Thanks. This is an interesting  opinion article which   may be seen as an 
argument for geoengineering solutions. There is plenty of evidenc e that a 
generally warming planet going forward would be destructive for much of the 
planet --- but not all of it. 



However, n o one has demonstrated that Hurrican S andy was a result of global 
warming or that global warming will increase the number of Hurricanes and 
related weather events --- and the article falls off the planet. 



----- Original Message -----


From: "Andrew Lockley" <andrew.lock...@gmail.com> 
To: "geoengineering" <geoengineering@googlegroups.com> 
Sent: Thursday, November 29, 2012 3:53:17 AM 
Subject: [geo] Hands off Mother Earth? - Opinion - The Boston Globe 



http://bostonglobe.com/opinion/2012/11/26/hands-off-mother-earth/iZQKJkGcDg8CY3x3wVBfHN/story.html
 

By James Carroll 

 |  GLOBE CORRESPONDENT     NOVEMBER 26, 2012 

American denial of climate change hit bottom this month. Hurricane Sandy was 
the most powerful instance yet of mundane weather trumping abstract science to 
make people face the truth. “It’s Global Warming, Stupid!” screeched the cover 
of Bloomberg Businessweek, above a photo of a flooded street. Rising sea levels 
just moved from future threat to present danger. And as the Pentagon had 
earlier this year emphasized climate change as a national security issue, so 
the CIA has just released its own grim assessment of coming “climate surprises” 
with “global security implications serious enough to compel international 
response.” In his post-election acceptance speech, President Obama warned of 
“the destructive power of a warming planet.”So perhaps this unprecedented 
problem will finally be meaningfully addressed by the president and Congress, 
with new emphasis on green energy, carbon taxes, anti-fracking legislation, 
elimination of subsidies to oil and gas companies, rejection of new pipelines, 
and so on. Climate prophet Bill McKibben is in the midst of a 21-city “Do the 
math” tour, drawing thousands of supporters, all demanding that carbon dioxide 
be left in the ground. Fossil fuels are choking the planet, and a critical mass 
of Americans are waking up to it.But sometimes when a corner gets turned, 
another, sharper corner shows itself. Even if carbon emissions were 
dramatically reduced all over the planet (including in China, India, and 
Africa, where fossil fuel engines are just firing up), the biosphere is already 
facing catastrophe. The greenhouse effect is self-compounding, and scientists 
tell us that atmospheric temperatures will continue to rise even without more 
pollution. However difficult it has been to launch a real discussion of the 
causes of global warming, an even-larger controversy looms now, as problematic 
attempts to mitigate warming through “geoengineering” are forced onto the human 
agenda.Geoengineering refers to manipulations of the structures of the natural 
world aimed at protecting the livable environment. Interventions can go further 
than, say, massive storm surge barriers protecting Amsterdam and London, or 
levee systems keeping New Orleans dry. Greenhouse gases can actually be removed 
from the atmosphere, and solar radiation can be managed in ways that reduce the 
planet’s absorption of heat. Stratospheric dispersal of sulfur aerosols to 
mimic the light-dimming consequences of volcanic ash is one geoengineering 
scheme. Another involves iron fertilization of the oceans to produce massive 
plankton blooms, which can repair broken aquatic food-chain webs, while 
lowering carbon dioxide levels. 

Weather manipulation has been around since cloud-seeding for rain, but these 
more drastic strategies are hugely controversial. Last July, a freelance 
geoengineer — some called him rogue — dumped 100 tons of iron sulphate into the 
Canadian Pacific, the largest deliberate ocean fertilization ever. A plankton 
bloom covering thousands of square miles of ocean resulted. The action was 
defended as a restoration of nutrients that would bring back the salmon stock 
in the region, and it was intended to create a carbon sink as well, but many 
scientists decried the iron-dump as a careless violation of international 
agreements. Now the actual consequences of the Pacific undertaking are being 
studied.Some argue that, given the already permanent and growing character of 
the greenhouse threat, such drastic manipulations of atmospheric systems are 
urgently needed — if carried out in scientifically responsible ways. But others 
warn that geoengineering techniques can make things far worse. Opposition 
movements rally with slogans like “Hands off Mother Earth.” Meanwhile, a 
subtler worry is that widespread talk about engineered solutions to climate 
change will lessen curbing pressures on Big Oil and other fossil fuel 
producers. And what about the possibility of a climate war between nations of 
the chilly north and the overheated south, with engineered planet temperatures 
wielded as a weapon?Once again, we humans find ourselves at a moral threshold, 
where technology poses unprecedented challenges to our capacity for ethical 
choice. Biomedical engineering, artificial intelligence, nanotechnology, 
genetic modification of agriculture, cellular manipulation for reproductive 
“enhancement”: These frontiers of science are also boundaries of wisdom. What 
is the right thing to do?In the case of the environment, though, the pressures 
come not from newfound capabilities, but from a doomsday clock that we 
ourselves set ticking. Having only now approached a broad popular consensus 
that climate change is a problem, we must promptly imagine far more expansive 
solutions. Reducing fossil fuels is urgently necessary, but probably 
insufficient. Let sensible discussion of creative interventions begin. For 
Mother Earth, and all her children. 

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