Sent: 29 September 2012 16:40
To:     
[andrew.lock...@gmail.com];[kcalde...@stanford.edu];[geoengineering@googlegroups.com]

kcalde...@stanford.edu geoengineering@googlegroups.com

Hello Ken et al.,

I am in total agreement with the views expressed by Ken
regarding the need for conducting extremely well-planned,
wholly open, carefully assessed, limited duration
geoengineering field-tests.

The case for not conducting such experiments is in my
view vanishingly small. I see absolutely no virtue in
dying with a clear conscience, based on doing nothing,
especially if that entails the concomitant demise of
billions of other people who are not in a position to
influence their own future.

Best Wishes,    John       lat...@ucar.edu


John Latham
Address: P.O. Box 3000,MMM,NCAR,Boulder,CO 80307-3000
Email: lat...@ucar.edu  or john.latha...@manchester.ac.uk
Tel: (US-Work) 303-497-8182 or (US-Home) 303-444-2429
 or   (US-Cell)   303-882-0724  or (UK) 01928-730-002
http://www.mmm.ucar.edu/people/latham
________________________________________
From: geoengineering@googlegroups.com [geoengineering@googlegroups.com] on 
behalf of Andrew Lockley [andrew.lock...@gmail.com]
Sent: 29 September 2012 08:26
To: geoengineering
Subject: [geo] Profile - Ken Caldeira

Posters Note - Yale interview is best read online where the formatting is 
preserved and audio is available. Ken is a list moderator but was not involved 
in drafting this email.

A

A selection of video interviews

http://zomobo.net/ken-caldeira

Yale Interview

http://e360.yale.edu/feature/geoengineering_the_planet_the_possibilities_and_the_pitfalls/2201/

Geoengineering the Planet:The Possibilities and the Pitfalls

Interfering with the Earth’s climate system to counteract global warming is a 
controversial concept. But in an interview with Yale Environment 360, climate 
scientist Ken Caldeira talks about why he believes the world needs to better 
understand which geoengineering schemes might work and which are fantasy — or 
worse.

Atmospheric scientist Ken Caldeira first became known for his groundbreaking 
work on ocean acidification, a phrase originally coined as a headline for one 
of his papers. Of late, however, Caldeira’s research has led him into the 
controversial area of geoengineering — the large-scale, deliberate manipulation 
of the Earth’s climate system.Many scientists have shied away from the subject 
because they feel it is a wrongheaded and dangerous path to pursue. But 
Caldeira — who heads a research lab at the Carnegie Institution for Science’s 
Department of Global Ecology at Stanford University — has not been so 
dismissive, in part Ken Caldeirabecause his climate modeling has demonstrated 
that some geoengineering schemes may indeed help reduce the risk of climate 
change. In fact, few scientists have thought harder about the moral, political, 
and environmental implications of geoengineering.Caldeira has become a focal 
point recently in the controversy surrounding the publication of Steven D. 
Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner’s SuperFreakonomics, the follow-up to their 
previous best-seller, Freakonomics. A chapter of the book that deals with 
geoengineering and quoted Caldeira was circulated on the Internet prior to the 
book’s publication and was widely criticized for its poor understanding of 
climate science and its cynical, contrarian perspective.In an interview with 
Yale Environment 360, conducted by author Jeff Goodell, who is working on a 
book about geoengineering, Caldeira spoke about how his work was misrepresented 
in SuperFreakonomics, as well as the prospects — and pitfalls — of plans to 
engineer the planet’s climate system. He views geoengineering as a last resort, 
one fraught with risks and unintended consequences. What if, for example, 
industrialized nations decide to inject heat-reflecting dust into the 
stratosphere and set off a climate reaction that causes drought and famine in 
India and China? For this and many other reasons, Caldeira argues that sharply 
reducing greenhouse gas emissions is by far the most prudent course.Still, 
given the huge volume of carbon dioxide that humanity continues to pour into 
the atmosphere, Caldeira says it would be folly not to undertake research into 
geoengineering. With the prospect that the world could reach a level of 
dangerous warming this century, Caldeira maintains it’s necessary to determine 
which projects — such as putting particles in the stratosphere to reflect 
sunlight into space — might work and which will not. He likens geoengineering 
schemes to seatbelts — a technology that might reduce the chance of injury in 
case of a climate crash.But, warned Caldeira, “Thinking of geoengineering as a 
substitute for emissions reduction is analogous to saying, ‘Now that I’ve got 
the seatbelts on, I can just take my hands off the wheel and turn around and 
talk to people in the back seat.’ It’s crazy.”Yale Environment 360: I want to 
start with this little dust-up over SuperFreakonomics. In the book, you are 
quoted as saying, when it comes to global warming, “Carbon dioxide is not the 
right villain.” Is that accurate?Ken Caldeira: That is not accurate. I don’t 
believe I said anything remotely like that because I believe that we should be 
outlawing the production of devices that emit carbon dioxide, and I don’t think 
we can solve this carbon climate problem unless we drastically reduce our 
carbon dioxide emissions very soon.e360: They also write that you are convinced 
that human activity is responsible for “some” global warming. What does that 
mean?Caldeira: I don’t think we can say with certainty whether we’re 
responsible for 90 percent of it or we might be responsible for 110 percent of 
it. But the vast majority of global warming, I believe, is due to human release 
of greenhouse gases to the atmosphere.e360: Another thing that plays in to the 
same kind of sensibility is the idea that the doubling of CO2 traps less than 2 
percent of the outgoing radiation emitted by the Earth. When that’s phrased 
like that, it makes it sound like it’s not really much of a problem.Caldeira: 
You should think of the whole global warming problem as a 1 percent problem, at 
least for doubling of CO2. In absolute temperature Kelvin — scientists like to 
use the Kelvin scale — the current EarthListen to the full interview (29 min.) 
temperature is around 288 degrees Kelvin, and a 3-degree warming on top of that 
is basically a one-percent additional warming. And so this whole issue of 
climate change, when viewed from an Earth-system perspective, is a story about 
1 percents and 2 percents. Two percent might sound like a small number, but 
that’s the difference between a much hotter world, and the kind of world we’re 
accustomed to.e360: The authors also cite you as saying that a doubling of CO2 
yields a 70-percent increase in plant growth, suggesting it would be a boon to 
agricultural activity. It sounds like one of those old CO2-is-good-for-you ads. 
Can you explain that?Caldeira: Yes, first of all, there are two parts of that. 
One is the 70-percent increase in plant growth. And that came out of a paper 
that we produced, I believe, in 2005.We took a model and emitted all of the 
carbon dioxide available in fossil fuel resources, and that model — which has a 
very low climate sensitivity, and what I would consider a hyperactive land 
biosphere — produced 9-degree Centigrade warming globally and 20 degrees around 
East Antarctica.Now that’s 16 degrees Fahrenheit globally, and something like 
36 degrees around Antarctica, which could be enough to threaten the ice sheet. 
For that study we knew that the land biosphere model was overactive and taking 
up too much CO2, but we felt that was conservative to the hypothesis we were 
addressing, because if you had a biosphere that took up less CO2, it would only 
make the planet even warmer.So we were showing, look, even if CO2 fertilization 
is at the high end of anybody’s imagination, we still produce rather 
frightening temperatures. But I do believe the basic sign is correct, that with 
more CO2, plants can use water more efficiently, and even the IPCC 
[International Panel on Climate Change] says that agricultural productivity is 
expected to go up with global warming.But that will not be distributed 
uniformly. It’s thought that agricultural productivity will increase in the mid 
and high latitudes, where warmer weather will help the plants grow, but will 
decrease productivity in the poor equatorial nations where heat is already 
stressing crop yield.e360: Overall, do you feel like your work has been 
accurately and fairly represented in this book?Caldeira: The main 
misrepresentation is the quote that says that CO2 is not “the right villain.” 
Now, again, I don’t use “villain” talk myself, but if you say what’s the 
primary gas responsible for the planetary warming, I would say it’s carbon 
dioxide.Now, there’s a tougher question when it comes to the other statements 
that are attributed to me. All of those other statements are based in fact 
andThe casual reader can... come up with the misimpression of what I believe. 
based on studies that either I have published or other scientists have 
published. And if we pull back to the case of the biosphere taking up 70 
percent of CO2 — well, yes, we have a published study that said that. It also 
presented results saying that we might warm up the planet enough to risk 
melting Antarctica ultimately. And so there is a selective use of quotes.If you 
spend several hours talking to somebody and they take a half-dozen things and 
put it in a book, then it’s going to be in the context and framing of arguments 
that the authors are trying to make. And so the actual statements attributed to 
me are based on fact, but the contexts and the framing of those issues are very 
different from the context and framing that I would put those same facts 
in...So I think that the casual reader can... come up with a misimpression of 
what I believe and what I feel about things.e360: Let’s talk a little bit more 
broadly about geoengineering. I was struck by something one of the authors said 
on NPR the other day — that he got interested in geoengineering when he 
realized that the problem with global warming is not that there is too much 
carbon in the air; it’s that it is too hot. Do you agree with that?Caldeira: 
The reason it is too hot is that there is too much carbon dioxide in the air. 
Now the carbon dioxide itself, of course, has big negative implications for 
ocean acidification and ecosystems, including coral reefs. So there are direct 
CO2 effects.But I think if we had some magic thing that would reverse all 
effects of CO2 perfectly, then you could say, “Well the problem is not CO2.” 
But nobody really expects that we are going to have some magic, perfect CO2 
nullifier. And it’s clear to me that if we continue allowing greenhouse gas 
concentration to grow in the atmosphere, and try to engineer our climate to 
counteract those effects, that as the greenhouse gases accumulate, and our 
counteracting system grows ever larger and larger, that the risk of some kind 
of catastrophic failure of this offsetting — or the imperfections in this 
offsetting — would grow in time and the net result would be pretty negative, I 
would imagine.So, I do see CO2 as the problem. I think to present it as if, 
“Well, it not’s really CO2, but the effects of CO2,” it’s like if you got shot 
by a bullet and you said, “Well, it wasn’t really the bullet that was the 
problem, it was just that I happened to have this hole through my body...”e360: 
Right. Well, a lot of people think of geoengineering as a quick and cheap fix 
for global warming. Is it?Caldeira: Let’s pretend for a moment that putting 
dust in the stratosphere is easy to do and works reasonably well. And let’s say 
the United States and England and the “Coalition of the Willing” decided to go 
ahead and deploy this system, and that China or India then went into a decade 
or two of deepI look at geoengineering as something only to consider if our 
backs were really up against the wall. drought. Whether the system caused that 
drought or not, I think the Chinese or the Indians would rightly suspect that 
the reason they have this drought and ensuing famines might be due to this 
system that was put up by these other countries. And you could easily imagine 
that there would be a great amount of political tension, and possibly even 
leading to warfare. So I think just the political dimensions and the governance 
dimensions of these geoengineering options suggest that we would be very 
reluctant to deploy these things, even if we thought they worked more or less 
perfectly.Another example is that, in many climate model simulations, the area 
around Egypt tends to get wetter with global warming. And so what if you do 
this geoengineering scheme and it takes away water from countries that didn’t 
have water a few centuries ago? Are they are going to be happy you’re doing 
this? So I think just the political problems associated with perceived winners 
and losers are so great that a politician is not going to want to deal with 
these problems.Then, of course, the system is not going to work perfectly. 
First of all, it’s not going to address the issues of ocean acidification. It’s 
not going to perfectly offset global warming, so you’ll have some residual 
effects. So, I look at these geoengineering options as something we would only 
want to consider if our backs were really up against the wall, and where all 
these environmental and political risks seem worth taking because the 
alternatives look so frightening.e360: I know that some scientists have 
suggested that there should be some kind of taboo on geoengineering research. 
But I know that you’ve been outspoken in the need for a federally-funded 
geoengineering research program. Can you explain that?Caldeira: Yes, I think we 
don’t know right now whether these kinds of approaches have the potential to 
reduce risk or not. In our climate models, the amount of climate change can be 
reduced by these kinds of approaches, but the climate models are an imperfect 
reflection of reality, and they don’t consider the kinds of political risks 
that I was mentioning before. And so I think we just have to say we don’t know 
whether these options can really reduce overall risk…Let’s say geoengineering 
doesn’t work, and that it would add to risk. It seems to me it would be worth 
having a research program to demonstrate that beyond a reasonable doubt so we 
can all forget about this and move on.On the other hand, if these options do 
have the potential to reduce risk, then it seems to me that we would like to 
have the option to reduce that risk should a time come where that would seem 
necessary. I kind of think of these geoengineering options as seeing, “Well, 
can we invent some kind of seatbelts for our climate system?” We need to drive 
the climate system carefully, we need to greatly reduce emissions. But even if 
we’re driving carefully we still run the risk of getting into an accident. And 
seatbelts can potentially reduce the damage when we’re in an accident.But the 
reason I’m concerned about geoengineering is because I am soI don’t think we’re 
going to reduce emissions fast enough that we’re not running some really grave 
risks. concerned about greenhouse gas emissions, and so, again, I’m in favor of 
essentially making greenhouse gas-emitting devices illegal. But I don’t think 
we’re going to reduce emissions fast enough to make me feel that we’re not 
running some really grave risks. And so I think we need to develop options to 
diminish those risks.And it’s not just geoengineering. I’m much in favor of a 
very broad-spectrum approach. I think one of the things we saw with the 
subprime mortgage crisis is that a few million people in the United States 
defaulted on their mortgages and we have a worldwide economic crisis. I think 
we have to assume that climate change damage will be a much bigger amplitude 
than a few million mortgage defaults.If there’s some kind of climate crisis in 
Southeast Asia, is that going to amplify and shake the whole global economic 
system? This is the kind of thing that Jim Lovelock is afraid of, that you’ll 
have “economic migrants” resulting from climate change that will ultimately 
destabilize modern civilization.And so I think we also need to be doing 
research in how do we make our society more robust, so that these local climate 
damages won’t turn into global problems. We need to be doing basic adaptation 
planning; we need to look at geoengineering options. But the main thing we need 
to do is work to eliminate carbon dioxide emissions.But thinking of 
geoengineering as a substitute for emissions reduction is analogous to saying, 
“Now that I’ve got the seatbelts on, I can’t just take my hands off the wheel 
and turn around and talk to people in the back seat.” It’s crazy.e360: Can you 
sketch briefly what a geoengineering research program might look like?Caldeira: 
The first thing I would do is use the plural, and say “programs.” Because many 
different things are lumped into the same category of geoengineering, which I 
think there’s no real good reason to link together.For example, people like 
David Keith and Klaus Lackner have been looking at capture of carbon dioxide 
from the air, which could then be isolated underground in underground storage 
reservoirs. And this is a kind of slow process that will likely be expensive 
and take many decades to make a real difference in atmosphere CO2 
concentrations. But it’s an important line of research that needs to be 
undertaken. But it won’t do any good in the event of an emergency. Maybe after 
an emergency when we realize we need to reduce greenhouse gas concentrations it 
would be useful.But that’s very different from, say, putting sulfur dust in the 
stratosphere, which would reflect sunlight back to space, and cool the Earth, 
much as Mount Pinatubo did in 1991 and 1992. Again, I think there needs to be a 
research program on that, but I don’t see any reason to couple that with these 
carbon dioxide removal approaches.So I think there at least needs to be two new 
programs — one looking at what are the scalable, fast-acting things we could do 
in the event of an emergency. What could we do fast that would start the earth 
cooling within a couple of years if we really wanted to? And then I think we 
need another research program in saying how can we backpedal out of our high 
greenhouse gas concentrations. Are there any things we can do to get the 
greenhouse gases that we’ve already emitted into the atmosphere out of the 
atmosphere?
e360: Do you think it’s inevitable that we’re going to try to engineer the 
Earth’s climate?
Caldeira: First of all, nobody can really see the future, and I’m not foolish 
enough to try to predict the future. But I think that there’s a very decent 
likelihood that we might go down a slippery slope in this direction. For 
example, we’ve done some simulations recently looking at this idea of whitening 
clouds over the ocean. John Latham has proposed this... Now we did a very 
idealized simulation, but in our simulations, by cooling the ocean relative to 
the land, this brought in a cool sea breeze from the ocean to the land, and 
then the sea breeze brought with it water and increased rainfall over land. 
Now, in principle, this could be deployed regionally. You could imagine 
whitening the clouds off the Sahel or off the coast of Los Angeles, and bring 
cooler, wetter air either to West Africa or the southwestern United States. And 
if we have global warming, and there’s some regional manipulation that would 
start making the regional climate more comfortable and more agriculturally 
productive, I think it’s going to be pretty hard to tell people, “No, no, you 
shouldn’t do that. You should swelter in the sun.”And so I think that there are 
pathways that we might start regionally and slowly ramp up to something more 
global. I think that’s a possibility.The other possibility is a real emergency 
situation where there’s a phase change in public opinion, [where] it becomes 
conventional wisdom that we can’t tolerate this climate change any more, that 
we have to do something.Whether that will ever happen or not, I don’t know. If 
I had to wager, I would wager that we would never deploy any geoengineering 
system, and that we’re more likely just to try our best to adapt to it.But I 
think there’s enough of a risk that it’s worth investigating whether there are 
options to reduce risk and damage.And the way I look at it is that we’re 
talking here about people’s lives, and I don’t think we’re going to deploy 
these systems to save polar bears. I think if they’re going to be deployed, 
it’s going to be to help people from dying of famines, or something dramatic 
like that. And I think that these techniques have a potential to save lives and 
reduce suffering, and we should explore whether that’s true or not.The idea 
that it would somehow be better to let people starve than to intervene in the 
climate system, we’re presented with that option... It sounds like the moral 
high ground to say, “Oh, well, we should never interfere with the climate 
system.” But we’re obviously interfering with the climate system wholesale now, 
and it’s possible that more intelligent interference could reduce the damage 
from the first interference. But it could make it worse. I don’t think we know, 
which is why we need the research program.

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To post to this group, send email to geoengineering@googlegroups.com.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
geoengineering+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering?hl=en.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To post to this group, send email to geoengineering@googlegroups.com.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
geoengineering+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering?hl=en.

Reply via email to