Robert, I partly agree with you but totally disagree when you say, I quote
: "
Clive naïvely asserts that we can't understand enough about how the Earth
system operates in order to take control of it.  This is a religious
argument that ignores global realities".  This statement is more religious
than Clive's. There is NOBODY in this earth who knows how best the climate
system functions for him or her to get hold of it. Our climate predictions
have long betrayed us that is why we invented the concept of "climate
change". A complex system like the climate is difficult to master if not
impossible, especially at the global scale. If you cool temperatures in the
arctic, you are likely to disturb the known an unknown sub-climatic systems
in the southern hemisphere and the equatorial region. Our models are
simplistic and elusive sometimes so that we cannot claim to have mastered
the climate system. Do not be naive to believe that we can do better now
because we know it. How can you correlate atmospheric circulation in
Arizona with precipitations in somaliland? or wind pressure in Butan with
vegetation change in Brazil? At what confidence level? Here the probability
is small if not nil.  If we cannot do that, whatever climate intervention
that will be put in place in a region will improve one aspect of the
climate in that specific region and worsen other variables therein and
elsewhere in the globe, depending on the spectra of its impacts.

Regards,

Dr Cush N. Luwesi, PhD
Lecturer
Department of Geography
Kenyatta University
Nairobi, Kenya

On Fri, Feb 13, 2015 at 5:14 AM, 'Robert Tulip' via geoengineering <
[email protected]> wrote:

> I was pleased to read Clive Hamilton's analysis of the politics of
> geoengineering, since I am one of those right wing technology advocates he
> usefully but wrongly describes.  I would really welcome intensive
> Republican and military and big oil interest in carbon dioxide removal, as
> that is the only thing with prospect of delivering results on climate
> security and energy security.
>
> Multinational companies have to invest in CDR to protect their stock
> prices, their reputations and their sources of supply. CDR can deliver a
> win-win for the climate and the economy. Clive's scientific dreams falsely
> assume that the science on warming means the science is also in on workable
> responses (ie emission reduction).
>
> Emission reduction will not happen, and would not stabilise the climate
> even if it did, since it would only slow the upward CO2 trajectory. We need
> commercial negative emission technology on a scale bigger than total
> emissions.  Economic growth powered by coal is a freight train that no one
> will stop. Emission reduction is as likely as suggesting the French could
> have stopped Hitler by reforming their tax system.  UN emission targets,
> even if any are agreed, are nothing but a mirage that will recede as their
> dates approach.
>
> The entire emission reduction strategy is based on false assumptions about
> science, economics and politics.  The power of the fossil energy industry
> will easily brush aside carbon taxes and global regulations.  So rather
> than demonise Newt Gingrich as Hamilton suggests, a better strategy is to
> reach out to the right wing, to get money, political will and ingenuity to
> identify and deliver mutual goals on global scale.  The political reality
> is that anyone perceived as hostile to the oil and coal and gas industry
> cannot gain the trust of the people who make globally crucial decisions.
>
> As Bjorn Lomborg argues, the priority should be R&D to make CDR
> commercially profitable.  My view is that we can burn coal and oil and gas
> and then mine the produced carbon using industrial algae farms at sea,
> delivering profitable commodities to fund scale up.
>
> Clive naïvely asserts that we can't understand enough about how the Earth
> system operates in order to take control of it.  This is a religious
> argument that ignores global realities.  Nine billion people means a choice
> between climate regulation and a runaway greenhouse.  Humans have planetary
> dominion whether we like it or not.  A Gaia Apollo project can deliver
> negative emission technology in the next decade to remove more carbon from
> the air than we add. The best target for the Paris climate conference is to
> harness private enterprise to remove twenty billion tonnes of carbon from
> the air each year within a decade.
>
> Robert Tulip
>
>   ------------------------------
>  *From:* Andrew Lockley <[email protected]>
> *To:* geoengineering <[email protected]>
> *Sent:* Friday, 13 February 2015, 10:39
> *Subject:* [geo] The Risks of Climate Engineering - NYTimes.com Hamilton
>
>
> http://mobile.nytimes.com/2015/02/12/opinion/the-risks-of-climate-engineering.html?referrer=
> By CLIVE HAMILTON
> FEBRUARY 12, 2015
> THE Republican Party has long resisted action on climate change, but now
> that much of the electorate wants something done, it needs to find a way
> out of the hole it has dug for itself. A committee appointed by the
> National Research Council may just have handed the party a ladder.In a
> two-volume report, the council is recommending that the federal government
> fund a research program into geoengineering as a response to a warming
> globe. The study could be a watershed moment because reports from the
> council, an arm of the National Academies that provides advice on science
> and technology, are often an impetus for new scientific research programs.
> Sometimes known as "Plan B," geoengineering covers a variety of
> technologies aimed at deliberate, large-scale intervention in the climate
> system to counter global warming.
> Despairing at global foot-dragging, some climate scientists now believe
> that a turn to Plan B is inevitable. They see it as inscribed in the logic
> of the situation. The council's study begins with the assertion that the
> "likelihood of eventually considering last-ditch efforts" to address
> climate destabilization grows every year.
> The report is balanced in its assessment of the science. Yet by bringing
> geoengineering from the fringes of the climate debate into the mainstream,
> it legitimizes a dangerous approach.Beneath the identifiable risks is not
> only a gut reaction to the hubris of it all -- the idea that humans could
> set out to regulate the Earth system, perhaps in perpetuity -- but also to
> what it says about where we are today. As the committee's chairwoman,
> Marcia McNutt, told The Associated Press: The public should read this
> report "and say, 'This is downright scary.' And they should say, 'If this
> is our Hail Mary, what a scary, scary place we are in.' "
> Even scarier is the fact that, while most geoengineering boosters see
> these technologies as a means of buying time for the world to get its act
> together, others promote them as a substitute for cutting emissions. In
> 2008, Newt Gingrich, the former House speaker, later Republican
> presidential candidate and an early backer of geoengineering, said:
> "Instead of penalizing ordinary Americans, we would have an option to
> address global warming by rewarding scientific invention," adding: "Bring
> on the American ingenuity."
> The report, considerably more cautious, describes geoengineering as one
> element of a "portfolio of responses" to climate change and examines the
> prospects of two approaches -- removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere,
> and enveloping the planet in a layer of sulfate particles to reduce the
> amount of solar radiation reaching the Earth's surface.
> At the same time, the council makes clear that there is "no substitute for
> dramatic reductions in the emissions" of greenhouse gases to slow global
> warming and acidifying oceans.The lowest-risk strategies for removing
> carbon dioxide are "currently limited by cost and at present cannot achieve
> the desired result of removing climatically important amounts," the report
> said. On the second approach, the council said that at present it was
> "opposed to climate-altering deployment" of technologies to reflect
> radiation back into space.
> Still, the council called for research programs to fill the gaps in our
> knowledge on both approaches, evoking a belief that we can understand
> enough about how the Earth system operates in order to take control of it.
> Expressing interest in geoengineering has been taboo for politicians
> worried about climate change for fear they would be accused of shirking
> their responsibility to cut carbon emissions. Yet in some congressional
> offices, interest in geoengineering is strong. And Congress isn't the only
> place where there is interest. Russia in 2013 unsuccessfully sought to
> insert a pro-geoengineering statement into the latest report of the
> Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
> Early work on geoengineering has given rise to one of the strangest
> paradoxes in American politics: enthusiasm for geoengineering from some who
> have attacked the idea of human-caused global warming. The Heartland
> Institute, infamous for its billboard comparing those who support climate
> science to the Unabomber, Theodore J. Kaczynski, featured an article in one
> of its newsletters from 2007 describing geoengineering as a "practical,
> cost-effective global warming strategy."
> Some scholars associated with conservative think tanks like the Hoover
> Institution and the Hudson Institute have written optimistically about
> geoengineering.
> Oil companies, too, have dipped their toes into the geoengineering waters
> with Shell, for instance, having funded research into a scheme to put lime
> into seawater so it absorbs more carbon dioxide.
> With half of Republican voters favoring government action to tackle global
> warming, any Republican administration would be tempted by the technofix to
> beat all technofixes.
> For some, instead of global warming's being proof of human failure,
> engineering the climate would represent the triumph of human ingenuity.
> While climate change threatens to destabilize the system, geoengineering
> promises to protect it. If there is such a thing as a right-wing
> technology, geoengineering is it.President Obama has been working
> assiduously to persuade the world that the United States is at last serious
> about Plan A -- winding back its greenhouse gas emissions. The suspicions of
> much of the world would be reignited if the United States were the first
> major power to invest heavily in Plan B.
> Clive Hamilton is a professor of public ethics at Charles Sturt University
> in Australia and the author, most recently, of "Earthmasters: The Dawn of
> the Age of Climate Engineering."
>  --
> 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.
>
>
>   --
> 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.
>

-- 
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