https://kencaldeira.wordpress.com/2015/02/16/fast-cheap-and-easy-and-very-dangerous/

Fast, cheap and easy ... and very dangerous
Posted on February 16, 2015
<https://kencaldeira.wordpress.com/2015/02/16/fast-cheap-and-easy-and-very-dangerous/>
 by kencaldeira <https://kencaldeira.wordpress.com/author/kencaldeira/>

[image: 635596243655283945-OURVIEW]
<https://kencaldeira.files.wordpress.com/2015/02/635596243655283945-ourview.jpg>

Last week, I got an email from an editor at USA Today. The email said
"We're looking for someone to ... argue for geoengineering as a viable means
to fight climate change", continuing "We would need 350 words by 3 PM
tomorrow afternoon."

They said that they couldn't show me the piece I would be responding to
(!), but the main points would be:

*- As the NAS panel said, geoengineering is no substitute for reducing
greenhouse gas emissions, the root cause of the problem.*

*- Albedo modification on a global scale could have major unintended
consequences.*

*- Carbon dioxide removal is less problematic but is probably cost
prohibitive, particularly if carbon emissions remain untaxed.*

*- Research should continue into climate intervention only as a
last-resort, if-all-else-fails option.*

I responded, saying, "OK. The stuff that you are saying is stuff that I
largely agree with. Nevertheless, you can argue that the glass is half
empty and I can argue that the glass is half full, arguing for the
potential benefits."

They responded, saying, "OK. The more half full, the better."

So, I set out to write a piece that would be as strong and one-sided as
possible, without saying anything that I thought was false. Note that my
intent was NOT to present a balanced view, but to argue a side as a lawyer
might argue a case.

I gave them about 100 words more than they asked for, and they cut it down
to size.

The piece by the USA Today editorial board can be found here:
http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2015/02/15/climate-change-solar-geoengineering-greenhouse-gases-editorials-debates/23465849/

My piece can be found here:
http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2015/02/15/megadrought-climate-change-ken-caldeira-editorials-debates/23465975/

I think what I said is true, but is not balanced. Possibility is not
probability. Saying that something could happen doesn't say anything about
the likelihood of it happening.

--

I wrote an email to a friend about this:


*The USA Today piece is a bit too high-pitched for my comfort level. The
same thing happened with me writing OpEds for the NY Times.*

*The media outlets want you to be as extreme and outlandish as possible
because that sells copy, and they know you want to be published and say
that if you are too lukewarm, we will find someone else who will say more
provocative things. So you compromise and become a little more strident
than you really feel comfortable with because you are an egomaniac who
wants the public exposure.*

http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2015/02/15/megadrought-climate-change-ken-caldeira-editorials-debates/23465975/
One known way to cool the Earth: Another viewSolar geoengineering could be
fast, cheap and easy.

If current trends in greenhouse gas emissions continue, unprecedented
megadroughts may plague much of the western USA, and the tropics may get so
hot that widespread crop failures and famines become commonplace. There is
a chance that climate change will prove truly catastrophic, with people
suffering and dying in many parts of the world.

With the Earth in such a fevered state, there will be intense and
irresistible pressure for politicians to do something, anything, to cool
things off.

People in crisis won't want to wait decades for carbon dioxide-polluting
energy systems to be transformed. And even if emissions of all greenhouse
gases were stopped suddenly, the Earth would remain hot for thousands of
years. There is basically only one way known to cool the Earth rapidly.

The only thing politicians can do to cause Earth's climate to cool within
their terms in office is to reflect more of the sun's warming rays back to
space. We know this is possible because we have seen volcanoes do it. In
1991, the Mount Pinatubo eruption in the Philippines injected lots of small
particles high in the atmosphere, and the next year the Earth cooled,
despite the continued rise in atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations.

A small fleet of airplanes could do what large volcanoes do -- create a
layer of small particles high in the atmosphere that scatters incoming
sunlight back to space. Cooling the Earth this way could be fast, cheap and
easy.

With the Earth in a fevered state, the pressure to put on a "solar
geoengineering" ice pack could become irresistible, especially if this ice
pack could potentially save millions of lives.

It is possible, of course, that sustaining the kind of aerosol layer that
circled the Earth in 1991 would just make things worse. We just don't know.
We need to do the research so that if a climate catastrophe does occur,
politicians will know whether turning down the heat this way can really
save lives and alleviate suffering.

Ignorance is not an option. The cost of not knowing is too large. The
ethical path forward is to generate the knowledge now that may be needed to
save lives in the future.

*Ken Caldeira is a climate scientist with the Carnegie Institution for
Science at Stanford.*

_______________
Ken Caldeira

Carnegie Institution for Science
Dept of Global Ecology
260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
+1 650 704 7212 [email protected]
website: http://kencaldeira.com
blog: http://kencaldeira.org
@KenCaldeira

My assistant is Dawn Ross <[email protected]>, with access to
incoming emails.

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