[geo] Moral Hazard or Moral Duty? - Repairing the Climate with Greenhouse Gas Removal and Solar Radiation Management

2022-01-22 Thread 'Robert Tulip' via geoengineering
Moral Hazard or Moral Duty? - Repairing the Climate with Greenhouse Gas Removal and Solar Radiation Management By Robert Chris, Shaun Fitzgerald Jan 21 2022 · 4 min read https://illuminem.com/energyvoices/35e225de-11e0-48

Re: [geo] Senior scholars?

2022-01-22 Thread Andrew Revkin
Yes, that's a solid point. How many sustainability challenges (other than CFC's) have been, or can be, "governed a fair, inclusive, and effective manner"? On Fri, Jan 21, 2022 at 11:46 PM Greg Rau wrote: > “In short, solar geoengineering deployment cannot be governed globally in > a fair, inclus

Re: [geo] Senior scholars?

2022-01-22 Thread Gernot Wagner
To be clear, this effort goes quite a bit further. From the "extended argument": "[…] it is *effective *and *enforceable *political control by the Global South that would be required." That, of course, renders basically any global (climate) governance effort anywhere illegitimate. *Gernot Wagner,

Re: [geo] Senior scholars?

2022-01-22 Thread 'Jessica Gurevitch' via geoengineering
I see two things to keep in mind here: first, climate intervention is a deliberate attempt to improve things that have been made worse by human actions, so, it is not comparable in that regard to anthropogenic climate change or to pollution more generally, which are not deliberate attempts to achie

Re: [geo] Senior scholars?

2022-01-22 Thread Ronal Larson
Greg, GEO list and 2 ccs Six answers to your questions below; > On Jan 21, 2022, at 9:46 PM, Greg Rau wrote: > > “In short, solar geoengineering deployment cannot be governed globally in a > fair, inclusive, and effective manner.” [RWL1:This quote follows three reasons