I do think Man can have an influence on the environment.
Forget CO2.
Forget volcanoes and CO2.
Think instead that one good volcano can produce sufficient particulates to bring about a noticeable chilling.
9/11 saw global air travel shut down for a while.
The drop in particulates was measurable and possibly
significant... the temp went up.
Of course, the temperature might have gone up because it was a weather thing, not a climate thing and not a pollution thing.
But we do know quite a bit about the effects of particulates on our weather and if we do something really big or keep it up long enough, just maybe we can even affect climate.
We have far fewer uncertainties with chilling.
Worse, we can get
significant effects from comparatively small changes - e.g. fuel sulphur reduction. Maybe the shift from coal to oil and gas has so reduced particulates that we think we are seeing warming and really all we are seeing is less chilling.
Maybe chilling has been masking warming (Anthropogenic or not).
But particulates could be the Weather Nuke while CO2 is a damp squib.
That's why the ecoengineers want to go for artificial volcanoes - particulates!
And SOX in particular (no pun intended).
Of course, it could be these guys like the dramatic end of the reel finish: clip the blue wire or the green wire?
Or nuke the asteroid.
Of course, what they're proposing is pretty drastic and damned expensive.
BUT we're not 100% sure what the problem is we're supposed to be trying to fix.
A lot of people argue we are in a ice age, or coming out of one.
And solar activity is at a 50 year low; maybe the sort of low associated with the "Maunder Minimums." e.g. the little ice age.
So we do something really clever to stop global warming and bingo! we freeze our butts off.
The really scary thing is that IF we have caused global warming, we've done it over quite an extended period of time through a steady stream of pollutants.
These Jokers want a quick fix. The big bang and everyone a hero.
Think about about it.
WE don't have a good record of well-intentioned meddling and what we propose isn't a long term series of tinkering with a park where hopefully we put what we learned wrecking one park into saving a park that can be saved, we're going to fix an entire planet all in one go.
If I didn't think we could affect our atmosphere, our weather, and even our climate, not even if we really put our minds to it, "Fine" I'd say, "fine, go ahead and see if I care" - at least we'll still have a planet.
But these guys won't want to mess around for years with some incremental solution where at every step you pause, collect the data, consider what you've achieved (learn) and then adjust your response; these guys are going to want to go for the one time
fix it big and fix it quick solutions.
Tell me where in all these fix it scenarios is the project plan with the KPIs and the milestones, the check and balances? When do we stop and take an objective look at the achievement so far? Is it in any of the plans? If we get it wrong, where is our recovery position? Where are the contingency plans if we discover CO2 is ineffective or hat we fired aup a few volcanoes we can't switch off and we are actually in a new little ice age.. even a little tiny one, coupled with our AGW plans could see an irretrievable disaster.
When you let go with a nuke, its an either/or situation, you're never just a little bit pregnant.
The assumption appears to be:
[ul][li]Man caused global warming. Don't argue.[/li]
[li]Man can Fix it. No question, just give us enough money[/li]
[li]There is no argument. Give us your money.[/li]
[li]We know we're right and we don't need cehcks s o therefore we are going to just go ahead and fix it.[/li]
[li]We don't need any delays or long drawn out processes, let's just do it (for the Gipper?)![/li][/ul]
I recall that Boeing report (I mentioned t on another thread) where they claimed that 80% (or some such figure) of failures are caused by maintenance.
This is the biggest maintenance project in town and this ain't a 747. If something goes wrong it we'd better have a reserve planet to hand.
So yes, I'm worried.
I'm worried that some of these guys have latched onto schemes and mechanisms that we know only too well can have a
significant effect on climate.
I'm worried they may want to fix in an afternoon what took a few decades to create.
I'm worried they may even be addressing the wrong problem.
JMW