Poster's note: places geoengineering in to context in deep time. Leaves me
wondering whether we could block the bosphorus and put the Black Sea into
an azolla friendly freshwater state . I welcome comments on this

https://palladiummag.com/2019/01/28/ancient-upheavals-show-how-to-geoengineer-a-stable-climate/

PATRICK MELLOR JANUARY 28, 2019
Ancient Upheavals Show How To Geoengineer A Stable Climate
Garrett Sears/Iceland - Following the glacial stream
In April of last year, the concentration of carbon dioxide in the Earth’s
atmosphere reached 410 ppm. This is the highest in over 3 million years,
and much higher than the pre-industrial average of 280 ppm. The last time
CO2 levels were this high, in the middle Pliocene epoch, the average global
temperature was around 3 °C greater than today, and sea levels were 25
meters higher. The time before that, in the middle Miocene, sea level was
40-50 meters higher.

Assuming “business as usual,” CO2 concentration is projected to be 600 to
800 ppm by the end of the century. Optimistic projections not involving
sustained negative emissions starting at mid-century give an average of
~2°C warming by 2100. Even that is considered by authorities to be a
problem, but it’s less than the paleoclimatic analog.

It’s usually assumed that if we reduce emissions, then CO2 will steadily
decline on its own due to natural sequestration processes. This is based on
the notion of a set residence time in the atmosphere—essentially a
guaranteed life cycle which these kinds of predictions can be based on—as
if the pre-industrial climate was some kind of strong equilibrium to which
excursions will quickly return.

But that’s not really how it works. In fact, the assumption that our
pre-industrial climate was a robust equilibrium is an existentially
dangerous one. If there’s more carbon around, the biosphere will just
operate with more carbon in the cycle, including in the air, until some
process causes permanent sequestration. To understand this, as well as the
unusual and metastable nature of our current climate, we have to go back to
the geological history of climate change.

The Current Climate Is An Icy Anomaly

Prior to 20 million years ago, both carbon dioxide concentration and
temperature were significantly above current levels, and had remained there
for most of earth’s history.

Even during the much of the cooling trend of the last 20 million years, the
Arctic Ocean was ice free in the summer, and the northern margins of the
surrounding continents, where today there is barren tundra, were clothed in
temperate forest. The Antarctic Ice Sheet covered only a small area around
the pole, the rest of the continent supporting mixed forests of conifers
and southern beeches. The coastlines of the continents were many miles
further inland than today.

In contrast to the usual apocalyptic narratives, the tropics were not
scorched wastelands. They were covered with luxuriant rainforests
containing up to 100 species of ape, including our own ancestors.
Temperatures were up to 10 ℃ higher than today at the poles, but the
tropics were not much hotter. Recent observations are showing that warming
is concentrated in high latitudes, causing mostly reduced seasonal
variations.

Prior to the last 20 million years, the climate was mostly warm and wet,
with much reduced seasonality.

The last time the climate was anything like today—in other words, the last
time there was an ice age, the current one being the Quaternary
glaciation—was the late Carboniferous period. That was 300 million years
ago, before the dinosaurs, with an ice age lasting approximately 60 million
years. Prior to that, the only other ice age since the advent of
multicellular life was the Ordovician glaciation, about 450 million years
ago, at which time the atmosphere had not yet reached its modern
composition.

The key point to understand is that the recent low carbon, low temperature
condition is a significant anomaly from the norm. We are in an interglacial
period—with reduced but still significant glaciation—of an ice age which
has lasted for the past 2.6 million years. Ice ages are rare: the Earth has
had significant polar ice caps for at most 20% of the last 540 million
years.

The remaining 80%, including the entire Mesozoic era, saw what are often
described as hothouse or greenhouse conditions. The greenhouse state is the
default equilibrium. Glacial or icehouse periods, on the other hand, are
historically not stable. They are comparatively short term events occurring
because of particular contingent conditions.

Most of Earth’s history has been warm, wet, and high-carbon. Ice ages like
the current one are rare, few, and short. The recent climate has not been a
long-term equilibrium, but a short-term metastable condition. This is key
background for any discussion of global warming, and any possible response.

Prehistoric Volcanic Warming

Though there are other factors, historical large changes in the climate
equilibrium are closely correlated with addition and removal of CO2 from
the atmosphere. The addition is usually due to massive and sustained
volcanic activity on a scale unseen for tens of millions of years. For
example, large areas of Siberia and Northern India are covered with the
remains of lava flows extending hundreds of miles, from eruptions which
continued for tens of millenia, known as flood basalts or traps.

The Siberian Traps were formed simultaneously with the Permian-Triassic
mass extinction, the worst in history, where 95% of marine and 70% of
terrestrial species were wiped out. Coming close on the heels of this
extinction event, the Wrangellia eruptions in the Carnian stage of the
early Triassic caused a further mass injection of CO2 into the atmosphere,
and another episode of sudden warming. This increased evaporation from the
oceans to such an extent that extreme precipitation caused almost
continuous flooding across the entire planet. Current evidence suggests
that average global rainfall reached the levels now seen in temperate
rainforests on the Pacific Northwest, for a period of 2 million years.
Known as the Carnian Pluvial Event, this caused another large scale
turnover in the biosphere, instrumental in the evolution of the dinosaurs.

The Indian flows, or Deccan Traps, happened at the same time as the
extinction of the dinosaurs, and were possibly caused or intensified by the
asteroid impact that caused the extinction. This caused a warming period
leading to the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum, an event much studied as a
possible analogue of current climate change.

The volcanic hotspot underlying Yellowstone National Park is a possible
source of a future flood basalt event.

Historically, these eruptions seem to cause an initial global cooling,
caused by the release of sun-blocking aerosols like SO2 into the upper
atmosphere, and then a large degree of warming caused by CO2 as the Sulfur
dissipates. The associated mass extinctions are likely exacerbated by this
climate whiplash. They also prolong the effects: the initial event and
dimmed cooling period reduces biological productivity, reducing the ability
of the biosphere to sequester carbon. This exacerbates ocean acidification
as CO2 dissolves into the water. Ocean acidification, combined with the
sudden reheating, in turn keeps biological productivity much reduced and
slows recovery. It can then take millions of years for the biosphere to
return the CO2 level to an equilibrium.

In contrast, mass extraction of CO2 from the atmosphere is associated with
events where unusual factors enable the removal of large quantities of
plant material from circulation before the biomass either decomposes or is
consumed by animals (which would release the CO2 absorbed by plant life
back into the atmosphere). One example of this would be mass burial. Once
icehouse conditions are established—that is, ice age conditions with
relatively lower temperatures, such as the present day—they are maintained
until the sequestration mechanism ceases to operate.

In the early history of the Earth, this happened multiple times, and these
ice ages are termed Snowball Earth events. The earliest one was likely
caused by cyanobacteria, the first widely successful photosynthetic
organism. The advent of photosynthesis both removed CO2 directly, and
removed methane, another potent greenhouse gas, by oxidation. The
transition to an oxidizing atmospheric chemistry caused a mass extinction,
as other life wasn’t adapted to a harsh oxygen atmosphere. As a result, the
cyanobacteria could draw down CO2 until nearly the entire surface of the
planet was covered in ice. These events may have ended by the injection of
CO2 through eruption of flood basalts through the ice cover.

The important point to take away from this is that massive CO2 addition to
the atmosphere has historically been caused by volcanic eruptions, and slow
carbon drawdown has occurred through the response of the biosphere to this
addition, returning conditions to a hothouse equilibrium. Large-scale CO2
removal is caused by distinctive and contingent biological events, rather
than by any kind of ongoing and stable geophysical process, and results in
a metastable icehouse state.

Our current addition of CO2 differs from this pattern by being caused by
industrial activity, and occurring on a far shorter timescale and higher
rate than is typical, although with a lower potential total addition.

Contextualizing Anthropogenic Warming

For comparison to our own activity, the most intense phase of the Deccan
Traps eruptions, 66 million years ago, released several tens of thousands
of gigatons of CO2 into the atmosphere, over a period of about 30,000
years. Since 1750, we have emitted about 1500 gigatons, half of this in the
last 40 years. We have roughly 3000 gigatons of potential emissions from
easily accessible fossil fuels remaining in the ground, although to release
this we would have to extract and burn all the world’s coal, which is
unlikely. So, even assuming these figures to be underestimates, and
factoring in CO2 equivalents in methane and other warming gases, total
realized and potential anthropogenic emissions are unlikely to exceed 4000
gigatons.

This is dwarfed by the effect of the largest Deccan eruptions.
Realistically, we will only ever emit about a tenth of the CO2 released in
a flood basalt volcanic event; we will probably not use all available coal
reserves as the carbon intensity of economic growth is either flat or on a
slowly declining trend. The major difference is that our emissions are
occurring over a period of centuries, rather than tens of millennia. Even
the most extreme natural events would release only on the order of 1
gigaton per year, whereas in 2017, global CO2 emissions were about 41
gigatons.

So our own maximum total impact is well within the limits of the largest
natural events that have occurred in prehistory, but is happening much
faster, and is therefore significant. Judging by these prehistorical
analogues, by default we can expect a very large impact: a mass extinction,
significant loss of coastal land, and large changes to global weather
patterns.

Most importantly, the unprecedented rate of our emissions may cause
significant instability in the climate, which is already precariously
balanced in an unusual ice age. Such instability has been seen recently in
the transition from the last glacial maximum to the current interglacial
period, though this was not directly caused by CO2 emissions.

This transition was not gradual or stable. Temperatures rose and fell
multiple degrees within decades. In the Younger Dryas event, only 13,000
years ago, global temperatures declined 2-6℃ from values similar to the
present, within about 30 years, after having risen on a similar timescale.
The colder climate lasted 1000 years, causing glaciers to advance once more
across Eurasia and North America, and then ended as abruptly as it started.
There is evidence that the sudden increase in aridity caused during this
time disrupted and postponed early development of agriculture in the Levant.

Our economic systems and patterns of settlement are not equipped to deal
well with this degree of instability, or with its possible result of a
return to the hothouse equilibrium.

Analogs For Intervention

It’s obvious that something will need to be done about this, either to
adapt to changing global climate patterns, or ideally to control them.
Fortunately, the geological record does not only forecast harsh change, but
also contains example mechanisms of mass carbon removal from the
atmosphere, which could help us to understand our options.

The two most relevant massive drawdown events occur during the
Carboniferous period, and the Eocene epoch:

In the Carboniferous, around 300 million years ago over a period of tens of
millions of years, CO2 concentration declined tenfold from over 2000 ppm to
about 200 ppm, similar to levels at the most recent glacial maximum, and
the only other time they have fallen this low in the last 500 million
years. Unsurprisingly, this also resulted in the previously mentioned ice
age, a particularly long and deep one. The carbon drawdown was caused by
the evolution of land plants before terrestrial herbivores and fungi became
adept at digesting wood. Huge forests proliferated across the continents,
and dead trees simply lay where they fell, without decomposing efficiency,
until eventually buried by subsequent vegetation.

Millions of years of this process sequestered enough carbon to raise the
oxygen concentration of the atmosphere to 35% (today it is 20%). This
allowed the evolution of giant insects, whose respiratory system depended
on this elevated oxygen, and terrifyingly destructive firestorms, where
even wet wood would burn. When fungi, termites, and herbivorous vertebrates
evolved and proliferated enough to end the sequestration process, and start
returning carbon trapped in dead vegetation to the atmosphere, the ice age
ended. Glaciation did not occur on Earth for another 270 million years.
Much of the coal we burn now represents carbon removed from the atmosphere
during this ice age.

The second example, the Azolla event, was only discovered in the last 20
years, and was extremely specific in its mechanism. In the early Eocene,
global surface temperatures were 8 ℃ higher than today. Tropical forests
extended almost to the poles, and atmospheric CO2 concentration was 3500
ppm, in contrast to today’s 400 ppm. Around 49 million years ago, the
global climate suddenly cooled by 6 ℃, with a simultaneous drop of
atmospheric CO2 to 650 ppm. The cause of this drop in temperature and CO2
was unknown until a convincing hypothesis was proposed in 2004:

The Arctic Coring Expedition took advantage of reduced ice cover to take
core samples from the Lomonosov Ridge, in the Northern Arctic Ocean. To
their surprise, they discovered huge deposits of the freshwater aquatic
fern Azolla locked under the seabed. These deposits, up to 20 meters deep,
were laid down 49 million years ago, sustained over 800,000 years, and
exactly coinciding with the observed drop in temperature and CO2. Noting
this correlation, the researchers proposed a causal link, now widely
accepted, between the strange growth of Azolla, and the massive drawdown in
atmospheric carbon dioxide, accounting for the sudden global cooling in the
Eocene.

Azolla is incapable of growth in salt water, and so was only able to grow
in huge volumes in the Arctic Ocean due to a set of unusual factors
involving a freshwater surface layer. These factors also ensured that the
carbon absorbed by the fern through photosynthesis was sequestered on the
seabed rather than being returned to the atmosphere when the plants
decomposed.

During the Eocene, the Arctic Ocean had limited water exchange with the
rest of the world oceans, and received the flow of a number of large
rivers. The lower density freshwater from these rivers pooled on the
surface, causing a low salinity layer to form. This layer prevented mixing
of the water column, and created a seabed with extremely low oxygen levels,
while also enabling Azolla to proliferate across the surface. As a floating
plant with leaves above the water, Azolla had direct access to atmospheric
CO2. Additionally, and unusually among ferns, Azolla is able to fix
nitrogen directly from the atmosphere using a bacterial symbiosis, removing
a further limitation to growth. Most decomposing organisms require oxygen
for their metabolism, and this was severely depleted on the seabed.
Therefore, when the ferns died and sank, they were preserved intact until
buried by sediment, and the carbon they had absorbed in life was locked
into the sedimentary rock under the sea. Ironically, much of the oil and
natural gas resources currently under active exploration in the Arctic are
composed of these Azolla deposits.

A common and vital lesson can be drawn from these historic events: previous
episodes of warming have only ended when specific events in the biosphere,
like the Carboniferous drawdown and the Azolla event, caused mass drawdown
of CO2. The cessation of emissions alone, and the background rate of carbon
extraction from the atmosphere, have never been sufficient to reduce
atmospheric CO2 either to a level or on a timescale relevant to human
civilization.

Possible Geoengineering Methods

Even currently locked-in emissions and warming may cause dramatic climate
instability, or a phase transition to a stable hothouse equilibrium, where
the factors maintaining the equilibrium may be powerful enough to resist
any attempt to return. Therefore, active intervention in the climate
system, not merely changing structure of economic activity, seems necessary
to avoid the potential of an uncontrolled climate catastrophe.

Such intervention could be no different in principle to the examples we’ve
just looked at. The Azolla event is particularly informative, as it shows
how specific conditions obtaining in the physical environment can cause a
self-sustaining biological process with a favorable ratio of carbon
extraction to energy investment.

In any case, some kind of geoengineering or controlled carbon drawdown is
necessary to ensure optimal and stable conditions for human civilization.

While previous examples of biological carbon drawdown have mostly occurred
over timescales of at minimum several millennia, any human effort would
need to be effective on a much shorter timescale.

There are four realistic candidate geoengineering methods that could be
used to solve this problem. These are direct air capture (DAC), bioenergy
with carbon capture and storage (BECCS), injection of aerosols into the
high atmosphere, and oceanic iron fertilization:

Direct Air Capture is simple, but is currently too expensive, at
approximately $100 per ton of CO2. DAC startups don’t even plan to
sequester, but rather to produce carbon-neutral fuels for profit, which
isn’t helpful for geoengineering. Government funding could provide
incentive for sequestration, but the expense would be too high, and the
technology won’t be mature enough to scale any time soon; Canadian startup
Carbon Engineering’s pilot plant only extracts one ton per day.

Bio-Energy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS) consists of biomass
being cultivated at large scale and used as feedstock to create biofuels,
such as ethanol, replacing fossil fuels in the same roles, or directly
burned to generate electrical power. The CO2 released in the process is
captured by scrubber systems and injected deep underground, usually into
porous rock formations. This enables a portion of the CO2 collected by the
plants in photosynthesis to be sequestered, while the rest is used to
create carbon neutral biofuel and electricity. In theory, this enables a
BECCS system to achieve net negative emissions, while remaining
economically viable from the sale of biofuels and electrical power.

BECCS is an elaboration of simple carbon capture and storage, where
scrubbers are used to capture exhaust gases from fossil fuel burning, or
biomass is pyrolyzed into biochar to be buried or used as soil amendment.
These methods are already in operation where carbon credits act as an
economic incentive.

Because of its close integration with existing technologies and emissions
sources, BECCS is currently the favored method for achieving net negative
emissions, but like DAC, suffers from problems of scalability. A BECCS
project would need to economically support both its fuel and power
production, and its method of carbon sequestration, using the sale of the
commodities produced. This is unlikely to be viable in the near term
without either significant carbon taxes, or increases in fossil fuel
prices, which the advent of fracking has made unlikely for now.

Using current methods, removing 10 gigatons of CO2 annually using BECCS
would require a land area the size of India to be brought under cultivation
for this purpose alone, which would entail an expansion of agricultural
land without compare in recent history, and be ecologically disastrous in
itself. If BECCS projects replaced existing agriculture, this would
displace the cultivation of food on arable land. BECCS will almost
certainly be a component of future strategies to effect carbon drawdown,
but cannot be rolled out on the scale required within a short time frame,
and would be too destructive as a sole solution.

Atmospheric Aerosol Injection is the next method. It is possible to provide
a direct cooling effect by injecting aerosols, most models using SO2, into
the stratosphere to partially block out the sun. This method is not
included in mainstream roadmaps, but would be extremely economical, and
deceptively efficient. By directly reducing incoming solar radiation,
causing global dimming, SO2 injection mimics the short term effects of a
large volcanic eruption, and enables the prevention of warming without
addressing CO2 emissions at all. By this mechanism, aerosol pollution from
industry likely masked some of the impact of increasing CO2 levels during
the 20th century.

While SO2 causes acid rain if released at low altitude, if injected into
the upper atmosphere it would have little to no effect at ground level, and
would provide effective cooling if continuously replenished. SO2 could be
injected through large hoses attached to tethered balloons, from
pressurized canisters aboard specialized or commercial aircraft, or through
airburst artillery. Addition of a few million tons of SO2 yearly would be
sufficient to offset the warming effect of a doubled CO2 concentration.
This is a comparatively small quantity, and could be distributed by a fleet
of modified 747 airliners for a cost of 1 or 2 billion dollars yearly. This
would provide effective mitigation of climate change within months. With
costs comparable to those of operating a small airline, this method could
be implemented by most states, or even by wealthy individuals.

The ease of implementation of this method makes it almost inevitable that
it will at some point be employed unilaterally. For example, if a strong
heat wave occurs in a city in Southern Asia during a period of high
humidity, as likely will happen at some point in the next few decades, and
wet bulb temperatures rise above 35℃, this will cause mass casualties
directly attributable to climate change. Currently, the impacts of
heatwaves are seen as an increase in the background death rate, and mainly
affect the very old, very young, and people with existing health problems.
But in this case, previously healthy people will start dying in the streets
without access to air conditioning.

This level of obvious impact will create an imperative for the government
of the country concerned to do something, anything, to mitigate the
situation. Given the low cost of aerosol injection, and its immediate
effects, there is a strong possibility that injecting SO2 into the
stratosphere will be their response, with easy justification using the
argument that the tragedy was the result of centuries of emissions by large
wealthy nations. This could have complex geopolitical consequences, given
that aerosol injection will modify the global climate quickly and
obviously, and cause easily observable whitening of the sky.

At first glance, aerosol injection seems to be the ultimate “get out of
jail free card” for climate change, and it does have a place in preventing
immediate catastrophic consequences of runaway warming. I would not be at
all surprised if it were employed at some point. It does not however
provide a long term solution.

First of all, shading the planet will not affect the rate of ocean
acidification, which creates severe problems in its own right. Dissolution
of CO2 into the ocean lowers the pH of seawater, disrupting the oceanic
biosphere. We can see this happening already: since 1750, the average pH of
the world ocean has decreased from 8.25 to 8.14.

Second, any aerosol injection system requires continuous management and
calibration to give the right degree of cooling. Successful short term
management of climate using this method will take the pressure off and thus
reduce the employment of more long term solutions that address CO2
directly. If CO2 concentrations continue to increase during a period of
effective solar radiation management, an unstable situation could result,
where any interruption or miscalibration in aerosol injection will result
in sudden extreme warming. This is the same mechanism that caused previous
mass extinctions after flood basalt events, as we noted above.

Oceanic Iron Fertilization. The ideal geoengineering method for tackling
the carbon problem would mimic a naturally occurring process which has been
shown to mitigate past episodes of global warming, would not be
prohibitively expensive or environmentally destructive, would have
beneficial effects beyond those of reducing climate change, would not
create dependency on continuous careful management, and would have
self-limiting negative consequences if misapplied. Such a method exists,
has been demonstrated experimentally for decades, and does not require the
creation of any massive infrastructure or technological innovation. This
method is oceanic iron fertilization.


NASA/North Pacific – Possible Phytoplankton bloom resulting from the 2012
Haida Salmon Restoration Corporation iron fertilization experiment
Iron fertilization takes advantage of the fact that the growth of marine
phytoplankton is primarily limited by micronutrient availability,
specifically that of iron, and that repletion of available iron in the
photic zone of the oceans is able to induce massive algal blooms, which
then sink into the abyss, sequestering vast quantities of carbon. Iron
fertilization has been experimentally demonstrated twelve times since 1993,
most notably in 2007 in the South Atlantic by an Indo-German consortium
(project LOHAFEX, 2007), and in the North Pacific in 2012, by the Haida
Salmon Restoration Corporation (HSRC). In both cases the addition of
ferrous sulfate in quantities between 10 and 100 tons resulted in massive
plankton blooms visible from space, with an estimated production of up to
100,000 tons of algae per ton of added iron. Even assuming that much of the
carbon contained in this algae is eventually returned to the atmosphere,
this is a most favorable ratio. Oceanographer John Martin was aware of this
as early as 1988, when he stated “give me half a tanker of iron, and I will
give you an ice age.”

Several iron fertilization experiments have been of doubtful legal status,
and societal reactions to them have been polarized both in the popular
press and academic contexts. The HSRC release was organized by the HSRC in
collaboration with Russ George, founder of the San Francisco based company
Planktos Inc.. They were careful to release the iron in technically
international waters, which gives an idea of the ambiguous legal situation.
George was subsequently described in much of the media as a “rogue
geoengineer” and “Pacific Ocean hacker,” and accused of manipulating the
Haida into supporting his scheme. In reality the project was collaborative
and the Haida were equal partners, standing to benefit economically from
the expected increase in salmon catch.

As intended, there was a correlated massive increase of the 2013 year class
of sockeye salmon by up to 400% due to increased food availability. The
causality is still debatable, but a similar increase in salmon population
occurred in the years following the 2008 eruption of the Kasatochi volcano
in Alaska, which introduced a large quantity of iron-rich dust into the
atmosphere, providing strong evidence that iron fertilization in general
increases fish stocks.

Currently, the majority of iron input to the deep oceans originates from
desert dust storms over the Sahara and Central Australia, which also
contribute to the fertility of the Amazon rainforest, due to their global
transport by wind currents in the high atmosphere. There is evidence that
the increased input of windblown iron rich dust into the oceans due to
aridity in the last glacial maximum was partly responsible for maintaining
low CO2 and cold temperatures. The quantity of this windblown dust has been
decreasing in recent decades, and this is correlated with a decline in
ocean fertility.

Another major source of iron and other nutrients is whale feces. Whales
distribute nutrients throughout the world ocean by feeding on krill and
small fish in productive regions of upwelling, and spreading nutrients
throughout their migrations by defecating in surface waters. Krill contain
so much iron that the feces of whales become red, containing 10 million
times the concentration of iron in ocean surface waters. But the global
population of large whales is still only at most 20-30% of that before
industrial whaling, despite a decades old ban. Studies of average water
transparency suggest that there has been an annual decline of 1% in ocean
phytoplankton populations throughout the 20th century. Artificial ocean
fertilization would help reverse this trend as a side effect.

While one ton of iron can theoretically stimulate algae growth to fix
80,000 tons of CO2, the actual sequestration efficiency is reduced by
several factors. As noted above, the HSDC project was associated with a
large increase in salmon population, which represents the transfer of
carbon into the bodies of these fish. Some were caught and eaten, and
others returned to the rivers of their birth to spawn. None of this carbon
was sequestered, but the increased productivity of the salmon fishery and
transfer of nutrients to Pacific coast forests are beneficial in
themselves. Sequestration is dependent on downwelling currents separating
phytoplankton from surface nutrient cycling. Because of this, choosing the
right location to fertilize is of paramount importance. The Antarctic
circumpolar current and areas of the Central Pacific with sustained
downwelling are currently the leading candidates. Estimates of
sequestration from recent iron fertilization experiments average about 20%,
with the Southern Ocean giving the higher reported values.

While much work remains in sorting out the details, a quick calculation is
possible at this point. Assuming a 20% near term sequestration efficiency
in optimal sites, and accounting for inevitable inefficiencies in the
distribution of iron, a sequestration of 10,000 tons of CO2 per ton of iron
is reasonable. Global anthropogenic carbon emissions in 2017 were 41
gigatons. Were we to attempt to entirely offset these emissions with iron
fertilization, 4.1 megatons of iron would be required. Global crude steel
production in 2017 was about 1.7 gigatons, so this represents the diversion
of roughly 0.2% of annual iron production, although using scrap and
recycled iron would be preferable. Unfortunately, the algae would become
limited by other nutrient deficiencies long before this point, there may
not be enough downwelling areas in the oceans to remove such massive
quantities of carbon from circulation, and global marine ecosystems would
be heavily disrupted by such a massive ongoing fertilization campaign,
though these challenges could no doubt be mitigated to some degree.

In a real world scenario including ongoing emissions reductions and
limitations to fertilization efforts, 20% at most of this quantity of iron
would be used, about 800,000 tons. This is equivalent to the capacity of 2
large oil tankers. If we assume the use of an easily soluble iron source,
such as iron sulfate, this brings us up to 2.2 megatons, about 6 tankers
per year. While this is economically non-trivial, it could be done for less
than 10 billion dollars per year, comparing favorably with BECCS and DAC,
which require human intervention at all stages of the sequestration
process, and would cost at minimum several hundred billion in order to
offset a significant fraction of current emissions.

Oceanic iron fertilization actually offers a very attractive and practical
method to help solve the problem of global warming, assuming it is deployed
alongside other negative emissions technologies, and at least some degree
of emissions reduction. There is no need to use only one method to the
exclusion of all others.

Humans Now Control The Carbon Cycle

Examining the prehistorical natural analogues is vital to predicting the
future consequences of different geoengineering methods. For example, the
closest analogue to BECCS is the mass burial of terrestrial vegetation in
the Carboniferous. Aerosol induced global dimming mimics the effects of
large volcanic eruptions, without the associated CO2 injection. DAC is a
form of accelerated weathering. Iron fertilization has analogues in both
the Azolla event and more directly in the addition of iron rich wind borne
dust to the oceans during recent glacial periods.

While we don’t yet know everything, and we will continue to learn more
about the costs, efficacy, and other effects of the different methods,
oceanic iron fertilization appears very attractive. It is more economically
efficient compared to BECCS and DAC, has none of the Faustian instability
of aerosol injection, and has the significant benefit of increasing
fisheries and oceanic ecosystem productivity.

What is clear is that a focus on emissions reductions alone is not going to
work. Projecting climate impacts in terms of arbitrarily defined residence
times of CO2 in the atmosphere ignores the fact that ocean dissolution is
not an acceptable long term means of removing CO2, that natural
sequestration is not a process occurring independently from human activity
at a constant rate, and that even optimistic emissions reduction scenarios
may throw the global climate into a period of severe instability.

Whatever our intentions, and independently of our fossil fuel emissions,
humans now exert a dominating influence on the carbon cycle. We appropriate
roughly 30% of the primary production of the terrestrial biosphere to grow
food and produce raw materials such as wood, paper, and textiles. We cannot
expect the biosphere to continue to function as though 7.7 billion humans
are not present, simply because we reduce or eliminate fossil fuel use.

Unlike the many previous organisms which have caused global disruptions in
climate simply by doing too well, we have the ability to intervene
deliberately to mitigate the worst environmental consequences of our sudden
dominance, and even stabilize and optimize the global climate system and
carbon cycle to our liking.

This entails taking an active geoengineering approach, where we stop acting
as if the climate system is both beyond human control and too sacred to
affect, and instead admit ourselves direct control, responsibility, and
husbandry over the earth. This transition from treating the earth’s climate
and ecological systems as wild and beyond the human order, to treating them
as gardened integral parts of the human order, would massively impact how
we see ourselves. New areas of opportunity would open up with the rise of
such technologies.

For example, oceanic iron fertilization opens the door to fertilization and
productivity management of ecosystems in general. What if we could turn
deserts into productive pastures, turn barren areas into rainforests, boost
the productivity and diversity of existing ecosystems, and have enough
sustainable wild fish to feed everybody? What if we could choose to manage
the earth to massively increase gross biological productivity using
fertilization and careful control of the carbon cycle, towards a massively
more fertile and prosperous planetary ecosystem? These things are not
immediately possible, and there will no doubt be pitfalls along the way;
however, once we take the plunge into geoengineering, such possibilities
start to seem almost inevitable.

On the other hand, we could also continue to stumble blindly toward
extremely unpleasant climate disasters while desperately trying to minimize
our impact, and descending into accusatory but practically useless
political infighting. There is a clear choice here, and while
geoengineering will require unprecedented global coordination and unity of
purpose, it’s not even all that expensive. In the long term it is our only
tenable option, and the opportunities are endless.

Patrick Mellor is a philosopher and biologist in San Francisco. His current
research is focused on paleoecology and the evolution of memory.

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