Tuesday, November 01, 2016

Geoengineering to Alter Climate Moves Closer to Reality

* Researchers say greenhouse-gas removal needed to avert warming
* Large-scale greenhouse gas removal among methods considered


Oil platform (Credit: Wikipedia) Click to Enlarge.
So-called geoengineering is seen as necessary to achieve the COP21 Paris agreement clinched in December, when 197 countries pledged to keep global temperatures rises below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), according to researchers who produced a report for the UN Convention on Biological Diversity.
...
The University of East Anglia released a study in February that concluded geoengineering ideas were hazardous, costly or unrealistic.  The Convention on Biodiversity has approached geoengineering with caution, seeking to constrain the development unless there is effective global governance, Williamson said.

“Risks of having local imbalances of climate are quite high, we’re not quite sure how it would turn out,” Williamson said.  “If you have a climate catastrophe, a flood or storm, the accusation will be that it resulted from your action in the atmosphere.”

Some minds have nevertheless been changing when confronted with the scale of the climate change problems to be solved.  Monday’s report makes clear that while geoengineering still entails environmental, political and economic risks, it’s worth considering as long as potentially unintended consequences can be pinpointed and minimized.

Carbon capture and storage is one of the more viable options going forward, Williamson said. Costs for machines that suck carbon dioxide out of the air, known as the direct air capture method, are falling as the technology becomes more efficient.  The government of Norway recently committed $160 million to fund projects that will collect pollution from three industrial sites and extend its research program.

World leaders will be meeting in Marrakesh from Nov. 7 to 20 for the COP22 conference to bang out more details on the implementation of climate deal and discuss concrete plans.  To date, 87 countries have ratified the Paris agreement, including China, the U.S. and the European Union.  It will enter into force Nov. 4.

The geoengineering report will be presented at a UN Convention on Biodiversity Conference in Cancun, Mexico in December.

Read more at Geoengineering to Alter Climate Moves Closer to Reality

No comments:

Post a Comment