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Drastic Climate Therapy Could Make Things Worse
Better, perhaps, to let the earth look after itself than try to regulate its system through mirrors, clouds and artificial trees
The idea of serious scientists and engineers gathering to discuss schemes for controlling the world's climate would a mere 10 years ago have seemed bizarre, or something from science fiction. But now, well into the 21st century, we are slowly and reluctantly starting to realise that global heating is real. We may have cool, wet summers in the UK, but we are fortunate compared with the Inuit, who see their habitat melting, and Australians and Africans who suffer intensifying heat and drought. We should not be surprised that public policy is edging ever nearer to geoengineering, the therapy our scientists are considering for a fevered planet.
Our senior scientific society, the Royal Society, met at the start of the month to launch the report "Geoengineering the Climate" and to hear from its representative scientists. The meeting was hosted by the president, Lord Rees, and the chairman was Professor John Shepherd, who chaired the study group. The goal, as Prof Shepherd explained in the Guardian in April, was to investigate theories of "intervening directly to engineer the climate system, so as to moderate the rise of temperature" and to "separate the real science from the science fiction".
Geoengineering is about deliberately changing the air, oceans or land surface of the world to offset global heating with the hope of restoring the cooler world we enjoyed in the last century. We are now fairly sure that the Earth has grown hotter by about one degree Celsius as a consequence of our own action in taking away as farmland the forests and other ecosystems that previously acted to keep the Earth cool. We also have increased by 6% the flow of CO2 into the air by burning coal, oil and natural gas. If we started global heating, can we reverse it by engineering?
The first scientist to consider geoengineering seriously was the Russian geophysicist Mikhail Budyko. In the 1970s he proposed that we could offset global heating by spreading in the stratosphere a fine dispersion of particles that reflected sunlight back to space; he based the idea on the observation that volcanic eruptions that did this were followed by global-scale cooling. He suggested that we could mimic the effects of a volcanic eruption by putting an aerosol into the stratosphere. His idea was confirmed by the detailed observations and analysis of the effect of Mount Pinatubo's eruption in 1991. It injected 20m tonnes of sulphur dioxide into the stratosphere and this soon oxidised to form the white reflecting particles that offset global heating for three years. It is within our capacity to put this much sulphur dioxide into the stratosphere.
There are other ways of reflecting sunlight: large mirrors or diffusers of sunlight put in orbit around the sun. One of the more promising and controllable reflection methods was put forward by John Latham and Stephen Salter, who proposed spraying very fine droplets of sea water from the ocean surface to make the natural surface clouds, called marine stratus, whiter.
As well as cooling by reflecting sunlight away we could cool by removing the carbon dioxide or methane from the air. Klaus Lackner has proposed making artificial trees to do this; others, following the lead of Johannes Lehmann, would sooner see vegetation capture CO2 and then, after harvest, turn the plant waste into charcoal and bury it.
Geoengineering implies that we have an ailing planet that needs a cure. But our ignorance of the Earth system is great; we know little more than an early 19th-century physician knew about the body. Geoengineering is like trying to cure pneumonia by immersing the patient in a bath of icy water; the fever would be cured but not the disease.
Many of us feel a sense of unease about using geoengineering to escape global heating. Most of the planetary therapies have side effects, potentially as severe as the disease itself. We know that the cooling by Pinatubo was accompanied by droughts; cooling alone does nothing to prevent the ocean growing ever more acid as the carbon dioxide dissolves in the water.
Before long, global heating could reach a level that makes geoengineering an enticing option. Indeed, cautiously applied it may help by buying us time either to adapt to climate change or to develop a practical scientific cure. We have, as yet, no comprehensive Earth system science; in such ignorance I cannot help feeling that attempts by us to regulate the Earth's climate and chemistry would condemn humanity to a Kafkaesque fate from which there may be no escape. Better, perhaps, to learn from the wiser physicians of the early 19th century; they knew no cure for common diseases but also knew that by letting nature take its course, the patient often recovered. Perhaps we, too, had better use our energies to adapt and leave recovery to Gaia; after all, she has survived more than three billion years and has kept life going all that time.



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Better, perhaps, to learn from the wiser physicians of the early 19th century; they knew no cure for common diseases but also knew that by letting nature take its course, the patient often recovered. Perhaps we, too, had better use our energies to adapt and leave recovery to Gaia; after all, she has survived more than three billion years and has kept life going all that time.
yes...man, the learner and doer, has one ultimate lesson to learn...to not do...
It's a simple idea: beware the law of unintended consequences.
Well said James. Geoengineering is a bandaid approach at best. At worst it is just human folly and vanity mucking things up even more. I guess there aren't any human-caused-global-warming deniers amongst the geoengineering proponents. How hard is it to see the root of the problem?
Too damn many people, obsessed with consumerist fervor, spurred on by corporate greed and a cultural inertia.
Whatareyagonnado? The techno/industrial "revolution" has brought us to this brink. Think more technology will save us? Not if we insist on capitalism and the infinite expansion
of empire and the comfortable suburban dream. There is another paradigm, and it is quietly unfolding in our collective psyche.
Sat Chit Ananda!
Another way of saying what Dr Lovelock said: the most important therapeutic act is to stop making things worse.
If there were any good sense at high levels, that man would be Nobel laureate twice over already.
These are silly fantasies...far from scientific reality and most requiring enormous amounts of energy to implement. Now that we are on the downside of the oil supply peak, energy will increasingly become more difficult to get and more expensive.
Amazing though, how most people would rather grasp at sci-fi straws than implement a simple and inexpensive solution- USE LESS ENERGY. I can just hear Homer, "doh!"?
"Just" USE LESS ENERGY? Easy to say but most of the energy used isn't used by people making individual choices that they can make to save the day. If we all limited our driving, changed to fluorescent light bulbs, stopped using appliances like hair dryers and electric dishwashers, it would not make enough of a difference to delay global warming by 15 minutes. It's the large scale uses, coal powered mostly, manufacturing and transportation that generate the greenhouse gasses.
The only way to use less energy is to cut human population down by at least two thirds. Any volunteers?
Actually, just do away with the billion-or-so of us in the "1st World" and the remainder will be just fine.
An example of a "machine" used by all of us that uses a great deal of coal powered electricity--The Internet.
A HUGE difference can be made at the personal level if we stop supporting the meat and ovo-lacto industries which ARE responsible for generating fully half of the co2 emmisions through big ag, petro chem fertilizer/pesticide, CAFE waste, etc.,etc.
Then there is the human toll of heart disease, obesity, etc., etc., which I guess
only adds to emmisions via trips to the doctor.....
Population is large on the resonsibility spectrum, but look at which population uses
the most energy......hmmmmmm, change of lifestyle and priorities could have an effect after all.
I follow you pessimest-I'm not talking about just personal choices. I agree, manufacturing is huge, so are buildings, transportation (air especially) and so on. I know changing the lightbulbs is not only a waste of time, it lulls people into actually thinking they are doing something, so they go their merry way still ignorant but happy.
What I'm saying is that if enough of us decide NOT to fly around the country, NOT to buy the latest electronic gadget, not to buy a new TV/DVD/Blu-ray/whatever, and to celebrate Buy Nothing day 6.5 days a week, we could bring a lot of manufacturers down. Just the initial impact on the economy would be enough to send the rest of it into a tailspin from which it could never recover. (just look what high gas prices for several months did). I know, I know- everyone always gets back to Jobs..what about all those poor folks losing their jobs? How about a new Hierarchy of Needs...and at the very top (above Jobs) you'll find the basic need of...how a planet that is habitable?
As for population, I fear the tragedy of the commons is going to solve that problem quite efficiently, if not pleasantly.
Elsewhere, Lovelock has said that climate change is already too far advanced to stop and that most of the planet will become uninhabitable, leaving 500 million humans left by centuries end living near the poles.
He has also said that Gaia is not as young as she used to be and cannot bounce back from such climate disruption like she once did.
Yet here, neither idea is mentioned.
Letting nature takes its course is the best way because whatever happens trying to hold on and save every last one of these 7,000,000,000 people is a fool's hope as those 7,000,000,000 people are the cause of the shape of things and it will get worse as far as human sufferiing goes.
And geoengineering(I am very surprise to read the Sir Martin Rees was calling for this even for discussion)is one of the worst ideas because man is far too stupid to tamper with nature to secure what has be a very mild segment of centuries of clemet weather, but that is about to change.
The only thing is, WHEN will this happen?
We need to stop.
It is already underway. The human mind is the where it starts. Consider how many people utterly dependent on the system as it exists and are willing to kill for it in order to sustain their consumptive and political identities?
Anything that does not reflect the exceedingly narrow band width of perception is subject to 1) being ignored 2) coopted (incompletely and only desired aspects - hence massive waste) 3) destruction - more waste
The planet is a conceptual landscape sharing in the most elegantly stunning miracle we could possibly imagine. Oddly enough, being in denial of this causes us to destroy the creation and each other.
Now if we just had a sci-fi weapon to beam this into the consciousness of ever frightened, war centered hot-button violent person.
Lacking that, I hold the notion in my prayers.
Hey, anything but actually resolve the problem, right?
I'm not impressed by Lovelock's solution, which seems to be to throw up our hands and pray to Gaia.
It's okay to be skeptical of many ideas for geoengineering, but the reality is that humans DO ALREADY have a large and growing impact on the planet, the combination of 7 billion people times our large and growing individual ecological footprints. We're looking at a range of serious effects including climate change itself, ocean acidification, deforestation, topsoil loss, mass species extinction.
The solution to ignorance isn't to bury our heads in the sand -- the solution is to gain knowledge. We need to study and better model to ecosystem. And the solution to the serious issues mentioned above isn't (just) pray. It's action based on the best scientific knowledge.
I imagine where we're at today as God dangling the keys, saying "Okay, kids, the planet's yours. Drive safely." When I drive I've got my eyes open and my hands on the wheel.
You must have missed the part where Lovelock admits to humanity's vast ignorance of the Eath System, which he compared to the state of medicine at the beginninmg of the 19th century. His other writings ceratinly do NOT suggest we just "pray" and do nothing. Far from it. I suggest you read his works before you go putting words in his mouth.
Evidently, Lovelock's other works are better than this article?
Yes, they are much better. However regarding this item, it is a part of an on-going "conversation" that's developed in parallel with his various essays on the subject of "Global Heating," as he calls it, published by The Guardian.
Lovelock is as important to science and society as Einstein, but only a few of us know this. I suggest you start with his "The Ages of Gaia." If you read "Microcosmos" by Lynn Magrulis in tandem, your mind will expand and your time spent well rewarded.
You write:
"When I drive I've got my eyes open and my hands on the wheel."
That's a part of the problem. What gives you the right, along with millions of others, to burn fossil fuel in the ongoing rape of the planet? Humans have an infinite capacity for arrogance and short sightedness, especially when it comes to inheriting religious dogma that separates our consciousness from a direct relationship, a stewardship, with this planet.
The arrogance of "engineering" a solution is a part of the problem too. The real solution is to stop the plunder, stop the rape, and stop the destruction. And ultimately, and without prejudice, to STOP CAPITALISM, whose philosophy of infinite growth on a finite system is leading towards mass extinction.
I don't agree with all of Derrick Jensen's work, but he is right on, on many levels with respect to his premises for "Endgame":
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endgame_(Derrick_Jensen_books)
Humans in general, but Western Civilization in particular, is analogous to spoiled rich children that are never ending 'want and desire' machines, with no concern for the consequences or the lives of others, human and non-human.
As Derrick points out, trying to explain to capitalists that the rape and pillage of this planet for profit is an amoral and unethical practice is about as difficult as it was trying to explain to a slave owner in the South that slavery should be abolished. Hence the Civil War. I am guessing we are heading towards another type of catastrophe very soon.
As many have noted, the best form of geoengineering we can accomplish is to STOP the geoengineering we are already embarked upon. This is essentially what Lovelock is saying.
Given the current political-economic "thinking," geoengineering would become the greatest and last opportunity for Disaster Capitalism.
Forget all this nonsense - here's what science should be focusing on:
A pill that allows humans to live on 40% less food and water;
Another pill that enhances the human body's ability to tolerate heat;
A secret food/drink additive that turns Greedism into Humanitarianism.
I am not sure biochar production is geoengineering. It is an ancient technique. There is certainly the danger for abuse such as monocropping, misuse of farmland, and deforestation but biochar can be done ethically and organically.
People currently cooking or heating with wood or burning slash piles could pyrolyze and then make that biochar available to gardeners and farmers to lock in carbon and increase the soil moisture and nutrient capacity. Biochar can be done small scale and local and in conjunction with forest conservation and fireproofing efforts. No giant infrastructure is needed. Pyrolysis units can be portable and affordable or homemade.
Lovelock himself has been promoting biochar so I am confused why he is making these statements now.
Have a look:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/sep/08/response-biochar-environment-climate-change
http://ow.ly/lgNp
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7924373.stm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXMUmby8PpU
I am not suggesting biochar alone is some magic pill, I just don't like seeing it lumped in with all these crazy geoengineering ideas which I do think could make things worse.
http://action.lcv.org/campaign/murk_0909?rk=W7%5f0nP9aFjsLE
in related activity the League of Conservation Voters has launched an immediate campaign - an ammendment has been introduced to reduce respons9ibility for cabon emission - heaviest polluters.
Yellowstone Park has the potential of a huge eruption someday as it has done in the past. Perhaps an underground nuclear explosion at Yellowstone could trigger an eruption of great enough magnitude to cool the earth for decades. Then we could continue to burn fossil fuels. In fact, we might need to increase the burning of fossil fuels just to keep from freezing in the long winters caused by the Yellowstone eruption. Let's give it a go. What have we got to lose?
The Oceans, for one thing.
Nature's got this.
A number of logical fallacies are being committed by many posters on the geoengineering topic.
The first is to assume that any of the proposed technologies will be selected by some "power" and immediately implemented on a global scale without smaller scale testing to determine the probable benefits and potential costs. It is simply not possible for a small scale test to alter the present course we're on, so there will be plenty of time to study the results before scaling up, which would be done in stages.
The second one is assigning "guilt by association". By simply belonging to a set of technologies that someone has denominated "geoengineering" does not determine if it has beneficial effects which depends on the particular details of the technology. There are an incalculable number of ways or locations where a particular technology could be applied. In some, bad results may achieved, in others, beneficial ones.
The fact of the matter is that many potential solutions have yet to be pubished or even thought of as yet, and nobody here, at least is in any position to say whether they might be, on balance, beneficial or not.
Those who engage in this may be thought of as "technology racists".
Don't devalue the term "racist". We already have a good word for reflexive technology bashers: luddite. However, your logic is equally fallacious. Just because we haven't thought of something doesn't mean it's there to be thought of. But we do have a long history of unintended consequences, so though it's not strictly logical to be skeptical, it's certainly wise.
in Japan, Masanobu Fukuoka found that by finding a way to let nature take its course, it is possible to grow rice without transplantation, plowing, pesticides or fertilizer; Haruchika Noguchi showed that disease functioned as a way to bring the body into equilibrium, and thus could be cured by aiding that natural process. Utilizing the Innate Intelligence of nature and the body, he was able to easily cure almost any disease, including early cancer and nerve degeneration diseases....recently Dr. Donald Epstein has echoed that work with his Network Spinal Analysis and Somato Respiratory Integration...
I agree that trying to geoengineer climate in our ignorance could wind up doing more harm than good.
I liked one suggestion that was floated by Obama's Interior (?) Secretary -- painting roofs and buildings white. It's a very passive measure, but could result in reflecting some of the sun's rays back into space the way ice used to do. Not a complete answer, but one step in the right direction.
We painted the roof of a rental we own white because the tenant complained of extreme heat in the summer. We toyed with the idea of opening vents in the ceiling, in the roof line, or installing air conditioning. We decided instead to try a reflective white paint on the roof, and it worked almost like magic. So, from personal experience, this is a very practical, low cost, low impact way to affect the absorption of heat.
Just let the Earth be.
Our species will either adapt to changes, over time, or we'll perish, and be replaced by another organism that is more fit for the environment.
It's that simple; no species survives forever, and it's arrogant for us to think that we are the one's who will somehow thwart our fate.
Who knows, many in a few generations we will produce babies that survive, and thrive, in an atmosphere that is mostly CO2.
I take issue with those who dismiss this article; Lovelock has been thinking about this stuff for longer than most people, and has contributed much original thought to the conversation. Please read one of his most recent books and catch up before shooting off your mouth too much--you'll find it entertaining as well as informative.
I take this article as an altogether sensible warning. We got here by altering the inputs and feedbacks a complex system without understanding the consequences. Even though the growing danger we face has been identified by a large group of experts, as a civilization we have not managed to change course--the diagnosis is in, but we cannot agree on solutions, or even the extent the problem, or even that there is a problem. The patient may well be terminal before we ever agree on a treatment.
Just read the comment section of most articles on climate change to get a feel for the scale of the massive ignorance (and deception?) that is impeding meaningful progress on this. Lovelock is saying that we'd better be careful what methods we choose to mitigate this problem. A reasonable position considering how badly we've done so far.