Dear Colleagues,
After months of work we have finalized  and uploaded our preprint of this
paper to the HPAC website (www.healthyplanetaction.org):
https://pdfhost.io/v/kUvEpsGdb_Understanding_the_Urgent_Need_for_Direct_Climate_Cooling_0209233
(Powerpoint summary version: https://online.fliphtml5.com/aacla/dtpn/#p=1)
Please share and distribute!
Title page and Abstract copied below.
Best,
Ron


*Understanding* *the* *Urgent* *Need for Direct Climate Cooling*



Ron Baiman1, Sev Clarke2, Clive Elsworth3, Leslie Field4, Grant Gower5,
Achim Hoffmann6 Michael MacCracken7, John Macdonald8, David Mitchell9, Franz
Dietrich Oeste10, Suzanne Reed11, Stephen Salter12, Herb Simmens13, Ye Tao14,
Robert Tulip15
Draft: 02/09/2023





*Abstract*

The long-term average global temperature increase inadequately predicts the
harm from regional or local extreme precipitation and heat events. Climate
change, especially polar amplification, has already caused enormous damage
and is likely to abruptly accelerate the risk of further catastrophic harm
to humans and other species in the absence of urgent direct climate cooling
efforts to slow or reverse it. At least nineteen potential direct climate
cooling methods have been identified with the potential to address such
climate disruptions.  A precautionary approach would be to evaluate such
direct climate cooling methods for their capacity to return our planetary
trajectory towards known and healthy climate conditions. An evaluation
framework could test and monitor small scale deployments under constrained
conditions. This paper includes short summaries of nineteen of these
methods, almost all written or reviewed by climate cooling experts from
among those cited in the footnotes.

Given multiple potential methods to directly cool the climate, relying
exclusively on GHG emissions reductions and removal seems incompatible with
responsible stewardship of the planet. With direct cooling of the Earth
having the potential to dramatically reduce harm, preserve ecosystems and
save lives, including it as a policy opportunity in the development of a
climate restoration plan that would return global warming to well below 1° C
would seem to be an urgent imperative for world leaders. The tragic example
of Pakistani floods this year induced by excessive Himalayan melt and
extreme monsoon events underscores the compelling



1 Corresponding author: Benedictine University, Lisle, IL, USA, email:
[email protected]

2 Winwick Business Solutions P/L, Australia

3 Citizens Climate Lobby, UK

4 Bright Ice Initiative, USA

5 Climate Restoration Technologies, USA

6 WOXON, The Ocean Enabled Climate Repair Company, UK

7 Climate Institute, USA

8 Climate Foundation, Australia 9 Desert Research Institute, USA 10
gM-Ingenieurbüro, Germany

11 The Collaboration Connection, USA

12 University of Edinburgh, UK

13 Planetphilia, USA

14 MEER Framework, USA

15 Iron Salt Aerosol Australia Pty Ltd, Australia

evidence that even 1° C of warming is too much. With such increasing impacts
from human- induced global warming, an effective restoration plan would then
seem to focus on three key components: a) deploying a direct cooling
influence, at least initially particularly focused on cooling the polar
regions and the Himalayas, b) reducing GHG emissions, including an early
focus on methane and other short-lived warming agents, and c) removing
legacy CO2, methane and other GHGs from the atmosphere and oceans. With
indications that the rate of warming is accelerating, it will be vital over
the next few decades to keep the climate from spiraling out of control. Only
the application of emergency cooling “tourniquets”, applied immediately or
as soon as is reasonably advisable, has the potential to slow or reverse
ongoing climate disruption and worsening climate impacts. While reducing
emissions of GHGs and removing GHGs from the atmosphere and ocean are both
essential for limiting warming, both approaches will require decades to be
effective and neither seems capable of returning global warming to below 1°
C during this century. And with polar warming leading to accelerating sea
level rise, only direct climate cooling can potentially slow or reverse loss
of Arctic sea ice that may lead ultimately to the total loss of the Greenland
Ice Sheet, with its potential for up to 7 meters of sea level rise.

These are the imperatives, challenges and opportunities of our epoch to
which we must immediately and urgently respond. Humanity has never faced an
existential threat so critical for the survival of human civilization and
our fellow living species on this planet.

-- 
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/CAPhUB9D8NgLi8%3D3T17cJM4aQWp4vc9MBQ_1u1V2pAmpFiHBkfQ%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to