Five YouTube videos of the 12 May event are available here:

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL4E3D946BECCF7DE3

The event is described here:

http://www.sri.com/newsroom/events/cafe-scientifique-silicon-valley-sri-two-novel-approaches-mitigating-climate-change

Part 1: Ken on solar geo and strat aerosols:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Y6p-B-KbiQ
Part 2: Ken on solar geo and strat aerosols:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wo5Y-SPrybE
Part 3: Armand on marine cloud brighening:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZbpYGwu4KNA
Part 4: Armand on marine cloud brighening:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b3D6mx5SQo8
Part 5: Ken and Armand answer questions:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KS9Nbe3Wzs

Cafe Scientifique Silicon Valley @ SRI: Reflecting Sunlight to Cool Earth's
Climate: Emulating Volcanoes and Brightening Marine Clouds
May 12, 2015
SRI - Menlo Park, CA

This free Cafe event will feature presentations by two thought leaders on
climate change:
[image: Caldeira and Neukermans]
Ken Caldeira (l); Armand Neukermans (r)

*Solar Geoengineering and Climate Change: *Nearly everyone understands that
the most effective way to reduce environmental risk associated with climate
change is to deeply cut greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible, yet
emissions and atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases continue to
increase. If current emissions trends continue, by the end of this century,
nearly every summer in the tropics will be hotter than the hottest summer
yet on record, raising the possibility of widespread crop failures and
famine. If climate change does prove truly catastrophic, the only feasible
way to cool the Earth rapidly would be to use solar geoengineering
technologies, for example, by emulating the cooling effects of volcanoes.
While it is fairly certain that Earth's climate can be cooled in this way,
it is far less certain whether such approaches could ever really reduce
overall risk and damage. *Dr. Ken Caldeira*
<http://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab/Caldeira_bio.html>, a senior
climate scientist at the Carnegie Institution for Science, will present the
science of solar geoengineering and discuss what this science might mean
for society.

*Marine Cloud Brightening: *The National Academy of Sciences recently
called for research into “geoengineering“. *Dr. Armand Neukermans* will
describe the efforts of a group of retired scientists and engineers to
develop a spray system that might enable a study of the feasibility of
marine cloud brightening (MCB) for climate cloud studies, as well as
possible climate intervention. MCB aims to increase the reflectivity of
low-hanging ocean clouds, thereby reflecting more sunlight and cooling the
planet. This might be done by increasing the droplet concentration in the
clouds by spraying seawater from oceangoing ships. The proposed systems
aims to create 1015 cloud nuclei from a glass of seawater. MCB ( if ever
needed) might conceivably be used globally or locally (e.g., for arctic
melt shielding, hurricane cooling, reef preservation, or fog belt
restoration).
About the Speakers

*Dr. Ken Caldeira *is a climate scientist working for the Carnegie
Institution for Science, Department of Global Ecology at Stanford
University. He investigates issues related to climate, carbon, and energy
systems. His primary tools are climate and the carbon cycle models,
although he does field work related to ocean acidification. Dr. Caldeira
co-authored a recent National Academies report
<http://www.nap.edu/catalog/18988/climate-intervention-reflecting-sunlight-to-cool-earth>
, *Climate Intervention: Reflecting Sunlight to Cool Earth*. A free PDF
version <http://www.nap.edu/download.php?record_id=18988> is available.

*Dr. Armand Neukermans *has held research and management positions at
KLA-Tencor, Hewlett-Packard, Xerox, and General Electric, and founded Xros,
an optical switch company. He is the author of 40 publications and the
inventor of more than 75 patents in diverse fields. He was named Silicon
Valley “Inventor of the year” in 2001. Since his retirement, he has been
involved in environmental projects, such as the foundation of the Big Sur
Environmental Institute, and in fostering the causes of social
entrepreneurs. He holds EE and ME degrees from Louvain University, and a
Ph.D. in applied physics from Stanford University.
- See more at:
http://www.sri.com/newsroom/events/cafe-scientifique-silicon-valley-sri-two-novel-approaches-mitigating-climate-change#sthash.S562iCyX.dpuf


_______________
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://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab/
blog: http://kencaldeira.org
@KenCaldeira

My assistant is Dawn Ross <[email protected]>, with access to
incoming emails.
Postdoc positions:
https://jobs.carnegiescience.edu/jobs/postdoctoral-opportunity-global-climate-modeling/

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