Here is a project that elevates engineers and their 
political masters to the status of benevolent deities; a project that requires 
us to manage a suite of world-shaping technologies over the long haul. Do we 
have either the desire or the capacity to do that? As the late American climate 
scientist Stephen Schneider wrote in 2008: ‘Just imagine if we needed to do all 
this in 1900 and then the rest of 20th-century history unfolded as it actually 
did!’ In other words, world history is volatile enough even without the 
question 
of how to manage the global climate.Let’s think about how disputes might play 
out. What if I, as the ruler of a nation beginning to feel the adverse effects 
of climate change, unilaterally decided to start reflecting sunlight back into 
space? What if this had the effect of altering the rainfall in your nation? It 
is not difficult to see how quickly the Cold War logic of imagined threats and 
counter-threats would creep in to the geopolitics of climate management. The 
lessons of a film such as Dr Strangelove, or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying 
and 
Love the Bomb (1964) could well apply to meteorology as much as they do to 
nuclear physics.Even short of provoking military conflict, it is not obvious 
whose consent should be sought before a government, or even a wealthy 
individual, decides to embark on ‘Experiment Earth’. What’s more, if you 
believe, as I do, that the story of climate change is at root one of injustice, 
it’s even less clear how a high-tech geoengineering industry — inevitably 
directed by a consortium of wealthy nations — would do anything but exacerbate 
the division between those who are protected from climate change and those who 
must suffer its consequences.These political questions obscure a still deeper 
issue. If geoengineering involves remaking the global climate, might it also 
remake the connection between humans and nature? We have always existed in a 
strange kind of equilibrium with the natural world (whatever that is). Think of 
urban green spaces: ‘nature’ might be found in them, but we probably wouldn’t 
call the spaces themselves natural. On the other hand, plenty of human 
innovations have made their way into our idea of the ‘natural order’. The 
classic example is smallholder agriculture: what was once (albeit many 
thousands 
of years ago) considered the height of mastery over the elements is now an 
archetypal image of humans living in harmony with their environment. The lines 
between nature and artifice have always been blurred. They only grow more so as 
our grand technological narratives advance — as we unlock the code to our own 
genetic identity or build life from the ‘bottom up’ using nanoscale 
components.We can admit all of this and still insist that there are 
deep-rooted, 
widely shared intuitions about which elements of the world can be called 
‘natural’. It is also clear that a broad range of people share a sense that 
certain aspects of the natural world lie — or should lie — beyond human 
influence. When scientists are accused of ‘playing God’, this criticism is as 
likely to come from an atheist as a religious person. If building life from the 
bottom up seems, to many, like overstepping the mark, this is not necessarily a 
theistic judgement. New technologies demand self-reflection about who we are 
and 
where we fit into the world. Geoengineering is only the latest idea to prompt 
that kind of soul-searching. Yet it is different from its predecessors in one 
important regard: its scope.Many scientists now believe that the industrial 
revolution marked the beginning of a new era defined by human dominance over 
the 
Earth’s ecosystems — the ‘anthropocene’. More than 20 years ago, the American 
environmentalist Bill McKibben wrote a book called The End of Nature (1989). He 
made a devastatingly simple argument: that the natural world could no longer be 
considered independent from human influence. Choices made by humans were 
shaping 
the fundamental nature of the planet itself, not just tinkering around the 
edges. As McKibben puts it:By the end of nature I do not mean the end of the 
world. The rain will still fall and the sun shine, though differently than 
before. When I say ‘nature’ I mean a certain set of human ideas about the world 
and our place in it.Geoengineering represents a very different set of ideas 
about the world and our place in it. A glance at the popular metaphors 
beginning 
to frame the debate leaves little doubt about just what kind of ideas they are. 
One popular rhetorical approach, for example, is to describe the planet as a 
patient, in need of treatment. It’s an image that Sir Paul Nurse, the President 
of the Royal Society, explored in a letter to The Guardian in September 
2011:Geoengineering research can be considered analogous to pharmaceutical 
research. One would not take a medicine that had not been rigorously tested to 
make sure that it worked and was safe. But, if there was a risk of disease, one 
would research possible treatments and, once the effects were established, one 
would take the medicine if needed and appropriate.Our ‘sick planet’ is 
presented 
as in need of medicine, something that only we, the clever humans, can 
dispense. 
Through careful, responsible research, we can determine a cure — never mind the 
fact that our own consumption is the proximal cause of the disease.Earlier in 
his letter, Nurse suggests (plausibly) that there might come a time when we are 
forced to consider geoengineering. But the claim that we 
might need geoengineering because we simply can’t rein in our consumption 
implies a stark and somewhat disturbing truth: the natural world is widely 
considered more malleable than our own wishes and desires. We even have a name 
to capture this self-serving inflexibility: human nature.Long before climate 
change was even a concept, technocrats, entrepreneurs and ‘rainmakers’ were 
itching to get their hands on the levers that controlled the heavensOf course, 
there is a difference between saying that people can’t change their ways and 
the 
argument that we shouldn’t have to. In the US, right-wing climate change denial 
organisations such as the Heartland Institute have thrown their weight behind 
geoengineering as a ‘cost-effective’ solution to climate change, flipping 
neatly 
from denying that the problem exists to advocating a solution to it. As is 
often 
the case with climate change scepticism, rejection of the science appears to be 
a proxy for dislike of the policy implications. For those who prefer 
geoengineering to the ‘social engineering’ of behaviour change, controlling the 
climate seems like a better deal than being controlled themselves.Then again, 
the urge to control the weather runs deeply in human societies, as the American 
historian of science James Roger Fleming shows in his fascinating book Fixing 
the Sky: The Chequered History of Weather and Climate Control (2010). Long 
before climate change was even a concept, technocrats, entrepreneurs and 
‘rainmakers’ were itching to get their hands on the levers that controlled the 
heavens. Indeed, Fleming’s analysis of medieval ‘hail archers’, hurricane 
canons 
and, more recently, cloud seeding, shows how illusory previous attempts to 
dominate nature have been, even on a small scale. Rarely has the enthusiasm for 
weather-engineering been matched by measurable, positive outcomes. There is an 
important lesson here for would-be geoengineers: if we can’t even manipulate 
the 
local weather successfully, what hope for controlling the global climate?But do 
geoengineers really want to seize the reins of the world’s atmosphere, or are 
they just regular guys who want to help combat climate change? Most of them, 
after all, claim that their interest in geoengineering is driven by necessity. 
And it is true that few would attempt such an outlandish enterprise unless all 
the other options had been exhausted.The problem is that all the other options 
have not been exhausted: people are simply exhausted from trying. So perhaps, 
despite the increasingly popular story that geoengineering is a necessary Plan 
B, the whole project only really makes sense as a kind of utopian scheme, 
pursued for its own sake. A reasonable question to ask in that case would be: 
‘Whose utopia?’There is in fact a small group of individuals — dubbed the 
‘geoclique’ — who have led the call to intensify research on geoengineering. 
Contrary to some of the more excitable commentary on their motives, I do not 
believe that they are secretly promoting a political vision of the future. But 
their idea of a ‘pragmatic’ response to the inadequacy of current environmental 
policies is still utopian in character. After all, is trying to recreate a 
‘better climate’ really so different from the political movements that sought 
to 
manipulate societal structures to make a ‘better world’? Moreover, if we accept 
our own overconsumption as an inevitability, we might slide into acceptance of 
the morally questionable mantra for solving the climate problem: we don’t have 
to change ourselves, because we can change nature.Can we take control of the 
winds, the rain and the sun, and model the climate to our liking?There are of 
course many in the environmental movement — and beyond — who oppose the logic 
of 
this approach. The green movement has always had at least one foot in the 
spiritual fields of Romanticism, with its reverence for the sanctity of nature. 
Nevertheless, some environmentalists have begun to embrace the Enlightenment 
logic of geoengineering as a Devil’s bargain. To ‘neo-environmentalists’ such 
as 
Stewart Brand or Mark Lynas, both critics of the green movement who view rapid 
technological change as the only feasible way to prevent catastrophic global 
warming, the prospect of geoengineering is no longer anathema.The more I 
reflect 
on what geoengineering is, and what it represents, the more it feels like the 
quest to control the climate is not really about climate change, or even about 
the climate at all. What it’s really about is the ancient, reciprocal loop 
between the idea of ‘nature’ and the question of where we — the humans — fit 
into it. Can we take control of the winds, the rain and the sun, and model the 
climate to our liking? For those who imagine that we can, geoengineering holds 
out the promise of an answer to climate change that sidesteps the inconvenience 
of societal reform. But for those who doubt our Earth-management credentials, 
geoengineering is worse than simply an ill-advised ‘quick fix’. It is the 
ultimate expression of a seemingly insatiable desire: to bend nature to the 
will 
of human nature, whatever the consequences.
Published on 2 April 2013
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