Hi Oswald:  (renamed the thread as this is going off topic)

It sounded like you are one of those who is taking the first active steps, 
perhaps I am wrong.

I am certainly trying to go down that path.

 

Here is another example: Fonger Ypma presenting his Venture 
https://arcticreflections.earth/

 

Very Recent TEDx Talk in Amsterdam

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GPSkGuehz-4   

 

Fonger is keen to get Feedback and happy to be contacted directly: Fonger Ypma 
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 

 

Last November I presented together with Fonger and David King on an online 
Energy panel hosted by Hans van der Loo. He is a good guy.

 

 

Achim

 

 

 

 

 

From: 'Oswald Petersen' via Healthy Planet Action Coalition (HPAC) 
<[email protected]> 
Sent: Thursday, February 15, 2024 9:19 AM
To: 'Achim Hoffmann' <[email protected]>; 'Gregory Slater' <[email protected]>
Cc: 'Ron Baiman' <[email protected]>; 'Jim Baird' 
<[email protected]>; [email protected]; 
[email protected]; 'healthy-planet-action-coalition' 
<[email protected]>
Subject: AW: [HPAC] A general question about the thermal response of the 
Earth's oceans..

 

Dear Achim,

 

all true. But first you need a woman or a man you does it all

 

Regards

Oswald

 

Von: Achim Hoffmann < <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]> 
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 15. Februar 2024 09:00
An: 'Oswald Petersen' <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >; 'Gregory Slater' <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Cc: 'Ron Baiman' <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >; 'Jim Baird' 
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >; 
[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> ; 
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> ; 
'healthy-planet-action-coalition' 
<[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Betreff: RE: [HPAC] A general question about the thermal response of the 
Earth's oceans..

 

It needs:

 

Entrepreneurial drive, can-do attitude, 

a business plan, 

a technical roll-out plan, de-risked as much as possible

a funding plan backed by funding institutions (private and public), 

large scale operator support, Joint Development Agreements, 

a clear view on the supply chain without any bottlenecks once you hit global 
scale and

most importantly to glue it all together: 

Credibility.

And then it needs Speed & Momentum driven by that Can-do-attitude.

 

Below is a short post link about how to get Climate Tech financed. Appreciate 
that this is rarely a discussion point here and it is all about climate data 
and models, but at some point, we need to start talking “real world”, beyond 
the dreaming, guessing, and modelling. 

That is how the real world thinks about funding examples like Climeworks (DAC, 
“Remove”), the H2 Green Steel (“Reduce”), etc. No “Restore” company out there 
that I know and that needs to change.

 

 
<https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/financing-massive-growth-climate-tech-werner-rehm-pvwuf/?trackingId=Sts1THScSyG19I02T2MXwA%3D%3D>
 
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/financing-massive-growth-climate-tech-werner-rehm-pvwuf/?trackingId=Sts1THScSyG19I02T2MXwA%3D%3D

 

 

 

From: 'Oswald Petersen' via Healthy Planet Action Coalition (HPAC) < 
<mailto:[email protected]> 
[email protected]> 
Sent: Thursday, February 15, 2024 2:02 AM
To: 'Gregory Slater' < <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]>
Cc: 'Ron Baiman' < <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]>; 'Jim Baird' 
< <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]>;  
<mailto:[email protected]> 
[email protected];  
<mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]; 
'healthy-planet-action-coalition' < 
<mailto:[email protected]> 
[email protected]>
Subject: AW: [HPAC] A general question about the thermal response of the 
Earth's oceans..

 

Dear Greg,

 

no shame needed, I love your posts😊

 

However I find your and Ron´s description of a dispersion technology utterly 
unconvincing. Doing such a job requires a company (better more than one). It 
requires thousands of pages of technical documents, including patents, special 
disperrsion devices, special planes…  and a team of at least 50 engineers, 
scientists, administrators … the works. Compare e.g. Climeworks for DAC. Then 
of course you need political actors working for you. You need a legal 
framework, a business case, cashflow… it is all missing. 

 

I guess I would claim your first 25 $ now . But in fact I am more interested in 
the other 25, just like you. Let me tell you : We are working on a plan to cool 
the climate by 0.5 degrees. That plan will not do SAI, but it will win those 25 
bucks. And it will work.

 

More on this very soon

 

Regards

 

Oswald Petersen

Atmospheric Methane Removal AG

Lärchenstr. 5

CH-8280 Kreuzlingen

Tel: +41-71-6887514

Mob: +49-177-2734245

 <https://amr.earth/> https://amr.earth

 <https://cool-planet.earth/> https://cool-planet.earth

 

 

 

 

Von: Gregory Slater < <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]> 
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 15. Februar 2024 00:57
An: Oswald Petersen <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Cc: Ron Baiman <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >; Jim Baird 
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >; 
[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> ; 
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> ; 
healthy-planet-action-coalition 
<[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Betreff: Re: [HPAC] A general question about the thermal response of the 
Earth's oceans..

 

 

Hello Oswald,

 

Well, admittedly, my posts are designed to provoke responses on this, and shame 
on me for that.  However, Keith and Smith just posted their article claiming 
that one could do operational (subscale) SAI now at ~+33 and -33 latitude using 
a small fleet of existing planes.  So I am hereby offering a $25 "SAI X-Prize" 
(first of its kind, as far as I know), to anyone who can prove that we can't do 
full global SAI cooling with some kind of cobbled together, motley collection 
of existing aircraft.  There. I have the money in my wallet as I write, waiting 
for someone to claim it.  But, Oswald, the more important thing, as far as I am 
concerned, is, has anyone attempted to put together any plan for the 'closest 
to full global SAI' that we could do today if we had the dough.  Why?  If I am 
wrong, send me the link to the maximally current doable SAI plan, for me to 
kvetch about.

 

Beyond that, since I claim not to be a radical-SAI-ist religious nut, nor a 
radical-MCB-ist religious nut, nor any other kind of religious nut, I am hereby 
offering a (second) $25 X-Prize for the anyone who can provide the 
fastest-to-deployment, closest-to-totally-stopping-sea-level-rise-completely, 
plan, giving the date of full deployment (again, assuming the dough), and the 
redection factor in sea level rise over current rate.  25 smackers!  Waiting 
for a claimant.

 

Ultimately, I on the team of anyone has a credible plan to fully stop sea level 
rise as fast as possible (but if that's decades, then I'm not interested, 
because it will be done convulsively anyway in the timescale without any of us 
advocating for it).

 

Regards,

Greg

 

 

On Feb 14, 2024, at 2:43 PM, Oswald Petersen <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

 

Dear Greg,

 

could you please point out who has the technology to do SAI ? I am not aware or 
any organization, be it a company, a government or an individual, who has such 
technology or claims to have it. Actually I don´t even know anyone who has a 
clear technical concept how to do this. 

 

So, to answer your question: Yes I really disagree with that.

 

Regards

 

Oswald

 

Von:  <mailto:[email protected]> 
[email protected] < 
<mailto:[email protected]> 
[email protected]> Im Auftrag von Gregory Slater
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 14. Februar 2024 22:42
An: Ron Baiman <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >
Cc: Jim Baird <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
>; [email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> ; 
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> ; 
healthy-planet-action-coalition 
<[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Betreff: Re: [HPAC] A general question about the thermal response of the 
Earth's oceans..

 

 

Hello Ron,

Thanks for reply and link.  I'll look at this.

However. Ron. It totally depresses me when you write, "At this point it appears 
that it may be very hard to reverse substantial sea level rise over next 
centuries....".  Seriously?  Why?  The only, only reason I am interested in SAI 
(and the other cooling technologies) is its capability to halt global warming 
and sea level rise immediately.  Today.  If we but choose to do so.  Is there 
anyone who actually doubts that SAI can halt global warming and sea live rise 
immediately?  Is there anyone who does not think we have the capacity to do 
this?  This is my baseline assumption.  That, whether or not we have the brains 
and the balls to do so, we have the technology to actually halt global warming 
~instantly.  We have that capacity.  Now.  Does anyone seriously disagree with 
that?

Thanks,

Greg Slater

 

 

On 2/13/24 12:26 PM, Ron Baiman wrote:

Agreed Greg!  At this point it appears that it may be very hard to reverse 
substantial sea level rise over next centuries but we should at least be trying 
to slow it down and minimize it as much as possible!

 

Jim's short summary of OTEC from (6/19/2023) from p. 15-16 of "The Case for 
Urgent Direct Climate Cooling" (slight mislabeling on the HPAC website): 
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1yHe2Fe6fU11odfcH-4GwdYDNTCk7uB-J/view

is copied below.  

 

Best,

Ron

 

"Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) would utilize the temperature difference
between surface and deeper ocean waters to cool the planet while generating 
baseload
energy and removing CO2 from the atmosphere.76,77,78 Deployment of 31,000 one
gigawatt OTEC plants has been estimated to: a) displace 0.8 W/m2 of average 
global
surface heat from the surface of the ocean to deeper water for 200 years; b) 
produce 31
terawatts of electricity per year (67% more than total world use), and c) 
absorb about
4.3 GtCO2 per year from the atmosphere by cooling ocean surface waters.79 At an
estimated cost of $2.9 trillion per year, it would take 30 years to ramp up to 
31,000

73 Nature Communications 12: 6713 (2021).
74 Sci. Rep. 6: 35070 (2016).
75 White-roofed greenhouses in Almeria have cooled the regional climate.
76 Rau, Greg and Jim R. Baird. 2018. Negative-CO2-emissions ocean thermal 
energy conversion. Renewable and
Sustainable Energy Reviews 95:265-272.
77 Baird, Jim. 2022. The physics and economics of thermodynamic geoengineering. 
Available from the author upon
request at [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> .
78 Gleckler PJ, Durack RJ, Stouffer RJ, Johnson GC, Forest CE. Industrial-era 
global ocean heat uptake doubles in
recent decades.2016. Nature Climate Change: https://doi.org/10.1038/nclimate2915
79 Renforth, Phil and Gideon Henderson. 2017. Assessing ocean alkalinity for 
carbon sequestration. Reviews of
Geophysics.

Healthy Planet Action Coalition Petition to World Leaders Page
16
plants.80,81,82,83 Economies of scale have been estimated to potentially reduce 
the cost of
OTEC electricity to about 1.1 cents per KWh.84"

 

On Tue, Feb 13, 2024 at 1:05 AM Gregory Slater <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

 

Hello Jim,

 

Thank you for the reply and information about 'thermodynamic geoengineering'.  
I do not know this technology.  I am still learning.  Please send links to more 
detailed summaries of the technology.

 

My bottom line is that the over-riding priorities must be to stabilize (and 
reduce) global mean temperature, and stabilize global mean sea level.  
Immediately.  Not in years or decades.  Whatever set of technologies can 
realistically make that happen should be carefully but swiftly deployed, with 
appropriate testing, modifications, and scale up, but as quickly as possible.  
It is an emergency, an actual crisis,  No time to lose.  Whatever gets this 
done the fastest I am in favor of.

 

There should be a session on this technology along with all the others at the 
'effective geoengineering' conference/summit that I am proposing.

 

Thanks,

Greg Slater

 

 

On Feb 12, 2024, at 10:04 PM, Jim Baird <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

 

Gregory, what is the fault in this logic?

 

The thermal coefficient of expansion of seawater is about half at a depth of 
1,000 meter it is at the surface per the following graphic.

<image002.jpg>
Heat moved into deep water to a median depth of 500 meters as Thermodynamic 
Geoengineering would provides with heat pipes produces 25% less sea level rise 
due to thermal expansion. And this heat would be unavailable to melt icecaps, 
or the glaciers that accounted for about 21% of the recorded sea level rise of 
the past two decades.

I share your concern with coastlines. 

Jim Baird

 

 

From:  <mailto:[email protected]> 
[email protected] On Behalf Of Gregory Slater
Sent: Monday, February 12, 2024 8:55 PM
To: Ron Baiman < <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]>
Cc:  <mailto:[email protected]> 
[email protected];  
<mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]; 
healthy-planet-action-coalition < 
<mailto:[email protected]> 
[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [HPAC] A general question about the thermal response of the 
Earth's oceans..

 

 

Hi Ron,

 

Thanks for the link.  I had not read this, though I am sure you and others 
announced it when it came out.

 

My question reflects my interest in understanding the likely net zero 
'end-state' that is the focus of the vast share of discussion around global 
warming and climate change, and your paper discusses that.  Certainly I regard 
even the current state of the Earth with regard to atmospheric CO2 to be 
unacceptable, let alone where ever we 'land' at net zero.  My specific interest 
in the question is where sea level ends up upon reaching the (still quite 
hypothetical) 'net zero'.  But of course, where ever we 'land' at net zero, 
that's not the end of the story, nor of humanity's suffering.  The ice sheets 
are melting, and the ocean are rising due to that melt, even where we are now.  
Net zero does not in any way stop that melting and sea level rise (on any 
timescale that matters for the stability of states and civilization).  Nor of 
course, does the entire spectrum of other increasingly catastrophic global 
warming-induced effects stop at 'net zero'.  This disconnect seems to pervade 
the global debate. Of course, you and most people on this forum are more aware 
of all this than me.  Without one or more (or better, all) of the proposed 
methods of climate intervention, we will definitely be 'giving up' on the 
coastal cities of the world, and astonishingly, that fate seems increasingly to 
be being actively embraced by activists, scientists, and leaders (at least in 
the industrialized world).  But I have absolutely no intention of docilely 
embracing the inundation of the coastlines, complete with all of the 
catastrophies, death, and suffering (to be borne by the poor and 
disenfranchised alone!) that that 'embrace of death' entails.  To hell with the 
global warming accommodators.  I refuse to give up on the coastlines.  I'll say 
it again.  I refuse to give up on the coastlines!  That's insanity.  It is this 
decision!, to abandon the coastlines, It is this decision! and not the decision 
to seriously begin testing all forms of climate intervention, that is being 
made by the rich and powerful right now, the class that can protect itself from 
the consequences, without any involvement of the billions of poor and 
disenfranchised of the world, who will be forced to suffer as a result.  As 
Thucydides so presciently wrote about global warming 2500 years ago, the rich 
will resist global warming intervention and the poor will be forced to 'suffer 
what they must'.

 

When it comes to the 'debate' about whether to employ climate intervention 
technologies, it's a totally rigged game, with the established powers in 
science and politics playing the role of 'the house'.

 

I believe that those of us who understand that intervention is not only doable 
but absolutely essential, that stabilizing the global mean temperature is the 
single most important thing to be done right now, today, should organize our 
own conference on how we must proceed, rather than begging the 
Davos-and-COP-attending activists, scientists, socialogists, political 
'scientists', celebrities, and politicians to 'please, pretty please' at least 
consider what we say.  It is we, not they, who speak on behalf of the poor and 
disenfranchised!

 

Greg Slater

 

 

On Feb 12, 2024, at 2:54 PM, Ron Baiman <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

 

Hi Greg, 

 

Recent modeling suggests that the oceans will gradually release heat to the 
atmosphere but not sure at what rate.

 

This is from the HPAC cooling paper: 
https://essopenarchive.org/doi/full/10.22541/essoar.169755546.65919302/v1

 

"Failure to begin deployment of direct cooling influence in the very near-term 
necessarily
will lead to greater harm and increased risk, at least until net-zero global 
GHG emissions are
achieved and legacy concentrations of GHGs are removed from the atmosphere and 
oceans.
Recent modeling suggests that, in the absence of direct climate cooling, if 
(anthropogenic and
natural) net-zero emissions were to be achieved after 3667 Gigatons of CO2 eq 
GHG (or 1000
Gigatons of carbon estimated to result in global warming of about 2.0°C) were 
accumulated in
the atmosphere, global warming would remain at roughly 2.0° C for at least 
another 50 years due
to continued thermal rebalancing from legacy ocean warming, even with continued 
ocean uptake
of legacy CO2 from the atmosphere (MacDougall et al., 2020; Hausfather, 2021). 
This suggests
that even after net-zero is achieved, a combination of continued direct climate 
cooling and
drawdown of legacy GHG would be necessary to expeditiously restore and 
regenerate a stable
climate and healthy ecosystem (Schuckmann et al., 2020; Baiman, 2021, footnote 
9)."

 

Best,

Ron

 

On Mon, Feb 12, 2024 at 3:14 PM Gregory Slater <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:


Hello All,

If we managed to reach 'net zero' by, say, 2050, so that, to zeroth 
order, the concentration of CO2 ceased to increase due to human 
activities after that time, how would the (mean) ocean temperature 
respond (over years, decades)?

I am happy to be directed to any published papers or group threads which 
discuss this.

Thanks, in advance, for any help.

Greg Slater, East Palo Alto, CA


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