Poster's note : This article is full of polemic, mistakes and probable
libel.

http://ecowatch.com/2013/the-war-on-nature-geoengineering-and-the-climate-crisis/

The War on Nature: Geoengineering and the Climate Crisis  June 4, 2013

Biofuelwatch

By Rachel Smolker and Almuth Ernsting

Will declaring a “climate emergency” help to finally prompt radical action
to address climate change? A growing number of campaigners as well as
scientists think so and hope that a major wake up call about unfolding
climate disasters will spur governments and people into action.Whether a
lack of scary-enough facts about climate change has been holding back real
action is questionable. After all, it requires a fair amount of
psychological denial to not be alarmed by the escalating heat
waves, droughts, floods and destructive megastorms.Studies about
psychological responses to climate change suggest that messages built on
fear can cause people to feel disempowered and less likely to take action
at all. Still, constantly playing down the scale of the unfolding
destruction of climate and other planetary life support systems so as not
to be “alarmist” seems somewhat disempowering to me. Personally, we much
prefer to hear climate scientist James Hansen speak of a “planetary
emergency” (in view of last year’s record low Arctic sea ice cover) than to
read excessively cautious comments about uncertainties and the need for
more research before concluding what seems obvious, for example that Arctic
sea ice is in rapid meltdown and that extreme weather events are already
far worse and more frequent than scientists had predicted.  Yet, while the
language of “climate emergency” may or may not spur more people to action,
the crucial question is exactly what type of action is being advocated.
James Hansen’s conclusion: “If we burn all the fossil fuels, we create
certain disaster” should be beyond dispute. Action on climate change will
be futile unless fossil fuels are left underground.Unlike James Hansen,
some academics and campaigners are calling for a very different type of
“radical action” in response to the climate emergency. Amongst them is the
small but vociferous Arctic Methane Emergency Group (AMEG). AMEG does not
mince words about the seriousness of the crisis:Abrupt climate change is
upon us. Farmers are in despair. Food prices will go through the roof. The
government’s climate change policy is in tatters. The government should
have acted years ago. Now it may be too late.The abrupt climate change
scenario put forward by AMEG is, briefly, as follows:The rate of warming is
greatest in the Arctic and the rate at which Arctic sea ice has been
melting is accelerating. The loss of sea ice triggers different impacts
which in turn make Arctic meltdown, global warming and extreme weather
across the Northern Hemisphere even worse. One of those effects is the
release of methane trapped in permafrost, Arctic peat and under the Arctic
Ocean. This could release so much methane at once that it would greatly
increase the rate of global warming and lead to “unstoppable runaway
warming.”The first part of this analysis should be beyond dispute. However,
the prediction of an imminent abrupt and catastrophic methane release from
the Arctic is much less widely accepted amongst climate scientists, many of
whom predict a slower release, over thousands of years—one which will
worsen climate change in the long run but (importantly) not surpass the
impacts of our own carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions.  One of the scientists
challenging AMEG’s predictions is methane expert, Dr. David Archer who
stresses:The worst case scenario is “what CO2 will do, under
business-as-usual, not in a wild blow-the-doors-off unpleasant surprise,
but just in the absence of any pleasant surprises (like emission
controls).”Is he right? We have no idea how much of the methane in the
Arctic will end up the atmosphere by when. Some recent climate change
impacts and findings have turned out to be much worse than what scientists
had previously predicted. For example, a recent New Scientist article
observed:We knew global warming was going to make the weather more extreme.
But it’s becoming even more extreme than anyone predicted.But the argument
regarding AMEG’s claims is not just a speculative argument about what might
happen in future. It is also—and primarily—an argument about how we think
about climate change and what we want to do about it. In this respect, we
unequivocally agree with Archer’s view: Business-as-usual will guarantee
the worst possible climate disaster. Arguing about just how bad that
worst-case scenario might be seems futile when we should be doing whatever
we can to stop greenhouse gas emissions, including fossil fuel burning and
ecosystem destruction. This, however, is very different from how AMEG views
the climate disaster.What AMEG most fears is not what humans are doing—it’s
the (methane) monsters lurking in nature. Preserving most life on Earth, in
their view, thus requires nature to be better controlled and its monsters
to be tamed. As AMEG’s Strategic Plan puts it, the “common enemy” that’s to
be fought, the underlying cause of abrupt climate change isn’t us, it isn’t
the fossil fuel economy—it’s the “vicious cycle of Arctic Warming and sea
ice retreat.”  They demand “something akin to a war room” and the war they
want governments to fight is a war against nature—and specifically a war
against the way in which nature responds when humans drastically alter the
planet’s atmosphere by increasing its greenhouse gases. The tools for
fighting this war that they suggest we use are a range of geoengineering
strategies: Large amounts of sulphur aerosols which they want pumped into
the lower stratosphere starting as soon as March/April 2014, the
development of new reflective particles to be pumped into the stratosphere
in future, marine cloud brightening, chemicals to destroy cirrus clouds,
marine geoengineering, weather modification and more.  Changing our own
society and economy is ancillary to this quest. Here are the changes which
AMEG’s demands in relation to our energy and transport sectors:
Postpone drilling in the Arctic, reintroduce a ban on polar flights, relax
requirements to clean up “bunker fuels” burnt in ships (because sulphur
aerosols have a short-term cooling effect), scrub black carbon but not
sulphur dioxide from coal power stations—and that’s it. Burning
more coal and diesel is fine, in their view, as long as we emit lots of
sulphur dioxide with it. Never mind the illnesses and acid rain caused by
sulphur dioxide. Indeed, AMEG members are even, bizarrely, promoting Arctic
methane hydrate mining for energy. One of the most widely cited AMEG
members, British oceanographer Peter Wadhams, has been criticized
by Greenpeace after praising Shell’s credentials for “safely” drilling in
the Arctic in front of a Parliamentary Committee.Not all AMEG members
appear this unconcerned about ongoing fossil fuel emissions and some
clearly do want to see real emissions reductions—in addition to
geoengineering. AMEG is a very mixed group: Some supporters clearly have no
financial interests in geoengineering and have joined AMEG purely out of
the conviction that AMEG has the most credible answer to climate change.
Some are academics who have gained a much greater public profile thanks to
AMEG’s campaign—such as Peter Wadhams. And some have major financial
interests in geoengineering—including Ken Caldeira. Caldeira, together with
David Keith (not listed on AMEG’s website) has received more than $4.6
million from Bill Gates’ personal funds, around half of it for personal
research on geoengineering, the other half to fund “research” by other
geoengineering advocates. He is also listed as an inventor on a patent for
a geoengineering device called StratoShield, held by Intellectual Ventures,
a company linked to Gates.All of them, however, are united in their faith
that geoengineering can work and that humans can avert an even greater
climate disaster by manipulating the planet’s atmosphere and biosphere.
They do not appear concerned about what unilateral action taken by a
government to deliberately manipulate planetary systems might mean for
democracy and the rights of most of the world’s population. This is perhaps
because they are convinced that geoengineering is the only way of keeping
the planet habitable (at least for most humans). But this conviction is not
derived from scientific knowledge—it is based on unwavering faith in human
ability to master and control nature through engineering and technology.The
possibility that their proposals could possibly backfire and end up making
climate change even worse, even faster has, it seems, not occurred to AMEG.
Yet what the science confirms is that the full impacts of geoengineering on
planetary and climate systems are by their nature unpredictable and that
they might well render the climate yet more unstable. In a recent joint
briefing by Biofuelwatch and EcoNexus, we summarized some of the highest
risks of the types of geoengineering promoted by AMEG: Destruction of the
ozone layer, acid rain, possible virtually instant and massive disruption
of rainfall patterns, especially in the tropics and subtropics (which could
mean a failure of the African and Asian monsoon), vegetation die-back which
would release yet more carbon—and those are just some of the known risks.If
we want to have any hope of avoiding the worst impacts of climate change,
we clearly need radical action—but that radical action must be aimed at
stopping the burning fossil fuels and reversing the destruction of
ecosystems (including soils). The very last thing we and the planet need is
yet another “war room” and a new battle-front in the war against nature.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering?hl=en.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to