Curiously, no mention of possible NASA involvement in SRM--seems a bit more 
obvious...

Josh


http://www.project-syndicate.org/online-commentary/nasa-geo-engineering-to-prevent-climate-change-by-jim-hartung

Can NASA Stop Global 
Warming?<http://www.project-syndicate.org/online-commentary/nasa-geo-engineering-to-prevent-climate-change-by-jim-hartung>
   
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LOS ANGELES – In 1961, President John F. Kennedy asserted that the United 
States “should commit itself to achieving the goal…of landing a man on the 
moon and returning him safely to earth,” by the end of the decade. The 
National Aeronautics and Space Administration accepted the challenge. From 
1969 to 1972, NASA’s Apollo program achieved six manned landings on the 
moon – missions that expanded human knowledge, stimulated economic growth, 
bolstered America’s geopolitical standing at a critical time, and inspired 
people worldwide.
[image: This illustration is by Dean Rohrer and comes from <a 
href="http://www.newsart.com";>NewsArt.com</a>, and is the property of the 
NewsArt organization and of its artist. Reproducing this image is a 
violation of copyright 
law.]<http://www.project-syndicate.org/default/library/63d5a3ba4ad86aa80fa43c0308d49e63.jpg>Illustration
 
by Dean Rohrer

Since then, NASA has repeatedly overcome adversity in pursuit of important 
breakthroughs and achievements, including exploring the solar system with 
robotic spacecraft, peering deep into the universe with space telescopes, 
and building the Space Shuttle and International Space Station. These 
successes far outweigh NASA’s few failures.

But, since the Apollo program, NASA has lacked a clear, overarching goal to 
guide its activities. To drive progress in crucial areas, the agency needs 
a compelling vision that is consequential and relevant to current needs – 
and it is up to US President Barack Obama to define it.

Obama should challenge NASA to address one of today’s most important 
issues, global warming, by developing safe, cost-effective technologies to 
remove carbon dioxide from the planet’s atmosphere and oceans. This mission 
could be accomplished in two phases.**During the first phase, which could 
be completed by 2020, researchers would identify roughly 10-20 candidate 
geo-engineering technologies and test them in small-scale experiments. The 
second phase would include large-scale test demonstrations to evaluate the 
most promising technologies by 2025.

Developing these technologies is crucial, given that, over the last 
half-century, the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere has increased from 
roughly 320 parts per million to almost 400 parts per million, heating up 
the planet and increasing the acidity of the world’s oceans. At this rate, 
the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere will exceed 450 parts per 
million in roughly 25 years.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change estimates that this increase 
will raise the average global temperature by roughly 2°C (3.6°F) over 
pre-industrial levels. It is widely agreed that exceeding this threshold 
would trigger the most devastating consequences of climate change. In other 
words, humanity has less than 25 years to stabilize the concentration of 
CO2 in the atmosphere.

Given this time constraint, decarbonization alone will be insufficient to 
avert irreversible, catastrophic climate change. In 2000-2011, the world 
decarbonized at an average annual rate of 0.8%. The *Massachusetts 
Institute of Technology 
estimates<http://globalchange.mit.edu/files/document/MITJPSPGC_Rpt169.pdf>
*that, given current trends, the concentration of atmospheric CO2 will 
exceed 500 parts per million by 2050, and 800 parts per million by 2100. 
According to a report by the professional services firm 
PricewaterhouseCoopers<http://www.pwc.com/en_GX/gx/low-carbon-economy-index/assets/pwc-low-carbon-economy-index-2012.pdf>,
 
even if the world decarbonizes at an annual rate of 3% until 2050, the 
concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere will rise to 750 parts per million, 
triggering an average global temperature increase of 4°C (7.2°F) over 
pre-industrial levels.

So, while the world should reduce its reliance on fossil fuels in favor of 
lower-carbon alternatives as quickly as possible, another approach is 
needed to avoid crossing the two-degree threshold. The best option is to 
develop technologies capable of removing large quantities of CO2 from the 
atmosphere and oceans, offsetting emissions during the transition from 
fossil fuels. NASA is the best organization for this mission for several 
reasons.

Geo-engineering (large-scale intervention in the Earth’s climate system 
aimed at moderating global warming) could have severe unintended 
consequences. Developing such technologies safely and efficiently will 
require the kind of creativity, technical competence, understanding of 
planetary processes, international participation, and global monitoring 
capabilities that NASA is best equipped to provide.

In a sense, global warming itself is a massive geo-engineering experiment 
with unknown consequences. NASA’s international experience will enable 
researchers to explore the options fully, and to develop the most effective 
technologies for reducing this ongoing experiment’s risks. And NASA’s 
reputation for comprehensive scientific inquiry will minimize suspicion 
about the effectiveness of the solutions that it develops – and the 
associated risks.

The natural processes by which CO2 is removed from the atmosphere and 
oceans work too slowly to offset current emissions without intervention; 
NASA’s success will rest on its ability to expedite and accelerate these 
processes. Promising potential solutions include causing CO2-absorbing 
rocks to weather more quickly, expanding practices and technologies in 
farming and forestry that sequester carbon in soil, and fertilizing the 
ocean to stimulate the growth of plants that consume and sequester CO2.

Far from conflicting with other, more traditional NASA programs, this 
mission would help to reinvigorate NASA and give its other programs greater 
focus and significance. This new, overarching vision would motivate NASA to 
gain a better understanding of the planetary processes that may affect 
Earth’s future, and to advance its capability to influence these processes 
if needed. Ultimately, this knowledge could be NASA’s greatest contribution 
to the world.

We do not have to decide today whether to implement geo-engineering 
technologies to remove CO2 from the atmosphere and oceans. But, in order to 
ensure that they can be applied if and when they are needed, we must begin 
to develop them soon. Obama should act now, lest he miss this crucial 
opportunity to curtail global warming.

Read more at 
http://www.project-syndicate.org/online-commentary/nasa-geo-engineering-to-prevent-climate-change-by-jim-hartung#Zga3mmzFMx8bcG38.99
 

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