https://theecologist.org/2019/jun/17/climate-restoration

Cambridge's Centre For Climate Repair argues that greening the world's
oceans and refreezing the Arctic will accelerate climate restoration.


Nick Breeze, journalist and organiser of the Cambridge Climate Lecture
Series, interviews Professor Sir David King, who served as Cheif Science
Advisor to the British Government under Prime Minsters' Blair, Brown,
Cameron, and May. He has recently set-up the Centre for Climate Repair
Cambridge to accelerate global efforts to avoid climate disaster.

Nick Breeze (NB): What were your thoughts when hearing Theresa May’s
decision to bring net zero emissions by 2050 into law?

David King (DK): I have been very impatient about the government's need to
move on from the 80 percent reduction by 2050 which we established in 2008
because all of the signs are that we need to get to net zero much more
quickly. So I think it is late in the day but at the same time it is very
welcome.

Climate repair

NB: How timely has it been considering the launch of the Centre for Climate
Repair?

DK: The Centre for Climate Repair has got three principal objectives. The
first principal objective is to speed up the rate at which we achieve net
zero emissions by reducing emissions.

NB: So it is a catalyst?

DK: It is absolutely the sine qua non. We are not going to manage this
massive problem when we are emitting 50+ billion tonnes of carbon dioxide
equivalent into the atmosphere every year and, yet, that number is
increasing year on year. So globally we have got to hit net zero by 2050 or
before, and that is not enough.

So the second part of the Climate Repair Centre’s objectives are to work on
the techniques that will enable us to bring down the level of greenhouse
gases in the atmosphere to a much more manageable range which I would say
is 350 parts per million (ppm). Currently we are at 415ppm.

The next objective is to deal with what is happening in the Arctic and the
Antarctic, which I think is probably the most worrying factor of all.
Arctic sea ice in the summer has virtually gone, so a good proportion of
the Arctic Ocean in the Arctic summer is exposed to sunlight. The Arctic
region is now heating up at about 2.7x the rate of the rest of the planet,
which means that in the middle of the North Pole region in the Arctic
Circle we have not got a hotspot and all that strange weather we are now
having, is following on from that hotspot.

But much more seriously than that, right next to that exposed summer Arctic
sea is Greenland. When Greenland loses all of its ice, we are talking about
a 7-metre sea level rise. One or two metres is too much for London and for
80 percent of the world's cities.

So we are looking at potential disaster. We have got to refreeze the Arctic
and we have got to refreeze the Antarctic as well. So the objective of the
centre we are setting up is to sort out how we are going to achieve all
these objectives.

Not to actually achieve them but to get the technologies in place, to get
the political climate in place as well, to create the need and therefore
the desire to deal with the problem.

Geoengineering

NB: One thing I have seen on social media is that this centre is a
reframing of ‘geoengineering’. Is that fair, and if it is, are we at a
point now where we have to take greater consideration of the seriousness of
where we are at?

DK: I have avoided using the word geoengineering because I think it has got
a bad notation. There is one form of geoengineering that I don’t think we
will ever need, and I very much hope we don’t, and that is to put sulphates
into the stratosphere in order to create particles that would reflect
sunlight away from the planet surface.

This would obviously cool the planet down. We know this because when
volcanos erupt they create that same effect but of course we don’t know
what the unintended consequences are. What we do know is that one of the
issues with that is going to be what it does to the ozone layer in the
stratosphere.

So just when we are getting rid of CFC’s and managing to reach the point
where the ozone depletion layer is refilled with ozone protecting us from
ultraviolet radiation, we then put a bunch of sulphates into the
stratosphere and we lose the ozone.

I am labelling this as geoengineering and the other technologies that we
can discuss as climate repair.

Oceans

NB: You have previously mentioned the oceans as a part of the climate
system. Is that still in the mix for climate repair?

DK: Very much so. In fact there is a group of us communicating around the
world on this issue and working out exactly what is needed. Let me give you
the latest information on how the group is developing. The paper is not
published yet so not really in the public domain.

In essence, the oceans are probably down to something like 10 percent of
living things compared with where they were 100 years ago. We have been
very destructive of the state of the oceans.

So one possibility is to fix that while at the same time removing carbon
dioxide from the atmosphere and this is really by greening the oceans.
There are two ways of greening the oceans, one is in shallower waters
around coastlines.

For example, on the Californian cost there used to be a lot of seaweed and
kelp. That has been removed because it gets in the way of shipping. Seaweed
and kelp is green matter; it takes carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere. It
is like an ocean forest. It creates a living system, and yet we have been
getting rid of them. We have also been poisoning the coastlines by putting
our waste into the oceans.

DK: So re-greening the oceans means learning from nature. You can see this
in David Attenborough’s films: when the wind blows over the Sahara desert
and it is heading towards the Atlantic Ocean, it can pick up very small
sand dust particles into the atmosphere, carrying them over thousands of
miles and dump them into he ocean when the wind stops blowing. And when
that happens, as Attenborough very clearly shows, you rapidly get a
greening of the ocean.

We now understand the science behind this. The iron in the sand catalyses
the formation of chlorophyll and then all of the small beasties of the
ocean, starting with the beginning of the food chain, that eats the green
matter, forests the ocean with living matter within months. It becomes
millions of fish in a few thousand square kilometres of space which has
been greened by this process.

Our estimate is that if we were to do that to 3 percent of the world deep
oceans, we would be soaking up about 10 billion tonnes of greenhouse gases
per annum.

People say, ‘what is the coast of that?’. I actually think we can charge
for the fishing rights in these regions and if we do that we are going to
much more than cover the costs.

What we do have to worry about with that, and this is what the Climate
Repair Centre will work on, is whether there is any negative impact? Are we
going to see, for example, what happens in your fish pond when it greens
over, the fish go belly up because when the green matter dies it takes the
oxygen out of the water slo the fish can’t live?

I don’t believe that is going to happen and we have evidence for this but
we have got to delve into the science deeply.

Net zero

NB: You mention the figure of 10 billion tonnes from 3 percent of the deep
oceans. Is 3 percent the upper boundary or maximum?

DK: No. It is just an illustration to get to the 10 billion tonnes.

NB: There has been a lot of talk recently around negative emissions
technologies (NETS) and a lot of proposals, when we look at the scale of
the problem, will never make it outside of the lab. This seems like an area
that does have scale on its side?

DK: Yes and we have said that we are only going to look at technologies
that are scaleable and by scaleable we mean a billion tones of carbon
dioxide equivalent per annum. There is the minimum level we are going to be
looking at.

NB: There seems to be a mode of thinking that these solutions will arise
and we can carry on emitting in a reduced way. Are you saying we have to
get right down to net zero emissions and work on these negative emissions
technologies if we are going to stabilise climate?

DK: I think getting to net zero is critically important but I am not sure
we can get our human emissions to zero and I am not talking about the fact
that we breathe out carbon dioxide. What I am talking about is our farming
practises. Rice growing emits a lot of methane, a lot of our livestock has
a lot of methane production. Of course we can move away from meat; that is
a possibility, but I think the reality is that it is going to be very
difficult within the 20-30 year period to get to zero emissions.

So we are going to need these negative emissions technologies in order to
achieve even net zero but what I am saying is that is certainly not enough.
I am also saying that we are not providing a fig leaf for the oil and gas
industries to carry on.

Extremely urgent

NB: You alluded to this earlier, that we are starting now to see real
impacts from climate change around world impacting industries, especially
agriculture. 30 years as a target to net zero emissions… what will the
world look like in 10 years? What will be facing then?

You have alluded to the need to accelerate our ambition, can technologies,
like the ocean restoration for example, be scaled up in a timeframe where
it helps us accelerate that ambition?

DK: Your question is absolutely pertinent because I believe what we do in
the next ten years, we being humanity, in order to manage this problem,
determines the future of humanity for the next ten thousand years. We have
got a very short timeline.

It is because of what is happening in the Arctic and Antarctic in
particular, just releasing that much ice into the ocean is going to be more
than our economy can manage. More than we can manage in terms of the
billion or more people who are going to be moving from where they are
living etc.

So I think the problem is extremely urgent. What I want to do is get this
up and running quickly. We want to set-up in Cambridge as a global hub. We
are going to be humble about this and work with people in every other
country, every other institution around the world. We are already doing
this with email contact and so on. We want to have workshops and
conferences so we can push this very quickly to the point where we can
satisfy anyone.

For example, on greening the oceans, Greenpeace has set its face against
this, saying we should not interfere with nature. Now I think the whole
problem is that we have already interfered with nature. We want to recover
the natural world. So we need to actually meet Greenpeace and have these
discussions and get to the point where they are satisfied this is the right
way forward.

Sulphites

NB: Given the scale of the problem we can’t take anything off the table at
this stage.

DK: Right, it’s important, because I have just taken off the table putting
sulphates into the stratosphere

NB: And there are people who disagree with you on that.

DK: I know there are so let me quickly say that we may come to need that
but I don’t think it is a new technology so I think we can send a rocket up
and the estimate is that we would have to send 10 million tonnes of
sulphates up into the stratosphere every years to achieve the one or two
degrees cooling that we need. I think the technology is there but I just
think hold back on that!

If we are desperate we do that but it doesn’t anything for ocean
acidification or any of the other problems that we face.

Virtual centre

NB: So where are you right now with the Centre for Climate Repair?

DK: It is totally a virtual centre at the moment and we are still in a very
fluid situation. We are raising money. We are in fundraising mode. How much
are we hoping to raise? In two years £50 million and within five years £100
million.

These are the figures the university is trotting out and I think frankly,
given the nature of the problems we are talking about, they seem quite
reasonable!

This Author

Nick Breeze is a climate and wine journalist, and also an organiser of the
Cambridge Climate Lecture Series

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