Dear Ken,

I’m curious where you found a definition of “geoengineering” that establishes 
the criteria you set forth here. Here’s a couple of mainstream ones:


  *   Geoengineering is the deliberate large-scale intervention in the Earth’s 
natural systems to counteract climate change.

Oxford Geoengineering Programme


  *   Attempted large scale human control of either biogeochemical cycles or 
the climate itself.

Robert G. Watts,  Engineering Response to Global Climate Change (1997)





Under both of these definitions, I think CDR fits under this rubric:



  1.  Under the Oxford definition, CDR is: 1. A large-scale intervention (or 
certain can be in terms of the scales society now is contemplating), and 2. 
Seeks to counteract the impacts of climate change that are inevitable should 
atmospheric concentrations continue to rise;
  2.  Under the Watts definition: 1. Many CDR approaches will exert a profound 
impact on biogeochemical cycles (kind of the quintessential definition, for 
example of those that rely on photosynthesis to effectuate sequestration, see: 
https://www.ipcc.ch/site/assets/uploads/2018/02/WG1AR5_Chapter06_FINAL.pdf;) 
and 2. CDR is intended to “control” the climate in terms of ensuring radiative 
forcing is mediated.

I get why CDR folks worry about the “g word,” but I don’t buy the distinction 
you’re making, Ken, based on credible definitions that have been promulgated to 
date.

wil





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WIL BURNS
Co-Director, Institute for Carbon Removal Law & Policy
American University

Visiting Professor, Environmental Policy & Culture Program, Northwestern 
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From: [email protected] 
<[email protected]> On Behalf Of Ken Caldeira
Sent: Thursday, February 2, 2023 11:05 AM
To: Andrew Lockley <[email protected]>
Cc: Michael Hayes <[email protected]>; Robert Tulip 
<[email protected]>; [email protected] 
<[email protected]> 
<[email protected]>; geoengineering 
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [CDR] Tiresome nomenclature squabbles

Carbon dioxide removal is an activity, or a tool, and can be fully described 
without reference to intent.

In contrast, geoengineering involves specific intention to alter Earth's 
climate.  CDR is a tool that is not typically applied to this intention, but 
could be.

If the intention of using CDR is to avoid climate change from concurrent CO2 
emissions, the intent is to prevent the alteration of climate, not to alter 
climate.

If the intention of using CDR is to bring atmospheric CO2 levels down below 
pre-industrial levels, then that application of CDR technologies might be 
considered geoengineering.


On Thu, Feb 2, 2023 at 6:21 AM Andrew Lockley 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Michael, as always, I'm very keen to avoid entering an extended discussion with 
you - but I'm writing to correct your false statements:
*The geoengineering list was focussed specifically on SRM only after the CDR 
list was established.
*As should be obvious, I'm talking only about the branding of the services I'm 
personally involved in branding: Reviewer 2, the geoengineering Google group 
and @geoengineering1. Plainly, I don't get naming rights beyond this.

As a note of caution, anyone using the geoengineering Google group to disparage 
individuals or make false statements about them can expect to be blocked or 
banned.

I will not reply further, and I hope you will not either.

Andrew Lockley

On Thu, 2 Feb 2023, 01:20 Michael Hayes, 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
[...] My original message had two purposes
A) to offer a full, citable explanation as to why I'm *not* planning on 
rebranding all my scicomm to suit anyone's doublespeak - any more than 
Coca-Cola will rebrand, now it's got no cocaine in
B) an appeal to stop the petty politics associated with these attempts to 
factionalise academia. [...]

MH]

1) Your single person 'branding' ability over such discussions should be 
questioned. No single person should have 'branding' rights to such a large 
field of study.

2) Academia has already split largely due to the early GE discussion being 
'branded' as only about SAI. Your single person 'branding' of the GE subject as 
only being about SAI as the GE group moderator triggered the formation of a 
seperate CDR group. Bombarding the stratosphere with sulfur loaded artillery 
rounds was your 'hobby horse' for years as the GE group moderator, and the 
totality of the early GE discussions within that GE had to revolve around your 
personal 'branding' desires. Years were wasted, IMO.

Channeling expert level discussions through your personal GE 'SAI biased 
branding' efforts within the old GE group has now been largely made moot, the 
petty personal politics at this expert level of discussion are now largely 
over. You're free to object to my historical account and insist upon your 
personal 'branding' rights over climate disruption mitigation and adaptation 
expert discussions. Please keep it within 3 short paragraphs.

Best regards










On Wed, Feb 1, 2023, 11:02 AM Andrew Lockley 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Michael, nobody is complaining about hurt feelings. This issue at hand is the 
practical problems created by an attempted redefinition of established 
terminology - apparently to precipitate a disciplinary schism (as others have 
pointed out). This situation has seemingly been manufactured by a small subset 
of CDR supporters - apparently to disassociate themselves from SRM, despite 
historical, definitional and personnel links between the two fields.

While I understand the politics perfectly well, it's absurd to try to redefine 
dictionary words to whitewash the politics of a discipline. I'm far from the 
only one affected by this, hence the desire to raise the issue in public - a 
rare personal message, on my part.

Let's be clear: CDR *is* geoengineering - and always has been. It's literally 
in the dictionary. Just because CDR *isn't* SRM, doesn't mean that it is free 
of the same moral hazard issues - as the overshoot scenarios attest. Any 
attempt to invoke piety by shunning supposedly morally-impure colleagues (or 
their work) is uncivil, unwarranted, and ultimately unproductive. Let he who is 
without moral hazard cast the first stone! 😁

My original message had two purposes
A) to offer a full, citable explanation as to why I'm *not* planning on 
rebranding all my scicomm to suit anyone's doublespeak - any more than 
Coca-Cola will rebrand, now it's got no cocaine in
B) an appeal to stop the petty politics associated with these attempts to 
factionalise academia.

Whether you're working on CDR or SRM, shortwave or longwave, upwelling or 
downwelling radiation, we're all on the same team.

Andrew

On Wed, 1 Feb 2023, 17:38 Michael Hayes, 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

What is the value of this discussion to the subject of CDR?

So far:

1) Someone reports getting their feelings hurt.

2) We've been presented with an odd ball list of largely unsupportable 
assumptions and rambling personal views about CDR supporters etc.

This is not the GE group nor an emotional support group. I don't mean to be 
insensitive to those in need of emotional support yet this is a STEM, policy, 
and economic space focused upon CDR. What has been presented has nothing to do 
with the STEM, policy, or the economics of CDR, that I can find.

Best regards



On Wed, Feb 1, 2023, 5:25 AM 'Robert Tulip' via Carbon Dioxide Removal 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:
Andrew

As you note, many advocates of CDR are totally opposed to SRM.  This is partly 
due to the widely held view among the general public that SRM is playing God, 
tinkering with nature, a dangerous intervention, whereas CDR is benign.

As a result of this context, some CDR proponents tactically distance themselves 
from SRM and the associated terminology of geoengineering.  This is either 
because they really believe the anti-SRM ideology, or just in order to get 
investment and support and engagement.

Some NGOs reportedly oppose SRM because their finance departments believe 
supporting it would be bad for their fundraising efforts, due to widespread 
opposition among their donor base.  They also believe that discussing SRM 
confuses their single message of the need to cut emissions.

This situation reflects the priority of politics over science in the formation 
of opinion.  It means the united front on climate action is seen as including 
CDR, in line with IPCC acceptance, but not SRM, which was given pariah status 
in the last IPCC Summary For Policymakers.  The confused moral hazard ideology 
is a main support for this political line.

This hostile attitude involves a refusal to see the earth as a single unified 
system, an inability to consider that earth system fragility and sensitivity 
can only be stabilised by brightening the planet.

Greta Thunberg’s recent publication, The Climate Book, contains the assertion 
that “all geoengineering schemes are attempts to manipulate the Earth with the 
same domineering mindset that got us into the climate crisis in the first 
place.” This quasi-religious hostility to technology commands broad support 
among climate activists, producing a refusal to listen to reason, despite being 
a recipe for social and economic and ecological collapse.

The philosophical and psychological and political blockages to albedo 
enhancement as a primary climate objective lead to highly dubious arguments, 
such as that accelerated emission reduction and CDR could prevent tipping 
points without any action on albedo.

It is essential to defend the concept of geoengineering, since questioning it 
demonstrates an inability to understand the climate problem.

These concerns ought to be the subject of much more discussion and debate, as 
they are actually central to planetary security, with significant moral 
implications.  Thank you for highlighting the problem.

Robert Tulip

From: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 On Behalf Of Andrew Lockley
Sent: Tuesday, 31 January 2023 11:06 AM
To: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>;
 geoengineering 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: [CDR] Tiresome nomenclature squabbles

Hi Geo/CDR lists,

I say very little personally - but I feel it's time to confront a problem, 
which has been building up for a while.

I'm noticing increasingly ill-tempered nomenclature egg-throwing in this 
community. It's affecting my work - and it's probably harming other people's 
work, too. I'm therefore cross-posting, in an attempt to get the problem under 
control.

Most particularly, the eggs are being thrown by a few select CDR folk, who 
refuse to cooperate with people/projects describing the field as geoengineering 
(or related terms). Sorry if that's blunt, but them's the facts. I'm declining 
to name names - but I have the receipts, if anyone needs them.

Before addressing the core argument being (incorrectly) made, here's some 
background on my scicomm work. This context is relevant, as the scicomm reaches 
broadly across this field (2k twitter followers, 10k podcast downloads, ~3k 
email readers).
I've always worked on SRM and CDR, in both academic publications and scicomm.

As a matter of historical fact, the CDR list (which I don't moderate) was spun 
out from the geoengineering Google group (which I do moderate), and as a matter 
of convenience the residual list focussed on SRM. This was done to manage comms 
in a practical way, not as some ideological schism. Plenty of people cross both 
lists, and I've seen no reason to rebrand.

The other information services I operate (@geoengineering1 twitter, Reviewer 2 
Does Geoengineering podcast) use the same generic geoengineering branding, and 
have done for a decade or more. This is partly as a matter of historic 
consistency, and partly because the word is being used correctly - as I'll 
explain below. I don't therefore feel that this wording choice is any 
justification for people to attack me or my work.

How bad has it got? Well, I'm reliably informed that I've had my CV binned for 
at least 1 job because I use the word "geoengineering" to describe the field. 
I've recently had several people (without exception CDR types) refuse to 
cooperate with my scicomm work - because I use the word "geoengineering" as a 
convenient, dictionary-accurate, and historically-relevant way to describe my 
work. That's denying their work an audience, based on a squabble over historic 
branding. Coca-Cola doesn't even have cocaine in anymore, but people don't 
argue with bar staff about it. So why argue with me, when my work is much more 
accurately described?

People are free to use whatever words they like to describe what they do; my 
beef isn't with the string of related terms for the same things (geoengineering 
vs climate intervention; solar radiation modification vs solar radiation 
management; carbon removal vs CDR vs GGR; etc.). The problem I have is with the 
petty personal sniping and factionalism that's increasingly creeping in to the 
discipline, as a result.

For the avoidance of doubt: I'm not rebranding everything I do just because a 
few CDR fans won't play nicely with their SRM counterparts. And I'm not going 
to jump into a silo, just because other people think I should.

Notwithstanding the objectionable pettiness of this behaviour, I don't believe 
the core argument bears any real scrutiny. So let's get to that.

With a quick Google I have found both present and historical references to the 
term "geoengineering" (relatedly climate engineering/intervention) being used 
to encompass CDR.

Here's the OED
https://www.oxfordreference.com/display/10.1093/oi/authority.20110803095848469;jsessionid=8F01D3B289E2BB2911C69F51B5050E01#:~:text=Geoengineering%20is%20the%20intentional%20large,of%20reducing%20undesired%20climatic%20...

NASEM
https://nap.nationalacademies.org/catalog/18805/climate-intervention-carbon-dioxide-removal-and-reliable-sequestration

Wikipedia
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climate_engineering

Royal Society
https://royalsociety.org/topics-policy/publications/2009/geoengineering-climate/

Futurelearn / Adam Smith
https://www.futurelearn.com/info/courses/climate-change-and-public-policy/0/steps/291219

...I could go on.

The issue here isn't the use of one word or another, it's the daftness of 
people shunning opportunities/people because of the utilisation of a standard 
(if not ubiquitous) term to describe the discipline.

So please, let's not have wars over words reminiscent of the kids' book 
"Fatipuffs and Thinnifers" 
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fattypuffs_and_Thinifers
...as even the kids reading that book knew it was stupid. We have all got much 
more to lose than to gain from such silly squabbles. Just because we might not 
like words that have been used for 15y or more doesn't mean it's a valid excuse 
to shun people and opportunities.

Thanks for listening. And best wishes to all my geoengineering friends - 
including both the SRM and CDR ones.

Andrew

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