What a great vindicationfor Russ George. This article raises issues that all 
concerned with thepolitics, economics and science of climate change should 
consider.  Theenvironmentalists and UN agencies who have persecuted Russ George 
should apologize and hang their heads in shame. The science on iron 
fertilization is not settled, but the indicationsare very positive.

 http://www.eenews.net/stories/1060008722 "for the past two years, salmonhave 
flowed into rivers along parts of the Pacific Northwest in sometimesrecord 
numbers .... "the iron sulfide bloom is a likely factorcontributing to those 
runs."

 It looks like theopposition to the successful Haida Salmon experiment had less 
to do withprotecting the environment than with using climate politics to damage 
thecapitalist system.  The real moral hazardhere is that climate politics has 
been hijacked by people who have an agenda toreduce economic growth on 
principle, and an ideological hostility to the profitmotive.  It appears these 
critics are obliviousto environmental science due to their eagerness to cast 
business as the enemy. The fact is, profitable CDR enterprises are likely to be 
the maincontribution to a possible future stabilisation of the climate.  This 
is insufferable for some who have putall their eggs in the emission reduction 
basket led by expanded governmentregulation and tax. The Pacific salmoniron 
algae project occurred in a safe environmental location with no apparentrisk as 
a limited and well planned scientific experiment aimed to deliversignificant 
economic and environmental benefits, targeted to poor indigenouscommunities.  
It provided a structuredreplication of much bigger natural volcanic processes. 
The fact that this fieldexperiment was not under academic auspices should be 
secondary to the actualmethods and ideas, and the indifference of universities 
is more a condemnationof the failure of experts to be pro-active and get 
involved.  RussGeorge’s logic is impeccable and simple: feed baby fish and more 
of them willsurvive.  

 The false alarmsraised about this pioneering work are entirely unjustified, as 
this articleshows.  The intimidating attacks directedagainst this salmon algae 
work have been damaging for science, growth andecology. 

 Robert Tulip

Disclaimer: PersonalViews Only

      From: Andrew Lockley <[email protected]>
 To: geoengineering <[email protected]> 
 Sent: Friday, 14 November 2014, 21:23
 Subject: [geo] GEOENGINEERING: Are record salmon runs in the Northwest the 
result of a controversial CO2 reduction scheme?
   
http://www.eenews.net/stories/1060008722The first of a two-part 
series.GEOENGINEERING:Are record salmon runs in the Northwest the result of a 
controversial CO2 reduction scheme?Joshua Learn, E&E reporterClimateWire: 
Wednesday, November 12, 2014The first of a two-part series.For the past 100 
years, the Haida First Nations tribe in Canada has watched the salmon runs that 
provided its main food source decline. Both the quantity and quality of its 
members' catch in the group of islands they call home, off the coast of British 
Columbia, continued to drop.In the late 1990s and early 2000s, they became 
determined to do something about it. They built a hatchery, fixed watersheds 
damaged by past logging practices and sent more fish into the ocean for their 
multiyear migrations.But the larger influx of fish that went out didn't return, 
and the search for better solutions for the small village of Old Massett on the 
north end of Graham Island in British Columbia eventually led the Haida down a 
path that culminated in the largest ocean fertilization project of its kind 
ever attempted.In the summer of 2012, the Haida Salmon Restoration Council 
(HSRC) joined forces with a California businessman, Russ George, and dribbled 
100 tons of iron sulfate into Canadian and international waters in the Pacific 
Ocean off the back of a ship.SPECIAL SERIESDid an ambitious 2012 experiment to 
"fertilize" the ocean with iron filings reduce CO2? That remains a controversy. 
But Pacific salmon seem to have enjoyed it.The idea, promoted by George, was 
that this would stimulate the growth of plankton, which would be eaten by 
larger ocean dwellers and begin a feeding frenzy by the juvenile fish heading 
into the ocean. That might ultimately lead to higher survival rates and better 
fishing results when the fish came back to the island streams to spawn.The 
sheer size of this experiment, when it was discovered, sent a shock wave 
through communities of environmentalists and scientists concerned about 
geoengineering -- schemes to intentionally manipulate the planet's climate. 
They called the actions a "blatant violation" of international laws set up to 
restrict the undertaking of such vast experiments due partly to the unknown 
secondary effects they may cause (Greenwire, Oct. 17, 2012).But for the past 
two years, salmon have flowed into rivers along parts of the Pacific Northwest 
in sometimes record numbers, and questions remain unanswered about the possible 
success, failure or effects of the experiment."I can't stand up and give you a 
rock-solid statement that says A equals B," said Jason McNamee about whether 
the experiment had something to do with the massive sockeye and pink salmon 
runs for the past two years. McNamee is a former director and operations 
officer of HSRC and still sometimes acts as spokesman for the corporation. But, 
he said, "the iron sulfide bloom is a likely factor contributing to those 
runs."Salmon, volcanoes and moneyWhere climate change entered into this vast 
fishing experiment is that it offered the possibility for George and the Haida 
to cash in on it.In the mid-2000s, British Columbia's Premier Gordon Campbell 
was pushing hard to end a moratorium of offshore oil and gas development in the 
Canadian Pacific.McNamee said that representatives from a big oil company 
showed up at Old Massett and asked village officials about potential carbon 
offset investments -- something the Haida weren't particularly familiar with at 
the time.The oil executives didn't have any plan in mind and perhaps only made 
the offer in an effort to promote goodwill with some of the coastal people in 
the area. There wasn't a huge market for carbon offsets in North America at the 
time, but the prospect of funding got the Haida leaders thinking about ways to 
fund further operations to help bring their fish back.Ocean fertilization 
generally involves using a mix of iron sulfate monohydrate -- used also as a 
livestock feed supplement and in the iron pills used by people who are anemic 
-- with iron oxide, or rust, into a liquid solution then dumping it into the 
sea. The principle is that phytoplankton, or algae, eat the iron. The algae are 
gobbled up by zooplankton, including species like krill or copapods -- food 
that salmon prefer.Most experiments of ocean fertilization are done by Mother 
Nature. Dust storms and volcanic eruptions can drop large amounts of iron 
particles into the sea.Sometimes it's hard to link these activities directly 
with salmon productivity, but some experts think that volcanic eruptions do 
offer rare glimpses into what would occur with really big influxes of iron into 
the ocean."The two biggest [salmon] runs that have occurred are both associated 
with volcanoes," said Tim Parsons, a professor emeritus at the University of 
British Columbia and a research scientist at the Institute of Ocean Sciences in 
Canada. "In 1956, an eruption of a volcano in Kamchatka produced a run of 20 
million salmon in 1958 in the Gulf of Alaska, and more recently, in 2008, a 
volcanic eruption on the Aleutians produced the run of 35 million salmon in 
2010."Parsons said that the volcanoes "spew iron over the whole of the 
Pacific," triggering a zooplankton buffet for salmon."Since the need to grow 
rapidly in this new ocean environment is a priority for the very young salmon, 
their abundant survival was for once assured, resulting in the phenomenal 
returns," he said. "Alternative hypotheses on this whole process are difficult 
to find in any of the reports on sockeye salmon returns in 2010."Fertilizing 
the ocean?McNamee said that none of the experts had predicted the huge run of 
sockeye in 2010, but "we would say that it's our belief that the volcanic 
eruption and the volcanic bloom is the cause of that high return."In 2012, the 
Haida and George released iron filings from a ship along a zigzagging path that 
extended over 5,000 nautical miles, timing the dump to coincide with an ocean 
eddy that spread the iron across the migration routes of different species of 
salmon. Satellites showed that the resulting plankton bloom covered around 
13,500 square miles of ocean.The sockeye run occurring this year -- two years 
after their experiment and in line with sockeye reproduction cycles -- in some 
ways resembles the pattern of a volcanic eruption in the Aleutian Islands in 
Alaska in 2008, just as it does the large pink salmon run in 2013 (the pinks 
have shorter cycles).But McNamee stops short of making a direct connection."The 
experiment did what it was designed to do," he said. "The experiment was 
successful because it grew zooplankton, which should have fed the salmon crop 
in the path of their migration."But George, the California businessman and 
director of HSRC before he was later fired, has been a lot more vocal in 
supporting the project."Clearly the 2012 work succeeded beyond our wildest 
expectations bringing back more than a half a billion additional salmon alone," 
he said in an email. "Countless other species of marine life were similarly 
restored and revived.""The fish only came back because standing biomass in our 
region of the NE Pacific was even more tremendously restored."Not everyone 
agrees with George's statements. Rich Zable, the director of fish ecology 
divisions at the National Marine Fisheries Service's Northwest Fisheries 
Science Center, said that the good sockeye runs that struck the northern Snake 
River and Columbia River this season were the result of "a combination of 
positive things happening up and down the coast.""I wouldn't say it's going to 
hurt," he said of HSRC's experiment. "But I wouldn't point my finger at this 
and say this is what caused the good run."He said that salmon tend to travel 
thousands of miles in their migrations up and down the coast. Ocean upwellings 
also bring up iron, but can be variable between years, and cooler waters that 
occur sometimes can also lead to less predation on salmon."We think it's a 
combination of cooler conditions and few predators that leads to good return 
years," he said.Another study that came out Monday in Nature Geoscience shows 
evidence that natural iron fertilization may not have as great an effect as 
thought on carbon sequestration. The authors found that while phytoplankton 
suck CO2 from the atmosphere, much of them could be eaten by other organisms 
like sea snails that produce calcium carbonate shells that sink to the bottom. 
But the organisms also emit CO2 back into the atmosphere in the process of 
creating the shells."Anything that's going to increase nutrients is going to 
help the populations," he said. But "if the fish are passing through, that's 
one snapshot in their lifetime."The bigger pictureThe trouble with the result 
of the experiment, though, is that it may not necessarily be as simple a 
question as whether or not it worked for the salmon.One problem is that even if 
the project did benefit the salmon, and even if the resulting algae bloom 
managed to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, salmon and CO2 aren't the 
only things at risk here."From an ecosystem standpoint, when you perturb the 
ecosystem, you don't really know how it's going to manifest itself in the food 
chain," Zable said.He said there is a potential for the iron to have a negative 
impact on other levels of food chains in the oceans. George Leonard, chief 
scientist of the Ocean Conservancy, said he agrees with many of the problems 
that Zable has with the experiment."Anything done at that scale could 
potentially have big changes in the ecosystem," Leonard said.He said that the 
Ocean Conservancy doesn't formally have a position on this issue, or on 
geoengineering in general, but he questioned whether any conclusions can be 
made on a one-off experiment like this."I think it's a great example of a 
really bad experimental design. If you want to determine cause and effect, 
that's not the way to do it," he said. "Simply dumping stuff into the ocean and 
saying, 'See? I told you so' -- that's not science.""There could be one or a 
million confounding variables," Leonard said.But while the experts are still 
uncertain about what happened during this vast experiment, salmon fishermen 
have been pleased. The salmon that ate these zooplankton have been seen in 
record numbers as they swam upstream in the Pacific Northwest, according to 
news stories from "Marketplace" and the Toronto Globe and Mail.Tomorrow: 
Lawyers get involved.AdvertisementTwitter: @JoshuaLearn1 | Email: 
[email protected]
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