Poster's note : a well researched piece, in which many group members are
quoted. A similar article appeared in the Santa Fe New Mexican.

http://mobile.nytimes.com/2014/11/10/science/earth/climate-tools-seek-to-bend-natures-path.html?_r=0&referrer=

The New York Times

THE BIG FIX

Climate Tools Seek to Bend Nature’s Path

A playground in Arnhem, the Netherlands, with a surface of olivine, a
green-tinted mineral that takes CO2 from the atmosphere.

JASPER JUINEN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

By HENRY FOUNTAIN

NOVEMBER 9, 2014

UTRECHT, the Netherlands — The solution to global warming, Olaf Schuiling
says, lies beneath our feet.

For Dr. Schuiling, a retired geochemist, climate salvation would come in
the form of olivine, a green-tinted mineral found in abundance around the
world. When exposed to the elements, it slowly takes carbon dioxide from
the atmosphere.

Olivine has been doing this naturally for billions of years, but Dr.
Schuiling wants to speed up the process by spreading it on fields and
beaches and using it for dikes, pathways, even sandboxes. Sprinkle enough
of the crushed rock around, he says, and it will eventually remove enough
CO2 to slow the rise in global temperatures.

“Let the earth help us to save the earth,” said Dr. Schuiling, who has been
pursuing the idea single-mindedly for several decades and at 82 is still
writing papers on the subject from his cluttered office at the University
of Utrecht.

The geochemist Olaf Schuiling advocates spreading olivine to slow the rise
in global temperatures.

ILVY NJIOKIKTJIEN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Once considered the stuff of wild-eyed fantasies, such ideas for countering
climate change — known as geoengineering solutions, because they
intentionally manipulate nature — are now being discussed seriously by
scientists. The National Academy of Sciences is expected to issue a report
on geoengineering later this year.

That does not mean that such measures, which are considered controversial
across the political spectrum, are likely to be adopted anytime soon. But
the effects of climate change may become so severe that geoengineering
solutions could attract even more serious consideration. Some scientists
say significant research should begin now.

Dr. Schuiling’s idea is one of several intended to reduce levels of CO2,
the main greenhouse gas, so the atmosphere will trap less heat. Other
approaches, potentially faster and more doable but riskier, would create
the equivalent of a sunshade around the planet by scattering reflective
droplets in the stratosphere or spraying seawater to create more clouds
over the oceans. Less sunlight reaching the earth’s surface would mean less
heat to be trapped, resulting in a quick lowering of temperatures.

No one can say for sure whether geoengineering of any kind would work. And
many of the approaches are seen as highly impractical. Dr. Schuiling’s, for
example, would take decades to have even a small impact, and the processes
of mining, grinding and transporting the billions of tons of olivine needed
would produce enormous carbon emissions of their own.

Beyond the practicalities, many people view the idea of geoengineering as
abhorrent — a last-gasp, Frankenstein-like approach to climate change that
would distract the world from the goal of eliminating the emissions that
are causing the problem in the first place. The climate is a vastly complex
system, so manipulating temperatures may also have consequences, like
changes in rainfall, that could be catastrophic or benefit one region at
the expense of another.

Critics also worry that geoengineering could be used unilaterally by one
nation, creating another source of geopolitical worries, or could aggravate
tensions between rich and poor nations over who causes and who suffers from
climate change. Even conducting research on some of these ideas, they say,
risks opening a Pandora’s box.

“There’s so much potential here for taking energy away from real responses
to climate change,” said Jim Thomas of the ETC Group, a research
organization that opposes geoengineering because of its potential impact on
poor countries. As for experimentation to test some of the ideas, he said,
“it shouldn’t happen.”

But a small community of scientists, policy experts and others argue that
the world must start to think about geoengineering — how it might be done
and at what cost, who would do it and how it would be governed.

An article about Dr. Schuiling's work inspired Eddy Wijnker to start
selling olivine sand.ILVY NJIOKIKTJIEN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

“There may come to be a choice between geoengineering and suffering,” said
Andy Parker of the Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies in
Potsdam, Germany. “And how we make that choice is crucial.”

Mimicking a VolcanoIn 1991, the eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the
Philippines spewed the largest cloud of sulfur dioxide gas ever measured
into the high atmosphere. The gas quickly formed tiny droplets of sulfuric
acid, which acted like minuscule mirrors and reflected some of the sun’s
rays back into space. For the next three years, average worldwide
temperatures fell by more than one degree.

One geoengineering approach would mimic this kind of volcanic action by
spraying sulfuric acid droplets into the stratosphere. Planes, modified to
fly higher than commercial flights, might be one way to do this at a
relatively low cost. Giant tethered balloons might be another.  Dutch
scientists are studying whether worms on the seafloor can help reduce
greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

The dimming would not be noticeable, but computer simulations have shown
that it would have a near-immediate effect on temperatures; how much would
depend on the quantity and size of the droplets.

Droplets, however, do not last, so spraying would have to be continuous,
and the quantities would have to be increased, in part to offset continuing
carbon emissions. The process also would do nothing to remove carbon
dioxide that has been absorbed by seawater and poses a threat to the
oceanic food chain.

David Keith, a researcher at Harvard University and a leading expert on the
subject, has suggested that if this kind of geoengineering, called solar
radiation management, or S.R.M., is ever undertaken, it should be done
slowly and carefully, so it could be halted if damaging weather patterns or
other problems arose. The goal should only be to slow the rate that the
atmosphere is warming under climate change, he said, not to reverse it.

Dr. Keith said that geoengineering and efforts to cut carbon emissions by
reducing the dependence on coal and other fossil fuels were not mutually
exclusive.

Any plan to spread olivine would work too slowly, if at all, to influence
climate change, critics say.

ILVY NJIOKIKTJIEN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

“We have to cut emissions,” he said. “Pretty much independent of that, we
might want to do S.R.M.

”He and others argue that, rather than discouraging work to roll back
emissions, discussions of geoengineering may actually encourage such
efforts. If people realize that the dangers of climate change are such that
geoengineering is being considered, they may work harder to avoid the need
for it. “It forces people to think more about climate,” Dr. Keith said.

He added that some of the latest computer simulations showed that the
effects of this kind of geoengineering would be relatively equal from
region to region globally.

But some critics of geoengineering are skeptical that any impact would be
balanced. People in underdeveloped countries are affected by climate change
that has largely been caused by the actions of industrialized countries. So
why should they trust that scattering droplets in the sky — the brainchild
of scientists from those same countries — would help them?

Pablo Suarez, who works in underdeveloped countries as associate director
of the Red Cross/Red Crescent Climate Center, said he encountered this
distrust when he told people about the idea.“

There is a range of reactions, the most noticeable one being, ‘Who do they
think they are that they can make decisions on my behalf?’ ” Dr. Suarez
said.“It is very understandable,” he added. “No one likes to be the rat in
someone else’s laboratory.”

The Green Rock Gospel

Ideas to remove carbon dioxide from the air, like Dr. Schuiling’s
rock-spreading scheme, provoke less alarm. While they have issues of their
own — olivine, for example, contains small amounts of metals that could
contaminate the environment — as a geoengineering method they would work
far more slowly and indirectly, affecting the climate over decades by
altering the atmosphere.

Dr. Schuiling has been talking for years about his idea to anyone who will
listen, preaching the gospel of the rock throughout the Netherlands. As a
result, some residents have taken action, and the country has become
something of an olivine hotbed. If you know where to look, you can see the
crushed rock on paths, in gardens and in play areas.

Eddy Wijnker, a former sound engineer who was inspired by a newspaper
article about Dr. Schuiling’s work, created greenSand, a company in the
small town of Maasland that sells olivine sand for home or commercial use;
it will soon receive a shipload from a mine in Spain. The company also
sells “green sand certificates” that pay for spreading the sand along
highways.

Dr. Schuiling’s doggedness has also spurred research. At the Royal
Netherlands Institute for Sea Research in Yerseke, on an arm of the North
Sea, Francesc Montserrat, an ecologist, is investigating the idea of
spreading olivine on the seabed. Not far away in Belgium, researchers at
the University of Antwerp are studying the effects of olivine on crops like
barley and wheat.But critics, including some in the geoengineering
community, say that plans like Dr. Schuiling’s would work too slowly, if at
all, and that undertaking them on a global scale would be close to
impossible. Removing carbon dioxide from the air might be useful for some
limited purposes — Dr. Keith, the Harvard researcher, has a company that is
developing a machine to do so — but probably not for saving the planet.

Dr. Schuiling, who can be blunt in dismissing his critics, sees things
differently. Industry extracts and transports huge quantities of coal, oil
and gas, he notes, so if society decided that geoengineering was necessary,
why couldn’t it do the same with olivine? The annual amount needed,
equivalent to about 3,000 Hoover Dams, is available around the world and is
within the limits of modern large-scale mining. “It is not something
unimaginable,” he said.

And, he adds, there’s no harm in starting small. Every bit of crushed
olivine spread on the ground makes a little headway in reducing CO2 levels
in the air.

“When I started, I was a nutty professor,” Dr. Schuiling said. But when he
gives a talk nowadays, “the first question after I finish is, ‘Why don’t we
do it?’ ”

A Call for Research

Few people say, “Why don’t we do it?” about strategies to block some of the
sunlight reaching the earth. Even those who are willing to consider the
idea of solar geoengineering say they hope it will never be needed.But many
in the geoengineering community see a need for more research. Computer
simulations go only so far, they say. Physical experiments, including ones
conducted in the air, must be undertaken, with proper oversight.“If we’re
going to make any rational decisions about the dangers and potential
benefits of S.R.M. technology, we need to have at least the basic data,”
said Jason Blackstock, who studies the science and policy implications of
geoengineering at University College London.

Very little money is set aside worldwide for geoengineering research. But
even the suggestion of conducting field experiments can cause an
uproar.“People like lines in the sand to be drawn, and there’s a very
obvious one which says, fine, if you want to do stuff on a desktop or a lab
bench, that’s O.K.,” said Matthew Watson, a researcher at the University of
Bristol in Britain. “But as soon as you start going out into the real
world, then that’s different.”

Dr. Watson knows all about those lines in the sand: He led a geoengineering
research project, financed by the British government, that included a
relatively benign test of one proposed technology. In 2011, the researchers
planned to tether a balloon about a half-mile in the sky and try to pump a
small amount of plain water up to it through a hose.The proposal prompted
protests in Britain, was delayed for half a year and then canceled,
although ostensibly for other reasons.In the United States, Dr. Keith and
his colleagues have proposed a balloon experiment that would test the
effect of sulfate droplets on atmospheric ozone — a potential trouble spot
for solar engineering. Dr. Keith receives some private money from Bill
Gates, the founder of Microsoft, for his geoengineering research, but says
that for this experiment, which could cost $10 million or more, most of the
funds would have to come from the government, for reasons of accountability
and transparency.But the prospects of government support for any kind of
geoengineering test seem slim right now in the United States, where many
politicians deny that climate change is even occurring.“There’s a lot of
understanding that we should be working on this,” said Jane Long, formerly
with the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and now a contributing
scientist with theEnvironmental Defense Fund. “The biggest damper is
climate politics.”Even the White House does not talk about the subject. The
president’s science adviser, John P. Holdren, discussed geoengineering in
response to an interviewer’s question in 2009, but has not mentioned it
publicly since. When asked recently about the subject, a spokesman for his
office had no comment for the record.The coming report on the subject by a
panel of the National Academy of Sciences is expected to recommend that
scientists prepare to study the next large volcanic eruption, whenever it
happens, with an eye on better understanding the effects of sulfuric acid
droplets. Even if the academy does not recommend a bigger research program,
including field experiments, the report may spur discussion.“The
conventional wisdom is that the right doesn’t want to talk about this
because it acknowledges the problem,” said Rafe Pomerance, a consultant and
a former environmental official in the State Department during the Clinton
administration. “And the left is worried about the impact on
emissions.”Getting the topic out in the open, then, would be a good thing,
Mr. Pomerance said. “It’s going to take a little more time,” he added. “But
it’s coming.”

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