Hi Folks,

This email is related to the geoengineering group discussion thread found
here
<https://groups.google.com/d/msg/geoengineering/NsN39U6mM34/cVW-d9-kZnEJ>.
Those who are not current list members have been CC'ed due to your
potential interest in the subject(s) found within the thread. As we find
many times within that forum, the initial starting point of the discussion
often gives rise to a wide spectrum of relevant subjects. After all, the
subject of geoengineering, itself, should take into
consideration virtually every aspect of life on this planet.

*On the subject thread of CDR/Moral Hazard/Soil Carbon/Combined Land and
Marine BECCS/Funding and Governance: My views.*

*1) The CRD Moral Hazard Red Herring:*

The specious argument of a *'moral hazard'* issue, within the specter of
CDR based mitigation, is seemingly no more than a useless reductionist
distraction (i.e. red herring). In that, the concept of carbon negative
biofuels (i.e. BECCS
<http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg3/en/ch3s3-3-5-1.html>) is
one concept, among a few,  which simply makes the entire issue of a moral
hazard moot, as it relates to CDR.

The soil based CDR approaches (i.e. biochar, olivine, pasture cropping
<http://www.carbonranching.org/SOLUTIONS/3_PastureCropping.pdf> etc.) also
renders the issue of a moral hazard moot due to the many out-year C
sequestration benefits as well as the significant reduction in agro FF and
chemical uses. Also, it is important to keep in mind that many of these
soil based CDR approaches are adaptable to the BECCS regiment, in that they
are compatible technologies.

*2) BECCS efficaciousness at the practical and ethical levels:*

Greg puts forth the premise that BECCS (i.e. carbon negative biofuel) is
too expensive. Yet, one has to ask the basic question of; *Relative to
what?* The most fundamental premise of BECCS (per IPCC WG 3) is that it
must be profitable at all stages and thus offers one of the few mitigation
concepts which can actually earn its own keep. In fact, *not
employing* BECCS/carbon
negative biofuel, in our current situation, is actually a true and
significant moral hazard, in of itself, due to the multiple benefits of;

1) replacing FFs while utilizing/sequestering carbon

2) supporting important ancillary biotic processes beyond BECCS

3) providing far greater equitable distribution of the economic and
environmental benefits than non-BECCS related options

Even PV does not achieve this important blend of technical, policy, profit,
ethical advantages. Due to the robust list of benefits offered by BECCS
related operations,* not* employing BECCS operations is seemingly as
unethical as the un-abated continuation of FF use.

*3) Energy First with Carbon Utilization/Sequestration Being the Other
First:*

Mike's opinion of *"I am all for encouraging land uptake of carbon, but if
we are not simultaneously pushing for cutting emissions sharply, it really
degrades all the effort that needs to be put into land carbon buildup."* is
achievable once we adopt the broadest possible holistic view of the
potential solutions. One important example of the benefits of taking such a
broad view is found through the lens of working simultaneously within the
marine and land biocapacity <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biocapacity>
 arenas.

In that, engineered carbon uptake within the marine environment (vis-a-vis
vast scale maricuture which can include olivine use) can eventually dwarf
land carbon uptake simply due to the vast scale of the marine resources
available to work with. Further, a vast scale marine bio-production effort
will significantly reduce agro protein production pressures and thus help
preserve the land resources and land biodiversity.

This synergistic cascade of benefits can be extended through utilizing some
of the marine bio-production stream of biomass for use as biochar and
organic fertilizer to support increased land vegetable/grain
bio-production. Also, the potential vast scale of freshwater production of
marine bio-production operations would also be transformative to land based
bio-production including large scale engineered desert afforestation
<http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0961953495000267>
 operations.

The large scale use of land/marine hybrid technologies, such as aquaponics
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquaponics> use either at sea or on land, can
be economic game changers.

In brief, viewing the global bio-capacity of the combined marine and land
areas, as opposed to the current restricted view of primarily that of land
use only, provides us with the fullest spectrum *and* scale of global
carbon management tools along with a robust list of food/energy security
means and methods.

*4) What exactly do we mean by ' Sustainability':*

The recent WWF *'Living Planet Report 2014
<http://ba04e385e36eeed47f9c-abbcd57a2a90674a4bcb7fab6c6198d0.r88.cf1.rackcdn.com/Living_Planet_Report_2014.pdf>*
' *"measures one key dimension of sustainability: the extent to which the
Earth's reproductive ecosystems have sufficient regenerative capacity to
keep up with humanity's consumptive demands" (page 152 section 9)*. The
combined regenerative capacity of land *and* marine environments, utilizing
coordinated engineered BECCS methods as outlined in the IMBECS Protocol
Draft
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1m9VXozADC0IIE6mYx5NsnJLrUvF_fWJN_GyigCzDLn0/edit>,
offers a level of sustainability capable of meeting current and
trans-generational anthropogenic mitigation needs as well as many of our
critical commodity needs. Such a combined approach to mitigation and
commodity needs would also possibly stimulate the development of a robust
global circular economy <http://www.eea.europa.eu/publications/signals-2014>
.

*5) Dealing with 900 lb Gorillas:*

It is not the technology nor the natural resources which we lack. As we all
know, it is the lack of political and corporate level will to take actions
which address that which threatens us, our descendants and the vast
majority of species on this planet. And, the primary impediment to opening
up a virtual flood of well thought-out and appropriate methods/actions is
found within the needs of the FF industry.

Obviously, the FF industry can not be summarily shut down for multiple
reasons. Converting that industry over to biofuel will be something of a
blend between force feeding and weaning. Yet, through establishing a strong
combined marine/terrestrial and *internationally coordinated* BECCS effort,
which can supply the large scale commercial quantities of bio-products, the
current network of FF pipelines, tanker ships/trains and storage depots can
start to be compelled into utilizing low cost carbon negative biofuels and
thus begin the global weaning phase of our FF dependency.

This force feeding biofuel into the FF distribution sector is not as
difficult as it may first seem. So long as the fuels are of equal and or
better value and all other aspects are equal, the distribution sector (and
consumer) will care less if it is carbon negative biofuel or tar sands oil
moving along the distribution network...in the vast majority of cases.

*6) Getting to a Coordinated International BECCS Effort and Governance
Policy: Something of a conclusion.  *

Robert's position that "*... if CO2 is converted to algae, and the algae is
then held in large fabric bags at the bottom of the sea, we have an
enduring resource, a carbon bank.*" may have technical merit yet storing
the excess carbon within the soil through the production and use of marine
derived biochar and organic fertilizer would seem to be far more
productive. Yet, both paths should be explored at the overall systems
level. There is even a divide of opinions between the relative benefits
between micro and macro algal cultivation and utilization.

As the above difference of opinions illustrates, unless we can find common
grounds on a full suite of energy/food security and climate change
mitigation technologies, the probability of CDR/BECCS/biofuel/soil carbon
etc. developing a strong enough market presence to substantially contribute
to a stable future will be low.

In conclusion and to Mike MacCracken's encouragement to *"not circle the
wagons and shoot in—we need to be doing everything and not letting anyone
off the hook on this", *I would like to add the suggestion that we find
convergence on an overall meta concept, which utilizes both marine and land
based CDR, energy and food security methods, and build a funding alliance
which can provide seed capital for a wide spectrum of benefit corporation (
B-Corp <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benefit_corporation>) start-ups that
can, once matured, provide the tools we need for a truly sustainable future.

The primary benefit of building such a broad, technically speaking, funding
alliance is the potential ability of such an alliance to properly govern
such a technically divergent yet interwoven and synergistic suite of
solutions. The overall governance approach is being developed within the
IMBECS Protocol Draft
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1m9VXozADC0IIE6mYx5NsnJLrUvF_fWJN_GyigCzDLn0/edit>.
Any suggestions or comments would be highly welcomed.

Best regards,


*Michael Hayes*
*360-708-4976*
*The IMBECS Protocol Draft
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1m9VXozADC0IIE6mYx5NsnJLrUvF_fWJN_GyigCzDLn0/pub>
*

-- 
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.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to