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Mitigating Climate Change – Examining Viable Options
March 27, 2017

Does putting particles or mirrors in space to reflect sunlight sound like
science fiction, or may it be a viable technological option for mitigating
ongoing climate change?

Can the potential implementation of climate geoengineering effectively
safeguard our planet’s climate, or will it simply create more environmental
concerns?

Those are two of the pressing questions to be addressed on Thursday, March
30, during the seminar “Into the Great Wide Open: The Potential Promise and
Perils of Climate Geoengineering.”

Seminar presenter Wil Burns, Ph.D., is co-executive director of American
University’s Forum for Climate Engineering Assessment.

Wil Burns, Ph.D., co-executive director of the Forum for Climate
Engineering Assessment at American University, will present a balanced look
at engineering options to mitigate climate change, beginning at 4 p.m. in
the duPont-Ball Library, Room 25L, on Stetson’s historical campus in
DeLand, Florida. An informal dialogue session follows at 5 p.m., designed
to accommodate students who want to talk more about science/policy
interfacing in related academic, governmental and career settings.

All members of the Stetson community are invited to attend, including those
with nonscientific backgrounds. Song Gao, Ph.D., associate professor in the
Chemistry Department at Stetson, invited Burns and serves as host and
facilitator.

“According to current scientific analyses,” says Burns, “the world is on
course for continued warming for centuries after GHG [greenhouse gas]
emissions are stabilized. This could have disastrous consequences for human
institutions and natural ecosystems, including massive sea level rise,
substantial diminution of biodiversity and potentially catastrophic
declines in agricultural production.”

As a result, he explains, a series of potential mitigation responses –
climate geoengineering – is gaining increased attention, with methods that
include ocean iron fertilization, marine cloud albedo enhancement and
stratospheric sulfate injection, among others. Yet, Burns cautions: “While
these schemes could help the world combat climate change, they also could
have serious negative ramifications, including alteration of marine
ecosystems and threats to food security.”

Gao anticipates a mesmerizing lecture and lively discussion afterward.

“The current climate change has an unmistakable human contribution, as seen
from observational evidence worldwide and mathematical simulations based on
fundamental physics, chemistry and climate science,” Gao comments. “The
real dilemma is, while humans have played a major role in facilitating this
warming, humans can also play active roles in mitigating climate change by
reducing GHG emissions and, in dire scenarios where warming gets extreme,
considering the options of geoengineering. This is what Dr. Burns will
outline with a thoughtful discussion across scientific, policy and social
aspects in layman’s terms. We think this will be a fantastic opportunity
for our students and campus members to engage in a timely topic of global
and local significance.”

Burns also is co-chair of the International Environmental Law Committee of
the American Branch of the International Law Association. Previously, he
was director of the Energy Policy and Climate Program at Johns Hopkins
University. He has published nearly 100 academic papers and co-edited four
books in areas of climate geoengineering science and governance, European
Union’s Emissions Trade System, and the loss and damage mechanism of the
Paris Agreement.

For more information, email Song Gao at [email protected].



*Into the Great Wide Open: **The Potential Promise and Perils of Climate
Geoengineering*

*Seminar presented by Wil Burns, Ph.D., Co-Executive Director, Forum for
Climate Engineering Assessment, American University*

*Thursday, March 30*

Stetson University, DeLand, Florida

duPont-Ball Library, Room 25L

Seminar, 4-5 p.m.

Informal Dialogue, 5-5:45 p.m.

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