Dear members of the geoengineering newsgroup,

you may find our latest article published in "WIREs climate change" of 
interest to you. It can be found at 
http://wires.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WiresArticle/wisId-WCC261.html
Title: Rethinking climate engineering categorization in the context of 
climate change mitigation and adaptation 

Here is the abstract: 

"The portfolio of approaches to respond to the challenges posed by 
anthropogenic climate change has broadened beyond mitigation and adaptation 
with the recent discussion of potential *climate engineering* options. How 
to define and categorize climate engineering options has been a recurring 
issue in both public and specialist discussions. We assert here that 
current definitions of mitigation, adaptation, and climate engineering are 
ambiguous, overlap with each other and thus contribute to confusing the 
discourse on how to tackle anthropogenic climate change. We propose a new 
and more inclusive categorization into five different classes: 
anthropogenic emissions reductions (AER), territorial or domestic removal 
of atmospheric CO2 and other greenhouse gases (D‐GGR), trans‐territorial 
removal of atmospheric CO2 and other greenhouse gases (T‐GGR), regional to 
planetary targeted climate modification (TCM), and climate change 
adaptation measures (including local targeted climate and environmental 
modification, abbreviated CCAM). Thus, we suggest that techniques for 
domestic greenhouse gas removal might better be thought of as forming a 
separate category alongside more traditional mitigation techniques that 
consist of emissions reductions. Local targeted climate modification can be 
seen as an adaptation measure as long as there are no detectable remote 
environmental effects. In both cases, the scale and intensity of action are 
essential attributes from the technological, climatic, and political 
viewpoints. While some of the boundaries in this revised classification 
depend on policy and judgement, it offers a foundation for debating on how 
to define and categorize climate engineering options and differentiate them 
from both mitigation and adaptation measures to climate change."

regards,

Olivier Boucher 

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