Deploy has an ominous and fateful ring. What about some careful, well thought 
through, limited experiments in order to decide about the value and risk of 
deployment? I think that is entirely possible with stratospheric aerosols. I 
think this group is entirely capable if defining and proposing limited 
experiments.

 

From: geoengineering@googlegroups.com [mailto:geoengineering@googlegroups.com] 
On Behalf Of Ken Caldeira
Sent: Saturday, July 23, 2011 10:37 AM
To: John Nissen
Cc: em...@lewis-brown.net; geo-engineering grp; John Nissen
Subject: Re: [geo] Jim Hansen : 1 to 2DegC and 20m sea level rise

 

John,

I have no doubt that, from the perspective of many extant species and 
less-fortunate humans, we are indeed in dire straits.

If I were convinced that stratospheric aerosols would work as advertised and 
that there would be no unforeseen or unanticipated repercussions, and that some 
sort of democratic process could be devised to give the overall effort 
political legitimacy, then I would be in favor of early deployment of such 
schemes.

However, I am confident that were such systems deployed, there would be 
surprises. Maybe the surprise would be how well it works and how everyone the 
world over greets the project with such a high degree of appreciation. On the 
other hand, the surprise could be that things go rather wrong, exacerbating 
international friction, leading to economic disruption, wars, etc.

Before such systems would be deployed, I would hope that the risk-benefit 
balance would be very clearly tipped in the direction of benefit. I just do not 
think we are there yet.

Best,

Ken


___________________________________________________
Ken Caldeira

Carnegie Institution Dept of Global Ecology
260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
+1 650 704 7212 kcalde...@carnegie.stanford.edu 
http://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab  @kencaldeira



On Sat, Jul 23, 2011 at 12:08 AM, John Nissen <johnnissen2...@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi Ken,

You take a fundamentally different view of the Earth System and geoengineering. 
 I see the Earth System as in an extremely precarious state and geoengineering 
as absolutely necessary to nudge the system back into a state that allows 
continued habitation of the planet by ourselves and our offspring.  Do you 
really think that we can survive the century simply by reducing carbon 
emissions?  If we wait for some dramatic event, like disappearance of Arctic 
sea ice, as an "emergency" sufficient to justify geoengineering, don't we risk 
leaving geoengineering too late?  

For me, geoengineering is like chemotherapy when a vital organ has cancer, or 
like fire-fighting when parts of the burning building contain explosives.  You 
start tackling the problem as quickly as you possibly can, concentrating on the 
critical parts.

John

---

 

On Fri, Jul 22, 2011 at 4:02 PM, Ken Caldeira <kcalde...@gmail.com> wrote:

Two points:

 

I am not opposed to scientists making prescriptive statements in their roles as 
citizens. 

 

However, I am opposed to prescriptive statements (statements about what we 
should do) in peer-reviewed scientific papers. 

 

I think science is about establishing objective facts about the world. As 
citizens, we take these facts and our values and make judgments about what we 
should do. 

 

I am 100% in favor of Jim Hansen making prescriptive statements. I would just 
prefer that he not do it in the context of a peer-reviewed scientific paper. 

 

Science cannot tell us what to do. It can give us information which we can use 
to make decisions. 

 

If the science gets mixed up with politics in peer-reviewed scientific 
publications, I think it ends up weakening the credibility of the entire 
scientific publication process (since statements whose truth value cannot be 
empirically established are obviously getting past reviewers). 

 

I should say that the worst in this respect are the economists, who insist that 
they should be regarded as a science while simultaneously trying to tell us 
what we should be doing. 

 

---

 

On deployment of some sort of solar reflection system:  all of our model 
results indicate that a high co2 world with deflection of some sunlight would 
be more similar to a low co2 world than is a high co2 world without deflection 
of sunlight. 

 

So, do I think that direct environmental damage from greenhouse gases could be 
diminished by deploying such a system?  Yes, probably although I am not 100% 
certain of this. 

 

Do I think near-term deployment will reduce overall risk and improve long-term 
well-being? Of this I am less certain, as it is hard to predict the various 
sociopolitical, as well as environmental, repercussions that might occur. 


Ken Caldeira

kcalde...@carnegie.stanford.edu

+1 650 704 7212 <tel:1%20650%20704%207212> 

http://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab

 

Sent from a limited-typing keyboard


On Jul 22, 2011, at 16:38, John Nissen <johnnissen2...@gmail.com> wrote:

 


Dear Ken,

I've already looked at this interesting paper [1], from Jim Hansen and Mikiko 
Sato - but I'd not read before of his conjecture about rate of ice mass loss 
doubling per decade, producing many metres of sea level rise this century.  But 
the implication is that the situation can be saved simply by reducing fossil 
fuel emissions!  Is that the prescription that you are complaining about?  
Wouldn't a well-considered prescription be welcome from somebody as eminent as 
Prof Hansen?  Geoengineering for example!  I don't see a way out of our 
predicament without it.  Do you, Ken?

Does Hansen accept that 90% sea ice could be gone as soon as at end summer 
2016? (BTW, I've another reference to this date we've been arguing about [2].)

Hansen seems to dismiss methane as always producing less forcing than CO2:

"This sensitivity has the merit that CO2 is the principal GHG forcing and 
perhaps the only one with good prospects for quantification of its long-term 
changes." (page 15)

However the paper is relevant to the methane issue in several ways.  One 
argument, which I've heard from Jeff Ridley, is that there is no sign of a 
methane excursion at previous interglacials* such as end-Eemian, when it was 
hotter, so we don't need to worry about having an excursion now.  Hansen shows 
that it was never hotter than it is now (in Holocene) by more than one degree.  

Elsewhere Hansen points out that the current rate of global warming is much 
higher than it has been for millions of years.  Andrew Lockley suggests it's 
higher than even it was at the PETM some 55.8 million years ago, when 
temperatures rose about 6 C [3].  That rate of change is important, because of 
methane's short lifetime.  The increasing speed of change implied by Hansen's 
climate sensitivity is thus relevant to methane.

A further way that the paper is relevant to methane is because of climate 
sensitivity to radiative forcing.  The paper suggests various alternative 
values that could be taken - see [1] table 1.   If we get over 2 W/m-2 from 
methane, then that certainly takes us over the danger line of 2 degrees global 
warming, using his argument.  

Cheers,

John

* During the past 800,000 years, methane never rose much above 700 ppb until 
recently, see [1] figure 2

[1] Full paper http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1105/1105.0968.pdf

Abstract here:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1105.0968v3 

[2] http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-13002706 

[3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleocene%E2%80%93Eocene_Thermal_Maximum  

---

On Thu, Jul 21, 2011 at 11:07 PM, Emily <em...@lewis-brown.net> wrote:

Hi,

here is a recent paper from Jim Hansen,including some figures I've read
before, which stunned me:

"In the early Pliocene global temperature was no more than 1-2°C warmer
than today, yet sea level was 15-25 meters (50-80 feet) higher."

best wishes,

Emily.


*Paleoclimate Implications: Accepted Paper and 'Popular Science'*


"Paleoclimate Implications for Human-Made Climate Change" has been
reviewed, revised in response to the referee's suggestions, and accepted
for publication in "Climate Change at the Eve of the Second Decade of
the Century: Inferences from Paleoclimate and Regional Aspects:
Proceedings of Milutin Milankovitch 130th Anniversary Symposium" (Eds.
A. Berger, F. Mesinger and D Šijački), Springer.

This final version has also been published in arXiv:1105.0968v3
[physics.ao-ph]
<http://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1 
<http://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=fbefcc8464&e=60a7483168>
 &id=fbefcc8464&e=60a7483168>

A__'popular science' summary
<http://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1 
<http://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=d3b93e0894&e=60a7483168>
 &id=d3b93e0894&e=60a7483168>
of the paper, intended for lay audience, is available.

Thanks especially to reviewer Dana Royer for helpful comments,
foundations and NASA program managers for research support, and a number
of people for comments on an early draft of the paper, as delineated in
the acknowledgements.

Jim Hansen

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