Slashdot Mirror


Geoengineering To Cool the Earth Becoming Thinkable

johkir writes "As early as 1965, when Al Gore was a freshman in college, a panel of distinguished environmental scientists warned President Lyndon B. Johnson that CO2 emissions from fossil fuels might cause 'marked changes in climate' that 'could be deleterious.' Yet the scientists did not so much as mention the possibility of reducing emissions. Instead they considered one idea: 'spreading very small reflective particles' over about five million square miles of ocean, so as to bounce about 1 percent more sunlight back to space — 'a wacky geoengineering solution.' In the decades since, geoengineering ideas never died, but they did get pushed to the fringe — they were widely perceived by scientists and environmentalists alike as silly and even immoral attempts to avoid addressing the root of the problem of global warming. Three recent developments have brought them back into the mainstream." We've discussed some pretty strange ideas in the geoengineering line over the last few years.

5 of 419 comments (clear)

  1. Like something out of Robinson's work by CRCulver · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's cool to see some of the speculation about the terraforming of other planets now applied to Earth. I fondly recall how one of the strategies used to warm Mars in Kim Stanley Robinson's trilogy beginning with Red Mars was spreading black dust to absorb sunlight.

  2. Paging Dr. Kynes... by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Who knows what will happen to important sea-life species if we go spreading reflective dust in the oceans?

    This is Earth; we have more than Shai-Hulud to preserve.

  3. Geo-engineering a bad idea by jgarzik · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As has been noted, geo-engineering requires massive amounts of hubris and luck.

    Geo-engineering is the act of fighting pollution... with yet more pollution!

    And when you intentionally try to change a planet-wide system, all manner of unintended consequences will occur.

  4. Re:Perhaps? by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Boo hoo, it's the cry of the urban planner who wants everyone in urban ratholes. No thanks.

    That is quite the false dichotomy isn't it? I want to design communities that don't force you into urban ratholes, and you respond with 'boo hoo'? I want to see us develop the urban areas we have, to make them livable to more people so that we don't require everyone to move 50 miles from their jobs just to find a decent place to live.

    Trust me when I say this, the last place I want to live is in a city. But the last thing i want to see happen is all of our contryside turned into generic urban fill. The problem is that the planning that existed to date was not part of a long term sustainable strategy. It banked on increasing the home-count and thus increased property tax revenue for governments, and not for the eventual collapse that will occur in 20-30 years when the cost of living in such a manner results in stagnating economies.

    If you don't plan for that, then an urban rathole is what you will get.

    I grew up in a rust-belt town. When you rely on a single industry to drive your local economy its foolish.

    --
    Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
  5. The Great Floating Garbage Patch didn't work? by toby · · Score: 4, Interesting

    the island is almost entirely comprises human-made trash. It currently weighs approximately 3.5 million tons with a concentration of 3.34 million pieces of garbage per square kilometer, 80 per cent of which is plastic.

    Due to the Patch's location in the North Pacific Gyre, its growth is guaranteed to continue as this Africa-sized section of ocean spins in a vortex that effectively traps flotsam.

    --
    you had me at #!