The Chinese are right. The sentence that I highlighted and put in italics is 
interesting. There is NO GOOD REASON to apply CCS, if it turns out that it is 
less secure, not very sustainable, and doubtless much more expensive than other 
ways to capture and store large volumes of CO2. The atmosphere is a well-mixed 
reservoir on a time scale of a few months, so  for the climate it makes no 
difference where we capture the CO2, nor where it comes from, so climate policy 
(or more narrowly CDR) should be based on the following: LET US CAPTURE AS MUCH 
CO2 AS POSSIBLE ANYWHERE ON EARTH, INDEPENDENT OF ITS ORIGIN, IN THE SAFEST, 
MOST SUSTAINABLE AND COST-EFFECTIVE WAY, Olaf Schuiling

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
On Behalf Of Andrew Lockley
Sent: vrijdag 12 december 2014 23:23
To: geoengineering
Subject: [geo] Fact or Fiction?: Geoengineering Can Solve Global Warming - 
Scientific American


http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/fact-or-fiction-geoengineering-can-solve-global-warming/

Fact or Fiction?: Geoengineering Can Solve Global Warming

Neither blocking sunlight nor capturing carbon can stop climate change

December 12, 2014
By David Biello

A global deal to combat climate change lurches toward reality in Lima, Peru, 
this week—and yet any politically feasible agreement will be insufficient to 
restrain continued warming of global average temperatures, perhaps 
uncomfortably high. Although recent pledges by China, the 28 countries of the 
European Union and the U.S. are the first signs of the possibility of 
restraining the endless growth of greenhouse gas pollution on a long-term 
basis, atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide have crossed the threshold 
of 400 parts per million—and will reach 450 ppm in less than two decades at 
present growth rates. The estimated one trillion metric tons of carbon the 
atmosphere can absorb could be burned through in even less time, particularly 
if India, as it develops, picks up where China leaves off by burning coal 
without any attempt to capture the CO2 before the greenhouse gas spews from 
smokestacks. The world may find itself in need of another alternative, such as 
geoengineering, if catastrophic climate change begins to manifest, whether in 
the form of even more deadly heat waves, more crop-killing droughts, more rapid 
rises in sea level or accelerating warming as natural stores of carbon—such as 
the ocean’s methane hydrates—melt down, releasing yet more greenhouse gases to 
drive yet more climate change. So maybe the answer is to genetically soup up 
plants so they can pull more CO2 out of the air and then bury them at the sea 
bottom? Or give the planet a giant sunshade, whether in the form of more clouds 
or a haze of light-reflecting sulfur bits floating in the stratosphere? "In a 
crisis the temptation will be to use the quick fix of geoengineering," argued 
economist Scott Barrett of Columbia University at a research symposium on CO2 
capture technologies this spring. If civilization continues, the unplanned, 
undirected geoengineering of the climate via burning fossil fuels—whether coal 
in a power plant or oil sludge in a massive container ship steaming across the 
Pacific—then perhaps nations will need to plan for a directed attempt at 
geoengineering or the "deliberate, large-scale manipulation of the planetary 
environment" as the U.K.'s Royal Society defines it. Still, scientists are 
starting to agree that geoengineering will prove insufficient for solving 
climate change. To understand this it helps to think of two distinct flavors of 
climate engineering: those that reduce greenhouse gases and those that block 
sunlight to keep the planet cool. The various sun-blocking schemes could be 
fast and cheap, like a fleet of airplanes spewingsulfur particles in the 
stratosphere to mimic the cooling effects of volcanic eruptions or an armada of 
ships brightening clouds by increasing the number of water droplets within 
them. On the other side, carbon removal schemes are slow and expensive, such as 
big air filters to suck CO2 out of the sky and bury it, turn it into fuel or 
otherwise keep it from trapping heat. Or the natural processes of rock 
weathering and plant growth that over geologic time constrain climate change 
could be sped up. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in its most 
recent comprehensive report suggested that one member of this set of 
ideas—burning plants paired with CO2 capture and burial, aka bioenergy with 
carbon and capture, or BECCS—might prove vital to restrain global warming. And 
the U.S. Department of Agriculture provided a $91-million loan guarantee in 
October to a company—Cool Planet—looking to build a kind of BECCS facility in 
Louisiana to make biofuels and biochar, a carbon-rich residual ash that can be 
used to improve soil fertility, keeping the carbon out of the atmosphere. But 
neither flavor of geoengineering can serve as a solution to climate change.

As outlined in the December Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A, 
sun-blocking schemes require continual refreshing and, at best, only buy time 
for real solutions, such as cutting down on the amount of CO2 piling up in the 
atmosphere as a result of fossil fuel burning, while failing to account for 
other impacts such as the increasing acidity of the oceans. And CO2 removal 
schemes could find themselves in a continuous game of catch-up with the world's 
voluminous output of greenhouse gases—an ever-more onerous burden if the world 
did nothing to restrain global warming pollution. Geoengineering could play a 
role in coping with some of the impacts of climate change, perhaps used to cool 
off the rapidly warming Arctic and save summertime sea ice. Or "these 
strategies might be used throughout the period required to replace fossil fuel 
burning with globally distributed clean energy and even be continued while CO2 
concentrations remain too high," as atmospheric scientists put it in an 
overview of the Philosophical Transactionsissue. Small-scale tests of such 
techniques are therefore warranted to assess the real risks, such as unexpected 
chemical reactions with the existing mix of atmospheric gases, for example. Of 
course, it took massive emissions of CO2 to detect human-caused global warming, 
suggesting small-scale tests may not reveal much. And even at a miniscule scale 
engineering the climate remains a radical step with consequences for both the 
climate and civilization that cannot be predicted in advance. There is no 
technological fix for global warming other than the hard work oftransforming a 
global energy system that relies on burning fossil fuels into one that relies 
on energy sources—the sun, Earth's heat, fission or, maybe some decade, 
fusion—that do not use the atmosphere as a dump. The fact that geoengineering 
cannot suffice is good news because it means that a viable form of climate 
engineering cannot undercut the urgency of making that switch. No form 
ofclimate engineering can solve global warming at present. To think so is 
science fiction.
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