https://www.straight.com/news/578741/gwynne-dyer-mea-culpa-geo-engineering-its-not-bleak-i-thought

I got it wrong in my article "Geo-engineering is in trouble", posted on
Straight.com on January 16. I couldn't be happier about that.The article
said that a new scientific study, carried out by Angus Ferraro, Ellie
Highwood and Andrew Charlton-Perez of Reading University, showed that the
most widely discussed geo-engineering method for holding the global
temperature down would have disastrous consequences for agriculture. The
method is injecting sulphur dioxide into the stratosphere; the (unintended)
result would be devastating drought in the tropics.The idea of using
sulphate aerosols in the stratosphere to reflect back some incoming
sunlight, thus lowering surface temperatures on Earth, has been the leading
contender for a geo-engineering solution to runaway heating since the whole
subject came out of the closet eight years ago. And then along come
"Ferraro et al." (as the scientists put it) to tell us that the
side-effects will be disastrous. Thanks, guys.So I ended the article by
saying: "The sulphur dioxide technique was the cheapest and seemingly the
best understood option for holding the temperature down. A great many
people were glad that it was there, as a kind of safety net if we really
don't get our act together in time to halt the warming by less intrusive
means. Now there's no safety net."Almost immediately I got an email from
Andy Parker, now a research fellow in the Kennedy School at Harvard
University and previously a climate-change policy adviser for the Royal
Society in the United Kingdom. You've been suckered by the publicity flacks
at Reading University, he said (though in kinder words). They have spun the
research findings for maximum shock value. In other words, read the damn
thing before you write about it.Well, actually, I did read it (it's
available online), but the conclusions are couched in the usual
science-speak, with a resolute avoidance of anything that might look like
interpretation for the general public. I didn't look long enough at the key
graph that undercuts the dire conclusions of the publicists, presumably
because I had already been conditioned by them to see something else
there.Drastic consequences would indeed ensue if you tried to geo-engineer
a 4 degrees C warmer world all the way back down to the pre-industrial
average global temperature by putting sulphate aerosols in the
stratosphere. But nobody in their right mind would try to do that.On the
other hand, if you were using sulphates to hold the temperature down to
plus 1.8 degrees C, in a world where the carbon dioxide content of the
atmosphere would otherwise give you plus 4 degrees C, then the effect on
tropical rainfall would be small. And that is a far likelier scenario,
because we are most unlikely to resort to large-scale geo-engineering until
we are right at the threshold (around plus 2 degrees C) of runaway
warming.So the correct conclusion to draw from Ferrero et al. is that
geo-engineering with sulphates is still one of the more promising
techniques for holding the temperature down, and should be investigated
further. As Andy Parker put it, "This does not tell us that we should do
geo-engineering, but it does mean that the paper is a long way from being
the nail in the coffin that the press release implies."And then I got
another email, this time from my old friend Amory Lovins, cofounder and
chief scientist at the Rocky Mountain Institute, who took me to task for
assuming that human greenhouse gas emissions "probably will not drop" fast
enough to prevent us from going into runaway warning (unless we
geo-engineer) later this century.Not true, he said. "Since the Kyoto
conference in 1997, most efforts to hedge climate risks have made four main
errors: assuming solutions will be costly rather than (at least mainly)
profitable; insisting they be motivated by concerns about climate rather
than about security, profit, or economic development; assuming they require
a global treaty; and assuming businesses can do little or nothing before
carbon is priced.""As these errors are gradually realized, climate
protection is changing course. It will be led more by countries and
companies than by international treaties and organizations, more by the
private sector and civil society than by governments, more by leading
developing economies than by mature developed ones, and more by efficiency
and clean energy's economic fundamentals than by possible future carbon
pricing."He pointed out how strongly China is committed to clean energy.
Last year renewables, (including hydro) accounted for 43 percent of new
generating capacity in China, as the extra coal plants ordered long ago
taper sharply down. India is showing signs of moving in the same direction,
and there's even hope that Japan may decide to replace all the nuclear
capacity it is shutting down with renewables rather than coal.So I
shouldn't be so pessimistic, they were both telling me. I believe Andy
Parker is right, and I hope Amory Lovins is right too. But just in case
Amory is a bit off in the timing of all these turnarounds on greenhouse gas
emissions in Asia, I would still like to see a lot of research, including
small-scale experiments in the open atmosphere, on the various techniques
for geo-engineering.

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