Recent CRF Press Joomla! - the dynamic portal engine and content management system http://www.climateresponsefund.org/index.php 2014-08-21T11:05:46Z Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management An interview with Graduate Student Kate Ricke of Carnegie Mellon Institute 2010-05-17T21:35:55Z 2010-05-17T21:35:55Z http://www.climateresponsefund.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=176:science-careers-kate-ricke&catid=37:recent-press&Itemid=62 Administrator mleinen@climateresponsefund.orf <p>An interview with Graduate Student Kate Ricke of Carnegie Mellon Institute in the Science Careers section of Science</p> <p>Kate thesis research involves modeling studies of solar radiation management</p> <p>Science</p> <p>May 7, 2010</p> <p>by Elisabeth Pain</p> <p><a href="http://sciencecareers.sciencemag.org/career_magazine/previous_issues/articles/2010_05_07/caredit.a1000048">http://sciencecareers.sciencemag.org/career_magazine/previous_issues/articles/2010_05_07/caredit.a1000048</a></p> <!--EndFragment--> <p>An interview with Graduate Student Kate Ricke of Carnegie Mellon Institute in the Science Careers section of Science</p> <p>Kate thesis research involves modeling studies of solar radiation management</p> <p>Science</p> <p>May 7, 2010</p> <p>by Elisabeth Pain</p> <p><a href="http://sciencecareers.sciencemag.org/career_magazine/previous_issues/articles/2010_05_07/caredit.a1000048">http://sciencecareers.sciencemag.org/career_magazine/previous_issues/articles/2010_05_07/caredit.a1000048</a></p> <!--EndFragment--> Saving the earth or hurting it - Charlotte Observer May 10 2010 2010-05-17T21:31:07Z 2010-05-17T21:31:07Z http://www.climateresponsefund.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=175:saving-the-earth-or-hurting-it-charlotte-observer-may-10-2010&catid=37:recent-press&Itemid=62 Administrator mleinen@climateresponsefund.orf <p>Saving the earth or hurting it</p> <p>Charlotte Observer</p> <p>May 10 2010</p> <p>by T. DeLene Beeland</p> <p><a href="http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2010/05/10/1426019/saving-the-earth-or-hurting-it.html">http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2010/05/10/1426019/saving-the-earth-or-hurting-it.html</a></p> <p>Saving the earth or hurting it</p> <p>Charlotte Observer</p> <p>May 10 2010</p> <p>by T. DeLene Beeland</p> <p><a href="http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2010/05/10/1426019/saving-the-earth-or-hurting-it.html">http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2010/05/10/1426019/saving-the-earth-or-hurting-it.html</a></p> Asilomar geoengineering conference grapples with the ethics of climate change shortcuts - Monterey County Weekly - March 25, 2010 2010-05-07T22:18:14Z 2010-05-07T22:18:14Z http://www.climateresponsefund.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=174:asilomar-geoengineering-conference-grapples-with-the-ethics-of-climate-change-shortcuts&catid=37:recent-press&Itemid=62 Administrator mleinen@climateresponsefund.orf <p>Asilomar geoengineering conference grapples with the ethics of climate change shortcuts</p> <p>Monterey County Weekly</p> <p>March 25, 2010</p> <p>by Kera Abraham</p> <p><a href="http://www.montereycountyweekly.com/archives/2010/2010-Mar-25/asilomar-geoengineering-conference-grapples-with-the-ethics-of-climate-change-shortcuts/">http://www.montereycountyweekly.com/archives/2010/2010-Mar-25/asilomar-geoengineering-conference-grapples-with-the-ethics-of-climate-change-shortcuts/</a></p> <p>Asilomar geoengineering conference grapples with the ethics of climate change shortcuts</p> <p>Monterey County Weekly</p> <p>March 25, 2010</p> <p>by Kera Abraham</p> <p><a href="http://www.montereycountyweekly.com/archives/2010/2010-Mar-25/asilomar-geoengineering-conference-grapples-with-the-ethics-of-climate-change-shortcuts/">http://www.montereycountyweekly.com/archives/2010/2010-Mar-25/asilomar-geoengineering-conference-grapples-with-the-ethics-of-climate-change-shortcuts/</a></p> Should geoengineering be used to address global warming? Christian Science Monitor - May 3, 2010 2010-05-07T22:14:16Z 2010-05-07T22:14:16Z http://www.climateresponsefund.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=173:should-geoengineering-be-used-to-address-global-warming&catid=37:recent-press&Itemid=62 Administrator mleinen@climateresponsefund.orf <p>Should geoengineering be used to address global warming?</p> <p>Christian Science Monitor</p> <p>May 3, 2010</p> <p>by Gregory Lamb</p> <p><a href="http://www.csmonitor.com/Environment/2010/0503/Should-geoengineering-be-used-to-address-global-warming">http://www.csmonitor.com/Environment/2010/0503/Should-geoengineering-be-used-to-address-global-warming</a></p> <p>Should geoengineering be used to address global warming?</p> <p>Christian Science Monitor</p> <p>May 3, 2010</p> <p>by Gregory Lamb</p> <p><a href="http://www.csmonitor.com/Environment/2010/0503/Should-geoengineering-be-used-to-address-global-warming">http://www.csmonitor.com/Environment/2010/0503/Should-geoengineering-be-used-to-address-global-warming</a></p> Klima-Forscher wollen Erde abkühlen - Welt Online - March 26, 2010 2010-05-07T22:11:59Z 2010-05-07T22:11:59Z http://www.climateresponsefund.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=172:klima-forscher-wollen-erde-abkuehlen&catid=37:recent-press&Itemid=62 Administrator mleinen@climateresponsefund.orf <p>Klima-Forscher wollen Erde abkühlen</p> <p>Welt Online</p> <p>blog post March 26, 2010</p> <p>by Von Thomas Jungling</p> <p><a href="http://www.welt.de/wissenschaft/umwelt/article7338808/Klima-Forscher-wollen-Erde-abkuehlen.html">http://www.welt.de/wissenschaft/umwelt/article7338808/Klima-Forscher-wollen-Erde-abkuehlen.html</a></p> <p>Klima-Forscher wollen Erde abkühlen</p> <p>Welt Online</p> <p>blog post March 26, 2010</p> <p>by Von Thomas Jungling</p> <p><a href="http://www.welt.de/wissenschaft/umwelt/article7338808/Klima-Forscher-wollen-Erde-abkuehlen.html">http://www.welt.de/wissenschaft/umwelt/article7338808/Klima-Forscher-wollen-Erde-abkuehlen.html</a></p> Mother Earth Has a Fever - Slate - March 22, 2010 2010-05-07T22:09:33Z 2010-05-07T22:09:33Z http://www.climateresponsefund.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=171:mother-earth-has-a-fever&catid=37:recent-press&Itemid=62 Administrator mleinen@climateresponsefund.orf <p>Mother Earth Has a Fever</p> <p>Slate</p> <p>blog post March 22, 2010</p> <p>by Eli Kintisch</p> <p><a href="http://www.slate.com/toolbar.aspx?action=print&amp;id=2250462">http://www.slate.com/toolbar.aspx?action=print&amp;id=2250462</a></p> <p>Mother Earth Has a Fever</p> <p>Slate</p> <p>blog post March 22, 2010</p> <p>by Eli Kintisch</p> <p><a href="http://www.slate.com/toolbar.aspx?action=print&amp;id=2250462">http://www.slate.com/toolbar.aspx?action=print&amp;id=2250462</a></p> Some catching up: Asilomar - Heliophage - April 18, 2010 2010-05-07T22:06:36Z 2010-05-07T22:06:36Z http://www.climateresponsefund.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=170:catching-up-on-asilomar&catid=37:recent-press&Itemid=62 Administrator mleinen@climateresponsefund.orf <p>Some catching up: Asilomar</p> <p>Heliophage</p> <p>blog post April 18, 2010</p> <p>by Oliver Morton</p> <p>Oliver Morton reviews coverage of the Asilomar conference on his blog and makes some observations about the conference.</p> <p><a href="http://heliophage.wordpress.com/category/geoengineering/">http://heliophage.wordpress.com/category/geoengineering/<br /></a></p> <p>Some catching up: Asilomar</p> <p>Heliophage</p> <p>blog post April 18, 2010</p> <p>by Oliver Morton</p> <p>Oliver Morton reviews coverage of the Asilomar conference on his blog and makes some observations about the conference.</p> <p><a href="http://heliophage.wordpress.com/category/geoengineering/">http://heliophage.wordpress.com/category/geoengineering/<br /></a></p> Cientistas tentam prevenir abuso da engenharia do clima - OlharDireto - April 12, 2010 2010-05-07T22:03:45Z 2010-05-07T22:03:45Z http://www.climateresponsefund.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=169:cientistas-tentam-prevenir-abuso-da-engenharia-do-clima-&catid=37:recent-press&Itemid=62 Administrator mleinen@climateresponsefund.orf <p>Cientistas tentam prevenir abuso da engenharia do clima</p> <p>OlharDireto</p> <p>Noticias - Meio Ambiente</p> <p>blog post April 12, 2010</p> <p><a href="http://www.olhardireto.com.br/noticias/exibir.asp?edt=31&amp;id=95615">http://www.olhardireto.com.br/noticias/exibir.asp?edt=31&amp;id=95615</a></p> <p>Cientistas tentam prevenir abuso da engenharia do clima</p> <p>OlharDireto</p> <p>Noticias - Meio Ambiente</p> <p>blog post April 12, 2010</p> <p><a href="http://www.olhardireto.com.br/noticias/exibir.asp?edt=31&amp;id=95615">http://www.olhardireto.com.br/noticias/exibir.asp?edt=31&amp;id=95615</a></p> The "Oxford Principles" for Geoengineering Regulation - Roger Pielke, Jr blog - April 5, 2010 2010-05-07T22:00:20Z 2010-05-07T22:00:20Z http://www.climateresponsefund.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=168:oxford-principles-for-geoengineering&catid=37:recent-press&Itemid=62 Administrator mleinen@climateresponsefund.orf <p><br />The "Oxford Principles" for Geoengineering Regulation</p> <p>Roger Pielke, Jr's blog</p> <p>blog post April 5, 2010</p> <p>by Roger Pielke, Jr.</p> <p><a href="http://rogerpielkejr.blogspot.com/2010/04/oxford-principles-for-geoengineering.html">http://rogerpielkejr.blogspot.com/2010/04/oxford-principles-for-geoengineering.html</a></p> <p><br />The "Oxford Principles" for Geoengineering Regulation</p> <p>Roger Pielke, Jr's blog</p> <p>blog post April 5, 2010</p> <p>by Roger Pielke, Jr.</p> <p><a href="http://rogerpielkejr.blogspot.com/2010/04/oxford-principles-for-geoengineering.html">http://rogerpielkejr.blogspot.com/2010/04/oxford-principles-for-geoengineering.html</a></p> 'Asilomar 2' Takes Small Steps Toward Rules for Geoengineering - Science - April 2, 2010 2010-05-07T21:47:28Z 2010-05-07T21:47:28Z http://www.climateresponsefund.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=167:asilomar-2-takes-small-steps&catid=37:recent-press&Itemid=62 Administrator mleinen@climateresponsefund.orf <p>'Asilomar 2' Takes Small Steps Toward Rules for Geoengineering</p> <p>Science , v. 328, p 22-23 April 2, 2010</p> <p>by Eli Kintisch</p> <p><a href="http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/reprint/328/5974/22.pdf">http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/reprint/328/5974/22.pdf</a></p> <p><br />PACIFIC GROVE, CALIFORNIA—Meeting in 1975 at a leafy retreat center here by the sea, molecular biologists grappled with how to unlock the secrets of recombinant DNA without creating infectious, runaway bio- agents. Their successful deliberations laid the groundwork for a regulatory framework that allowed research—and ultimately the biotech industry—to flourish. <br />Last week, nearly 200 experts in geosciences and other scientific and policy disciplines met here to confront a new kind of risky research: <br />large-scale geoengineering projects aimed at countering the buildup of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. And although the climate scientists may have accomplished less in a week than did their biologist forebears, they did make progress. The conference organizers declared that geo- engineering research is “indispensable” but said that it should be done with “humility.” Governments and the public should work together to decide what schemes are “viable, appropriate, and ethical,” the statement added. Cuts in greenhouse emissions should be a priority, it said, mirroring statements by the American Geophysical Union and the U.K. Royal Society.</p> <p><br />Most conferees believe the possibility of climate tipping points has placed geoengineering on the global agenda. And so last week’s meeting—The Asilomar International Conference on Climate Intervention Technologies, or Asilomar 2, as it was dubbed—was driven both by fears of climate catastrophes and the potentially dangerous steps that scientists or politicians might take to avert them. It was “a meeting … we all wished was not necessary,” conference organizer Margaret Leinen of the Climate Response Fund in Alexandria, Virginia, told the participants.</p> <p><br />Leinen’s organization was formed last year to fund geoengineering research projects, which fall into two broad categories. The first involves efforts to block the sun’s rays, using techniques such as spraying aerosols in the upper atmosphere or brightening clouds with sea salt. The second approach aims to remove carbon from the atmosphere by means of schemes such as growing algae blooms in the ocean. The conference even coined separate phrases for the two activities: “Climate intervention” describes the sun-blocking methods, and “carbon remediation” covers the CO 2-sucking methods.</p> <p><br />As the fund began to hit up potential donors, however, several said that the nascent field needed a set of ethical ground rules before practitioners developed research plans. As a result, the goals of last week’s meeting were both specific and ambitious: Set up voluntary guidelines for a host of geo-engineering methods that had never been deployed on a large scale, or in some cases in any setting outside the lab.</p> <p><br />Sobered by such broad societal responsi- bilities, participants spent a good deal of time discussing research ethics and the geopolitical implications of geoengineering. “I’d expected hubris but didn’t find it. No one seemed anxious to get on with geoengineering,” said <br />Paul Craig of the Sierra Club. Indeed, Princeton University energy expert Robert Socolow struck a cautionary note by presenting various “nightmares” for his audience to con- sider, from a rogue state using geoengineering before it was understood to having “all the [world’s] climate scientists working on geoengineering.”</p> <p><br />Although the effects of geoengineering studies might be felt across broad swaths of the planet, they also necessarily affect individuals. Several <br />speakers cited approvingly the approach taken by bio- medical researchers: the need for informed consent, a balancing of the benefits and risks to humans, and the appropriate selection of research “subjects.”</p> <p>But that model breaks down at some point because the risks involved in geoengineering are so different from those in medical research. Individual patients may die if a drug trial goes bad. Geoengineering experiments, <br />in contrast, could have wide-ranging and highly uncertain environmental effects, noted earth scientist Jane Long of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California.</p> <p><br />That broader scope fed fears of restrictive regulations. And participants worried that those rules could be triggered even by very tiny interventions, such as a much-discussed project off the Scottish coast to spread small quantities of sea salt into the air and study their cloud-whitening effects.</p> <p><br />The meeting also featured five breakout groups that focused on drafting research guidelines for the various kinds of approaches. What level of involvement by governments is appropriate? What role should the military or private companies play? A breakout group devoted to the idea of <br />blocking sunlight, for example, struggled over whether for-profit companies should be barred from the enterprise to ensure maximum “transparency.”</p> <p><br />Given all the conferees were asked to take on, it’s not surprising that many loose ends remained as they headed home. (The 14-hour days drew few complaints—“I had no one ask that we meet less and go walk on the beach,” marveled scientific organizing committee chair Michael MacCracken of the Climate Institute, which co-sponsored the meeting.) The final statement was approved by the 13-member organizing committee, for example, although MacCracken hopes to gather signatures from all of the participants over the next few weeks. In addition, the <br />breakout groups are still massaging suggestions on voluntary guidelines for specific geoengineering approaches.</p> <p>Reflecting the feeling that the meeting was only a start, some participants dubbed it “Asilomar 2.1” as a sign that more meetings would be needed. But everyone seemed optimistic that the answers would eventually provide a solid foundation for the fledgling—if frightening—field. “Asilomar 3 will be in another 30 years, for the next discipline,” predicted Socolow. <br />–ELI KINTISCH <br /><br /></p> <p>'Asilomar 2' Takes Small Steps Toward Rules for Geoengineering</p> <p>Science , v. 328, p 22-23 April 2, 2010</p> <p>by Eli Kintisch</p> <p><a href="http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/reprint/328/5974/22.pdf">http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/reprint/328/5974/22.pdf</a></p> <p><br />PACIFIC GROVE, CALIFORNIA—Meeting in 1975 at a leafy retreat center here by the sea, molecular biologists grappled with how to unlock the secrets of recombinant DNA without creating infectious, runaway bio- agents. Their successful deliberations laid the groundwork for a regulatory framework that allowed research—and ultimately the biotech industry—to flourish. <br />Last week, nearly 200 experts in geosciences and other scientific and policy disciplines met here to confront a new kind of risky research: <br />large-scale geoengineering projects aimed at countering the buildup of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. And although the climate scientists may have accomplished less in a week than did their biologist forebears, they did make progress. The conference organizers declared that geo- engineering research is “indispensable” but said that it should be done with “humility.” Governments and the public should work together to decide what schemes are “viable, appropriate, and ethical,” the statement added. Cuts in greenhouse emissions should be a priority, it said, mirroring statements by the American Geophysical Union and the U.K. Royal Society.</p> <p><br />Most conferees believe the possibility of climate tipping points has placed geoengineering on the global agenda. And so last week’s meeting—The Asilomar International Conference on Climate Intervention Technologies, or Asilomar 2, as it was dubbed—was driven both by fears of climate catastrophes and the potentially dangerous steps that scientists or politicians might take to avert them. It was “a meeting … we all wished was not necessary,” conference organizer Margaret Leinen of the Climate Response Fund in Alexandria, Virginia, told the participants.</p> <p><br />Leinen’s organization was formed last year to fund geoengineering research projects, which fall into two broad categories. The first involves efforts to block the sun’s rays, using techniques such as spraying aerosols in the upper atmosphere or brightening clouds with sea salt. The second approach aims to remove carbon from the atmosphere by means of schemes such as growing algae blooms in the ocean. The conference even coined separate phrases for the two activities: “Climate intervention” describes the sun-blocking methods, and “carbon remediation” covers the CO 2-sucking methods.</p> <p><br />As the fund began to hit up potential donors, however, several said that the nascent field needed a set of ethical ground rules before practitioners developed research plans. As a result, the goals of last week’s meeting were both specific and ambitious: Set up voluntary guidelines for a host of geo-engineering methods that had never been deployed on a large scale, or in some cases in any setting outside the lab.</p> <p><br />Sobered by such broad societal responsi- bilities, participants spent a good deal of time discussing research ethics and the geopolitical implications of geoengineering. “I’d expected hubris but didn’t find it. No one seemed anxious to get on with geoengineering,” said <br />Paul Craig of the Sierra Club. Indeed, Princeton University energy expert Robert Socolow struck a cautionary note by presenting various “nightmares” for his audience to con- sider, from a rogue state using geoengineering before it was understood to having “all the [world’s] climate scientists working on geoengineering.”</p> <p><br />Although the effects of geoengineering studies might be felt across broad swaths of the planet, they also necessarily affect individuals. Several <br />speakers cited approvingly the approach taken by bio- medical researchers: the need for informed consent, a balancing of the benefits and risks to humans, and the appropriate selection of research “subjects.”</p> <p>But that model breaks down at some point because the risks involved in geoengineering are so different from those in medical research. Individual patients may die if a drug trial goes bad. Geoengineering experiments, <br />in contrast, could have wide-ranging and highly uncertain environmental effects, noted earth scientist Jane Long of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California.</p> <p><br />That broader scope fed fears of restrictive regulations. And participants worried that those rules could be triggered even by very tiny interventions, such as a much-discussed project off the Scottish coast to spread small quantities of sea salt into the air and study their cloud-whitening effects.</p> <p><br />The meeting also featured five breakout groups that focused on drafting research guidelines for the various kinds of approaches. What level of involvement by governments is appropriate? What role should the military or private companies play? A breakout group devoted to the idea of <br />blocking sunlight, for example, struggled over whether for-profit companies should be barred from the enterprise to ensure maximum “transparency.”</p> <p><br />Given all the conferees were asked to take on, it’s not surprising that many loose ends remained as they headed home. (The 14-hour days drew few complaints—“I had no one ask that we meet less and go walk on the beach,” marveled scientific organizing committee chair Michael MacCracken of the Climate Institute, which co-sponsored the meeting.) The final statement was approved by the 13-member organizing committee, for example, although MacCracken hopes to gather signatures from all of the participants over the next few weeks. In addition, the <br />breakout groups are still massaging suggestions on voluntary guidelines for specific geoengineering approaches.</p> <p>Reflecting the feeling that the meeting was only a start, some participants dubbed it “Asilomar 2.1” as a sign that more meetings would be needed. But everyone seemed optimistic that the answers would eventually provide a solid foundation for the fledgling—if frightening—field. “Asilomar 3 will be in another 30 years, for the next discipline,” predicted Socolow. <br />–ELI KINTISCH <br /><br /></p>