Re: [geo] US scientists launch world's biggest solar geoengineering study

2017-03-25 Thread Gernot Wagner
com] *On Behalf Of *Adrian Tuck > *Sent:* Saturday, March 25, 2017 11:49 AM > *To:* shin.asay...@gmail.com > *Cc:* geoengineering > *Subject:* Re: [geo] US scientists launch world's biggest solar > geoengineering study > > > > The idea that we know enough by way of p

RE: [geo] US scientists launch world's biggest solar geoengineering study

2017-03-25 Thread Douglas MacMartin
[mailto:geoengineering@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Adrian Tuck Sent: Saturday, March 25, 2017 11:49 AM To: shin.asay...@gmail.com Cc: geoengineering Subject: Re: [geo] US scientists launch world's biggest solar geoengineering study The idea that we know enough by way of predictabili

Re: [geo] US scientists launch world's biggest solar geoengineering study

2017-03-25 Thread Andrew Lockley
I'm not sure Dr Trenberth's comments accurately reflect the state of current knowledge. >From my recollection of yesterday's webinar (https://youtu.be/YHKEEqYlJP4) , David Keith was particularly scathing about the persistence of this "drought" mythology. My personal understanding is that : * Hydr

Re: [geo] US scientists launch world's biggest solar geoengineering study

2017-03-25 Thread Adrian Tuck
The idea that we know enough by way of predictability to embark on this, when models predict macro weather rather than climate, is inadvisable, to put it mildly. On 25 Mar 2017, at 05:10, Shinichiro ASAYAMA wrote: > Dear all, > > In association with this new Harvard solar geoengineering resea

Re: [geo] US scientists launch world's biggest solar geoengineering study

2017-03-25 Thread Shinichiro ASAYAMA
Dear all, In association with this new Harvard solar geoengineering research program, I would like to take an opportunity to selfishly advertise our paper on Japanese lay public views on outdoor experiments of stratospheric aerosol injection, recently published in Geoforum. Ambivalent climate of