What is ‘Geoengineering’?
06/12/2008Ronald Bailey discusses a proposed solution to global climate change.
Reason magazine science correspondent Ronald Bailey reports on a recent American Enterprise Institute conference that discussed the idea of “geoengineering.” Here’s an excerpt:
“At AEI, climatologist Tom Wigley from the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Colorado defined geoengineering as the deliberate modification of the earth’s short wave radiation budget in order to reduce the magnitude of climate change. In his presentation, Wigley looked mostly at two possible approaches to geoengineering: injecting sulfate or other aerosols into the stratosphere, and changing the reflectivity of clouds.
“Why consider geoengineering in the first place? As Columbia University economist Jeffrey Sachs wrote in Scientific American in April: ‘[O]ur current technologies cannot support both a decline in carbon dioxide emissions and an expanding global economy. If we try to restrain emissions without a fundamentally new set of technologies, we will end up stifling economic growth, including the development prospects for billions of people.’
“So if we don’t want to perpetuate poverty in the name of preventing climate change, geoengineering may be our way out. Why? Because geoengineering would provide more time for the world’s economy to grow while inventors and entrepreneurs develop and deploy new carbon neutral energy sources to replace fossil fuels.”
Read the whole thing.