Fred: 

You give some good reasons not everyone would belong or want to belong but 
right now no one belongs. Perhaps membership might not include everyone but it 
would be a viable group and it would enhance the credibility of geoengineering. 
Belonging to a particular group (possibly among others) is not being pigeon 
holed. One can keep membership private or not as they see fit. 


My goal in starting a laser society in an electrical engineering context was 
that electrical engineers understood laser principles better than physicists 
but physicists understood the materials and I wanted a mix and the members to 
mix. I achieved that. The !EEE Photonics Society ( 
http://www.photonicssociety.org/ ) now has over 7000 members. It has not slowed 
development of lasers and other photonic technology; very much on the contrary. 


-gene. 


----- Original Message -----
From: "Fred Zimmerman" <[email protected]> 
To: "Gene Gordon" <[email protected]> 
Cc: "Andrew Lockley" <[email protected]>, "geoengineering" 
<[email protected]>, "Oliver Tickell" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Saturday, June 8, 2013 10:30:09 AM 
Subject: Re: [geo] Money 


There are some differences of perspective that might limit the membership of 
such a society. There are those who are already convinced that GE (or a 
particular form of it) is a necessity and those that are convinced that GE 
research is a necessity. Then there are those who are concerned with a robust 
flexible and innovative response to climate change but do not wish to be 
pigeonholed as members of a geoengineering professional society. I 





--- 
Fred Zimmerman 

Geoengineering IT! 
Bringing together the worlds of geoengineering and information technology 
GE NewsFilter: http://geoengineeringIT.net:8080 


On Sat, Jun 8, 2013 at 10:06 AM, < [email protected] > wrote: 




In contrast I have been involved in IEEE (while also maintaining a serious R&D 
job outside IEEE ) since ~1960 having run conferences, served on publication 
committees, founded and served as an assistant editor on 2 publications, and 
founded and run one IEEE society, served on the IEEE awards committee, founded 
one major award, etc. so excuse me if I have a hangup concerning the value of 
professional organizations. Although this geoengineering group activity serves 
a valuable purpose I firmly believe it would be far more effective if it were a 
recognized society as I described below. Discussions would include 
effectiveness of a particular technique but while slams against geoengineering 
R&D as an activity would still occur they would be laughable. In my opinion 
individuals or small groups getting funding for experiments would be more 
successful. I doubt this group with a narrow administrative base although a 
serious following through e-mail has the credibility of an ongoing society. I 
think a society would more effectively achieve the admirable objectives set out 
below. Geoengineering is important, will be critical and deserves a credible 
support organization to improve the investment prospects. 


-gene 


From: "Andrew Lockley" < [email protected] > 
To: "Eugene I. Gordon" < [email protected] > 
Cc: "geoengineering" < [email protected] >, "Oliver Tickell" < 
[email protected] > 
Sent: Friday, June 7, 2013 10:00:16 PM 
Subject: Re: [geo] Money 





My take on additional funding is that private money could be beneficial in 3 
key ways, which the state may be slow or reluctant to fund. 

1) A kitty for funding ad hoc costs, such as conference fees, open access 
charges , etc. This will allow the removal of minor but annoying road blocks. 
£50k-£500k 

2) Extra bodies and more computer time for key labs, to enable them to publish 
faster 
£200k-2M 
(more fundable by state than 1&3) 

3) Serious investment in outdoor experiments, and engineering development of 
deployment systems 
£500k-100M 

I have no experience of funding bodies, so I'd welcome comments on the above. 

A 
On Jun 6, 2013 9:34 AM, < [email protected] > wrote: 

<blockquote>


A: 
If there is any money available use it to form a geoengineering society to 
which members belong and pay dues, receive a publication with peer reviewed 
papers on geoengineering technology and experiments, and can attend an annual 
meeting; which society is managed and run for all the members and for the 
benefit of geoengineering. It should not undermine the science/technology by 
putting limits on what opinions people can express given they are within proper 
bounds. Members should be responsible for generating their own proposals and 
getting grant funding. If money is given to the group and then dispensed it is 
not likely to get truth in advertising and a small group gets too much power. 


This can be done for a few million dollars annually. I speak from personal 
experience having done exactly this years back in what is currently a group 
that is part of IEEE. 


-gene 


From: "Oliver Tickell" < [email protected] > 
Cc: "geoengineering" < [email protected] > 
Sent: Wednesday, June 5, 2013 10:26:18 AM 
Subject: Re: [geo] Money 

There has been sod all funding for studies of accelerated rock 
weathering. Some work has been done, on farmland in Holland for example, 
but to get this wiely accepted it's important to know how fast ground 
olivine weathers in different grain sizes, on land, on coast, different 
climates, effects on rivers draining olivined catchments, effects on 
marine biota from washout of Fe (if any) / H4SiO4, usefulness as 
fertiliser to restore Mg where lacking in soils, etc etc. 

All of which really should be done before any large scale deployment. 
Oliver. 

On 05/06/2013 10:58, Andrew Lockley wrote: 
> 
> Where do people think extra money is needed to further the study of 
> geoengineering? 
> 
> A 
> 
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