http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=latest-ipcc-climate-report-puts-geoengineering-in-the-spotlight

Latest IPCC Climate Report Puts Geoengineering in the Spotlight

A statement by the U.N.-convened group suggests that tinkering with the
atmosphere could be necessary to meet climate goals

By Daniel Cressey and Nature magazine

Geoengineering a Helpful Solution?:A recent report released by the IPCC
notes that a “large fraction” of anthropogenic climate change is
irreversible except with a “large net removal of CO2 from the atmosphere
over a sustained period”.

Attempts to counter global warming by modifying Earth's atmosphere have
been thrust into the spotlight following last week's report from the United
Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).Mention of
‘geoengineering’ in the report summary was brief, but it suggests that the
controversial area is now firmly on the scientific agenda. Some climate
models suggest that geoengineering may even be necessary to keep global
temperature rises to below 2 °C above pre-industrial levels.Most
geoengineering technologies generally either reflect sunlight — through
artificial ‘clouds’ of stratospheric aerosols, for example — or reduce the
amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. The latter approach,
described as ‘negative emissions’, involves capturing carbon dioxide with
strategies that range from building towers to collect it from the
atmosphere to grinding up rocks to react with CO2 and take it out of
circulation.Critics say that the technologies are unproven, will have
unforeseen impacts and could distract from attempts to limit emissions of
greenhouse gases. But advocates point to language in the summary for
policy-makers produced by the IPCC working group that assessed the
scientific evidence for climate change as evidence that reducing emissions
will not be enough.The document notes that a “large fraction” of
anthropogenic climate change is irreversible except with a “large net
removal of CO2 from the atmosphere over a sustained period”. Under some
climate models, keeping temperature rise below 2 °C will require negative
emissions.The summary reads: “Methods that aim to deliberately alter the
climate system to counter climate change, termed geoengineering, have been
proposed. Limited evidence precludes a comprehensive quantitative
assessment of both Solar Radiation Management (SRM) and Carbon Dioxide
Removal (CDR) and their impact on the climate system.”Piers Forster, a
climate-change researcher at the University of Leeds, UK, and one of the
authors of the summary, says: “The policy relevance of the information is
that if you do not start mitigating [ie reducing emissions] tomorrow we
will have to start to consider these unattractive options.”At present, only
small-scale, pilot geoengineering projects are in operation, including
reforestation efforts and capturing carbon from biofuel plants. This is
due, in part, to what some scientists say is a baffling dearth of funding
for researchers working in the area.But that may change with the
publication of the IPCC report. "To some extent, the treatment of
geoengineering in the IPCC reports is a reflection of growing governmental
interest in these ideas," says Ken Caldeira, a climate researcher at the
Carnegie Institution for Science, in Stanford, California. "It is hard to
determine the extent to which possible increases in funding would be driven
directly from this governmental interest and how much would be driven by
the report itself."Funding isn't the only concern. “There are serious
questions relating to the technical feasibility, social acceptability,
scalability and side effects relating to geoengineering techniques. It
seems perverse that policy-makers have thus far been content to leave such
important questions unanswered,” says Tim Kruger, manager of the
geoengineering program at the University of Oxford, UK, and organizer
of last week’s meeting in that city on technologies to remove CO2 from the
atmosphere. Many geoengineering experts complain about the lack of research
in the field, and widespread deployment of the technologies seems a distant
prospect. The debate is “at the point where the appropriateness of
[research and development] is the issue,” says Robert Socolow, who works on
carbon management and sequestration at Princeton University in New Jersey.
Socolow says that the focus now should be understanding how the Earth
works, research that will serve two purposes. Studies of Arctic ice, for
example, will help researchers to understand how intervention could slow
sea-level rise, and work on clouds could contribute to solar-radiation
management.“But first of all we will reduce our collective ignorance about
clouds and ice,” he says. “No message comes through from the [summary for
policy-makers] more forcefully than how urgent it is to improve
Earth-system science.”

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