https://goodmenproject.com/featured-content/geo-engineering-its-probably-not-a-good-idea/

Geo-Engineering: It’s Probably Not a Good Idea Skyseed: geo-engineering the
planet might be humankind’s last desperate throw, says a tale by a
geophysical hazard expert.
December 8, 2020 by Climate News Network Leave a Comment


By Tim Radford

There were always three objections to the technofix answer to climate
change: that geo-engineeering wouldn’t work, that it would deliver
unintended consequences that would be unpredictably distributed, and a
third, rarely mentioned: that it might work all too well.


In Bill McGuire’s unexpected eco-thriller Skyseed: Hacking the Earth might
be the last thing we ever do it works desperately well. Unexpected is a
carefully chosen word: it’s no surprise that scientists can be good writers
− I’ve argued elsewhere that they can be better writers than most writers −
but the leap from factual analysis to lurid fable is a challenge.

Skyseed has what good thrillers always need, as well as geo-engineering: a
world to save, characters with a bit of go in them, some plausible
villains, fast-paced action, sustained tension, a big moment of reckoning
and (let us be honest) as little preaching as possible.

The story is a simple one of global eco-collapse. Volcanoes are involved,
and extreme weather, and ice, but not the outcome that McGuire (a
volcanologist who for many years headed research into natural hazards) has
spent a working lifetime warning about.

In this book, instead of taking the obvious route and abandoning fossil
fuels as an energy source, a bullying, dishonest and unthinking American
president, dependent on what is now called “dark money”, with help from a
fawning British prime minister sorely in need of a trade deal, decides to
contain global heating in a different way.


Don’t like ads? Become a supporter and enjoy The Good Men Project ad free
“The precise manner in this book in which civilisation perishes as a
consequence of climate change is fortunately so far implausible”
The duo authorise a dangerous experiment in geo-engineering, under the
cover of some so-called rain-making experiments during high-altitude
military flights. That’s mistake one.

Mistake two is that they do it secretly. And they seem to think that a
small army of global climate scientists − people whose career is based on
sampling the stratospheric atmosphere and matching its chemistry with
global temperature levels − won’t notice. And that if they do, these
academic busybodies can be rubbed out without anyone else asking awkward
questions.

Of course, things go wrong: horribly wrong, and it doesn’t take long for a
trio of all-too human scientists, working separately and together, to
tumble to the truth. As soon as they start to do so, sinister forces try to
contain the secret. Our heroes survive, thanks to fortune, subterfuge and
some help with the weather, and come back with the truth: don’t mess with
geo-engineering.

In the course of this entertainment, the informed reader could play the
game of spot-the-science: quite a lot, actually, but trailed racily and
with just enough explanation to keep the story at stampede speed − advanced
nano-engineering, upper atmosphere chemistry, volcanic discharges, the
interplay of climate change on geological hazard, the advance of an ice
front, and so on. You could both enjoy the story and learn a little more
about how the planet works.


Not escapist

McGuire poses no great threat to the reputations of Len Deighton, Leslie
Charteris and Ian Fleming, but who cares? Their heroes always survived, to
begin a new adventure in each successive volume.

In Skyseed, whoever makes it to the last page doesn’t expect to survive for
much longer, and − non-spoiler alert − McGuire cheerfully breaks that bit
of bad news to the reader in the prologue. You know this one is going to
end badly, before it even begins.

A declaration of interest: I know McGuire, professionally, and have done
for many years. Another declaration: I can think of less readable books, by
vastly better-known popular authors. And a third: the precise manner in
this book in which civilisation perishes as a consequence of climate change
is fortunately so far implausible.

That civilisation is threatened, and all too plausibly, by the inexorable
increase of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, unhappily is not. You could
call this book a thriller. You could not call it escapist. − Climate News
Network

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/geoengineering/CAJ3C-06cu5Z71ZaBDWxjawbu%3D-TAk5Gp57LQ2hGaGE4_BU4Tkw%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to