After I finished my PhD in 1957 I took a Postdoc to work on fusion energy; 
Project Sherwood at MIT 



I decided after a year it would not happen in my lifetime, clearly a good 
prediction,  and left to work at a practical place like Bell Labs. I chose to 
work on lasers before there was a laser; a good choice. When practical fusion 
energy is finally av ailable; and it will be in time; energy and global climate 
issues will be resolved. I am now less pessimistic about fusion energy. I 
suspect there will be a Gordon great great grandchild who will be around who 
may  be working on it when it happens. 



My point here is that a proper element of geoengineering is to consider the 
implications of fusion energy as it relates to global climate control. I have 
not seen that topic here. 
. 


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


From: "Andrew Lockley" <andrew.lock...@gmail.com> 
To: " Sent: Sunday, December 2, 2012 4:11:13 AM 
Subject: [geo] Earth: Under Repair, Forever | OnEarth Magazine 



Posters note: Interesting slant on the scope of geoengineering 

http://www.onearth.org/article/under-repair-forever 

By Kim Stanley Robinson http://www.onearth.org/author/kim-stanley-robinson 

Earth: Under Repair, Forever 

Geoengineering sounds like something from a science fiction novel, but we 
actually do it every dayThe term geoengineering is relatively new. It follows 
and alters the word terraforming, coined by a science fiction writer 70 years 
ago to denote the act of making another planet more Earth-like. When I was 
writing my own Mars trilogy of novels in the 1990s, I described the deliberate 
alteration of that planet to give it an Earth-like biosphere; as I did so, it 
occurred to me that we were already doing to Earth what my characters were 
doing to Mars.But to say that we were "terraforming Earth" was painfully 
ironic, suggesting as it did that we had damaged our home planet so badly we 
now needed to take drastic steps to restore it to itself. 
When geoengineering entered the lexicon, many bristled at the word's hubristic 
implication that we had the knowledge and power to engineer anything so large 
and complex as our planet. Still, the term has stuck, and it has essentially 
come to mean doing anything technological, on a global scale, to reduce or 
reverse the effects of climate change.Defined this way, the idea makes almost 
everyone uneasy -- including the scientists who introduced it, most of whom 
agree that the best solution to our climate problem remains rapid 
decarbonization. But these scientists have also noticed that our progress on 
this front hasn't been good. We lack the political mechanisms, or maybe even 
the political will, to decarbonize. So people are right to be worried, and some 
of them have therefore put forth various geoengineering plans as possible 
emergency measures: problematic, but better than nothing.Objections to 
geoengineering appeared immediately. Many people have expressed doubt that the 
proposals would work, or believe that a string of negative unintended 
consequences could follow. Merely discussing these ideas, it has been said, 
risks giving us the false hope of a "silver bullet" solution to climate change 
in the near future -- thus reducing the pressure to stem carbon emissions here 
and now. 

These are valid concerns, but the fact remains: our current technologies 
are already geoengineering the planet -- albeit accidentally and negatively. 
Consider that significant percentages of the world's wetlands have been 
drained, and large swaths of its forests cut down. Ecosystems have been 
devastated by overdevelopment. We've raised atmospheric CO2 levels by about 100 
parts per million, and average global temperatures have gone up accordingly. 
Our oceans have soaked up so much of the carbon we've dumped into the 
atmosphere that the seas have measurably acidified. On land, hundreds of 
species have gone extinct. And far worse damage is sure to follow if this 
inadvertent geoengineering campaign of ours is allowed to continue.For the rest 
of history, we will be required to work at repairing the damage we've already 
done to the biosphere. Geoengineering, then, has become our ongoing 
responsibility to life on this planet, including all human generations to come. 
All of which leads to the question: can we actually design and accomplish any 
geoengineering projects that would mitigate or reverse climate change? Putting 
aside issues of political capability, are any of these projects physically 
possible?The answer appears to be: yes, some of them are. Maybe.Some of the 
most talked-about proposals entail removing CO2 from the atmosphere, or not 
letting it enter in the first place. One of them calls for trapping it and 
storing it deep underground. The concept behind carbon capture and 
sequestration has already been demonstrated to work; many scientists think it 
merits further study. And to those who say our most urgent goal is holding 
atmospheric carbon levels as close as possible to 350 parts per million, it's 
attractive for obvious reasons.Another oft-discussed idea involves shooting 
sulfur dioxide particles into the upper atmosphere in order to reflect incoming 
sunlight back into space. While this, too, would appear plausible from a 
mechanical standpoint, the veneer of plausibility only adds to serious concerns 
about unknown secondary effects, as well as worries that by taking an action 
such as this one, the root issue -- our need to curb carbon emissions -- would 
remain unaddressed. As a result, this is one of the most controversial 
geoengineering plans to date. It practically glows with the hubris of weird 
science; it scares people.When ideas move from the atmosphere to the ocean, 
they get even scarier. One of the most hotly debated sequestration plans would 
have us dumping iron dust into the ocean to promote algal blooms, which would 
eventually sink, taking their carbon load with them. Last July a California 
entrepreneur and geoengineering advocate tried doing this off the coast of 
British Columbia -- and found himself in trouble with Canada's environmental 
ministry, the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and the 
broader scientific community.Among their concerns is that actions like his 
could disturb the ocean's nutrient balance and food chains. But they also worry 
about accelerating ocean acidification -- a problem for which there exists no 
geoengineering solution. Some have proposed dumping pulverized limestone into 
the ocean to neutralize its acid; the United Kingdom's Royal Society, however, 
has concluded that the amount required would be equal to the White Cliffs of 
Dover, and then some. This is a fine addition to the parade of images that 
feature prominently in the eco-disaster subgenre of British science fiction, 
and it reminds us of an important lesson: we simply don't have the power to 
reverse all that we've done.So geoengineering the atmosphere looks iffy at 
best; geoengineering the oceans even worse. What about the land? We've been 
altering our landscapes for thousands of years, of course, so there's ample 
"proof of concept." But just as technology has aided us in the task of 
deforesting and draining our wetlands, so too does it now provide us with the 
capability to do things like reforest and rehydrate. Thinking about such 
potential reversals makes me believe the definition of geoengineering should be 
broadened. Our actions have a global impact; it's good to be reminded of this 
by giving that impact a name. Were we to take up hybrids and electric cars in 
great numbers, for example, could that be considered geoengineering? Under an 
expanded definition, absolutely. Whatever we do as a civilization of seven 
billion is inevitably going to have a geoengineering effect.What about that 
number, seven billion? Could stabilizing our population count? Again, yes. And 
we know of one good way to achieve this goal: promoting women's legal and 
social rights. Wherever they expand, population growth shifts toward the 
replacement rate. This particular geoengineering technology nicely illustrates 
how the word technology can't be defined simply as machinery; it includes 
things like software, organizational systems, laws, writing, and even public 
policy.Were we to change our lifestyles in order to conserve resources, 
could that be thought of as geoengineering? Consider the example of Zurich, 
which is hoping to become a 2,000 Watt Society. The city government is 
embarking on a grand experiment, encouraging citizens to live on 2,000 watts of 
electricity per person, per year -- what each of us would have were the world's 
electricity distributed equally. (Right now Americans average more than 10,000 
watts a year, Bangladeshis about 200.) Zurichers who have participated report 
no diminishment in their quality of life; on the contrary, they say that their 
lives have been augmented by new feelings of accomplishment and virtue.As a 
science fiction novelist trying to write the realism of the twenty-first 
century, I'm convinced that these broader definitions of geoengineering better 
describe what we'll all be doing in decades to come. In my books I've imagined 
people salting the Gulf Stream, damming the glaciers sliding off the Greenland 
ice cap, pumping ocean water into the dry basins of the Sahara and Asia to 
create salt seas, pumping melted ice from Antarctica north to provide 
freshwater, genetically engineering bacteria to sequester more carbon in the 
roots of trees, raising Florida 30 feet to get it back above water, and 
(hardest of all) comprehensively changing capitalism.These fictional methods 
range from promising to risky to crazy. All of them make for interesting 
stories, I hope -- and also compel us to think about what we can do to help 
Earth's biosphere, both individually and collectively. We have many 
opportunities to act; those actions scale up. If we take advantage of the 
opportunties, we'll be creating a permaculture that works in balance with our 
planet over the long haul. We'll all be geoengineers -- without ever even 
having to try any of the more dangerous experiments we now think of when we 
come across that word. 

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