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Proposal For United Nations To Study Climate-Cooling Technologies Rejected (reuters.com) 241

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: A push to launch a high-level study of potentially risky technological fixes to curb climate change was abandoned on Thursday at a U.N. environmental conference in Nairobi, as countries including the United States raised objections. "Geoengineering" technologies, which are gaining prominence as international efforts to curb climate-changing emissions fall short, aim to pull carbon out of the atmosphere or block some of the sun's warmth to cool the Earth. They could help fend off some of the worst impacts of runaway climate change, including worsening storms and heatwaves, backers say. But opponents argue the emerging technologies pose huge potential risks to people and nature, and could undermine efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, not least because many are backed by fossil-fuel interests. Observers at the U.N. Environment Assembly in Nairobi said the Swiss-backed proposal was rejected in part because it called for a "precautionary principle" approach to geoengineering the climate. That principle says great care must be taken in starting activities that have unclear risks for human health or the environment. The United States, Saudi Arabia and Brazil were among the strongest opponents of the proposal, with Japan also expressing reservations.
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Proposal For United Nations To Study Climate-Cooling Technologies Rejected

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  • No.... just no. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt.nerdflat@com> on Thursday March 14, 2019 @11:42PM (#58276186) Journal

    You don't solve a problem by trying to tip the scales in the other direction. You solve it by doing things in a balanced way from now on so that over time, the net result is balanced.

    It's not like Lincoln said "okay, that's enough with black slavery, let's make the white man be slaves for a couple of centuries to balance things out"

    You fix a problem by doing the right thing, today, and moving forward.

    In this particular case, it means passing laws which put stricter limits on emissions than what currently exist, so that manufacturers are forced (yes forced, because as much as we might want them to, they aren't going to do it entirely voluntarily... or certainly not at the speeds that are required) to innovate and come up with long term environmentally friendly solutions to the problems that we are facing.

    • We need to understand these things better, knowledge is power, a little knowledge can do exactly as you described, bad things. We need a FULL understanding of this desperately.
      • The UN already has plans for fighting global warming... This idea of using technology to counter-act global warming runs afoul of their preferred plan: Agenda 21 (depopulate the humans).

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        The problem is that climate change has become totally politicized. It wasn't always this way. In 2007, a debate moderator asked the Republican candidates if they thought climate change was a "serious problem". All but Fred Thompson agreed. That is unimaginable today. Denialism has become a right wing litmus test.

        The left isn't much better. They mostly see climate change as an opportunity to push an agenda for taxes, coercive big government, and centralization. So they reject even considering solution

        • by h33t l4x0r ( 4107715 ) on Friday March 15, 2019 @01:24AM (#58276466)
          Um, no. The left does not fear that climate change will have a good solution. You're just being silly.
          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            Um, no. The left does not fear that climate change will have a good solution. You're just being silly.

            I don't think so. It is not just geo-engineering that the left opposes. They are also opposed to carbon sequestration [wikipedia.org] and nuclear. Both of these use our existing industrial infrastructure, and don't require any big new government initiatives. The economics of building new nukes is questionable, but shutting down working existing nukes was insane.

            The left loves big coercive new initiatives. Yet most of the progress that we have made so far, such as LED bulbs, efficient variable speed motors, better insul

            • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

              by h33t l4x0r ( 4107715 )
              I don't know who you mean by "The Left" but most liberals are just regular folks who are concerned about the environment. They are not Trotsky-ite subversives, just like "The Right" isn't all Neo-nazi hate mongers. They are just poorly-informed Fox-viewers (just kidding)
            • They are also opposed to carbon sequestration [wikipedia.org] and nuclear. Both of these use our existing industrial infrastructure, and don't require any big new government initiatives

              How, exactly, do you plan on widespread carbon sequestration without a government initiative making it profitable?

              Also, nuclear requires a government initiative to deal with the waste since the government is required to deal with it by law. Also, it requires a new government initiative in the form of massive subsidies to make nuclear profitable.

          • A very small but visible segment of the left does fear a good solution. They're the homeopathic types who see climate change as a sort of Earth goddress retribution for technology, through the lens of their back-to-nature values. They want the only solution to be the end of industry and return to a fantasy idyllic native american tribal balance with nature.

            I certainly wouldn't say they have any political sway in the democratic party, though.

        • Seconded. If you want the country to become ‘woke’ on the carbon problem, then you might want to try not automatically rejecting every technology that might work at scale.

      • by mwvdlee ( 775178 ) on Friday March 15, 2019 @02:37AM (#58276640) Homepage

        Yes, and in order to gain that knowledge you must... NOT study it?
        They didn't vote down implementing technologies, they voted down gaining knowledge.

        • Of course the need to vote against gaining knowledge because it has a well known liberal bias.

        • What would you study? We're already at the point where all that's left would be implementing it, and studying the results.

          That implementation has a potential for massive disaster, and is unlikely to produce a feasible clean-up system - none of the proposals are efficient enough to do at sufficient scale to actually fix climate change.

          So, huge potential downside affecting vast numbers of people. Tiny potential upside. The alternative, "reduce emissions and stop clear cutting everything", has very little r

      • by Ogive17 ( 691899 )
        That's such a cop-out statement.

        Pollution is bad, regardless of the long term impacts on the planet. I've been to Beijing, the orange haze is nasty.

        We should be pushing technologies that eliminate the largest portion of pollutants.
      • You can not get a full understanding without doing it. And doing it has an enormous potential for disaster.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Forced to put up energy prices?
      Who can pay more and more for energy?
      The cost of energy would be such a burden the private sector would move to another nation.
      Productive private sector production lines need to run 24/7 with a very low energy cost.
      No night time, day time energy costs changes.
      No getting told that doing summer their nation can't do low cost energy 24/7.
      For growth, jobs and winning experts, energy prices have to be lower.
      Forced changes to energy prices just moves jobs to more understandin
      • What happens when the only "understanding" nations left are the extra-friendly-to-the-free-market ones like North Korea, Syria, Russia...Yemen, maybe...?

    • Re:No.... just no. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by doom ( 14564 ) <doom@kzsu.stanford.edu> on Friday March 15, 2019 @12:14AM (#58276328) Homepage Journal

      You have my sympathies on this one, but actually we're fucked. The jamming has been successful, nothing is happening fast enough to really get emissions under control, and when Miami is underwater you're going to see a panic to Do Something about this problem, and then we're going to do some of the quickest and dirtiest shit you can imagine (like, think blowing sulfides into the upper atmosphere with nuclear explosions).

      No one sane wants to roll the dice on geoengineering to ameliorate global warming, but really that is what we're going to do, and it would be a good idea to start doing some research on the techniques now, in hopes of dodging some of the worst ideas.

      I would be happy to be proved wrong about this prediction, but what we're actually seeing is the right is still in denial about the problem and the left is in denial about the solutions (we can do it all with renewables! In fact the problems have already been solved! Just sit back and watch the juggernaut of green technology conquer the world!) and the middle of the road folks aren't paying any attention because gas prices are down, so obviously there's no problems anywhere.

    • You don't solve a problem by trying to tip the scales in the other direction.

      Yes, that's actually exactly how you fix a problem. If you accept that there is a problem then cutbacks and regulations won't do it, we've been doing those for half a century with no noticeable impact whatsoever. If the end is truly nigh as basically every climate change spokesperson for decades has been saying then we have two options: accept it and die like animals, or embrace our Humanity and fix the fucking problem.

      • Re:No.... just no. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Mr. Dollar Ton ( 5495648 ) on Friday March 15, 2019 @02:19AM (#58276596)

        cutbacks and regulations won't do it, we've been doing those for half a century with no noticeable impact whatsoever

        Oh, please, there have not been doing serious cutbacks and regulations. Where there were - like the problem with the ozone hole, cutting back on the emissions at the source of the problem up to the point of eliminating them has had a most noticeable impact.

        Here the same approach would work well, except for the selfishness of those who shirk the responsibility for their contribution to it.

    • Sometimes you do solve a problem by tipping the scales the other way. Don't reject a solution before studying it. That's a cognitive bias.
    • Re:No.... just no. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Gavagai80 ( 1275204 ) on Friday March 15, 2019 @05:04AM (#58276836) Homepage

      The harsh fact is that getting 200 countries to cooperate to stop emissions is probably impossible. Whereas it only takes one country to fund geoengineering.

      Right now is obviously too early to turn to implement risky geoengineering strategies, but right now is definitely the time to study them, which was what the proposal was about. If we put off the studying until we're already in a serious crisis, it'll be too late for the decades of study needed to produce anything in time to prevent catastrophe.

      • but right now is definitely the time to study them, which was what the proposal was about.

        This proposal was to start implementing them so that you could study the results.

        Implementing geoenginering with no real idea of the side effects, in order to find out what those side-effects are, is a very, very, very bad idea.

    • by Chas ( 5144 )

      The thing is, "doing things in a balanced way" to keep things "balanced"?

      We're being told that "We're already fucked!"

      So we need something that will tip it BACK towards a "safer" or "saner" balance point.

      So, all the enviro-twatwaffles need to make up their mind.

      People are NOT simply going to turn over all control and authority to world governments.
      It's just not gonna happen.
      So, socially engineering people to live in caves and eat grass ain't happening.
      Nor is demanding that people not have kids.
      In most of th

    • Okay, so genociding most of the human population it is then?

      Because I thought the plan was to economically lift most of the developing world out of poverty and increase their standards of living and natural resource consumption. If we are going to do that no level of conservation can prevent massive increases in deforestation and CO2 emissions going forward, unless we have some kind of singularity and get Star Trek level replicators.

      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        Development to western levels improves forest cover. Most of the western nations are adding forest, not removing it. Developed countries with sane agricultural practices don't do things like slash and burn.

        Most developing countries are located where non-carbon energy sources, particularly solar, are quite practical, and again, they're mostly taking that route and skipping the dirty industrial path the west went through. Developing clean energy sources also eliminates things like household coal, wood and cha

        • Most developing countries are located where non-carbon energy sources, particularly solar, are quite practical, and again, they're mostly taking that route and skipping the dirty industrial path the west went through.

          I live in a developing 3rd world country and I am not seeing any of this. Citation desperately needed. PV panels are too expensive for most developing countries and how do you store the energy when the sun goes down?

    • >You don't solve a problem by trying to tip the scales in the other direction. You solve it by doing things in a balanced way from now on so that over time, the net result is balanced.

      You don't avoid a crash by stepping on the brakes or turning the wheel in the other direction! You just take your foot of the gas, go limp and hope everything works out!

      We're already at the point where natural processes are starting to take hold that will continue to warm the planet even if all human activity were to stop t

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      Lincoln also didn't say "okay, let's stop enslaving people going forward, and eventually the number of slaves will naturally drop until we're slave free!"

    • If carbon is as big a problem as climate researchers claim it is, we need to apply both approaches at the same time: emit less carbon, and sequester some of our earlier emissions. Only when the world stops emitting new carbon into the system can we stop sequestering.

    • You don't solve a problem by trying to tip the scales in the other direction. You solve it by doing things in a balanced way from now on so that over time, the net result is balanced.

      That will never ever work on certain systems, which have built-in unbalancing effects. And it won't work fast enough on other systems. So that's the best procedure to use in the best case, but it isn't a law.

      It's not like Lincoln said "okay, that's enough with black slavery, let's make the white man be slaves for a couple of centuries to balance things out"

      If they had paid just reparations back then, we wouldn't be hearing about demands for reparations now. And if just ending slavery had solved the problem, we wouldn't have affirmative action now. But since nothing was done to bridge the gap created by all the years of slavery, black people are still at a

      • by mark-t ( 151149 )

        . And if just ending slavery had solved the problem, we wouldn't have affirmative action now

        We're getting a bit OT, but I think affirmative action is B.S. too... it just perpetuates racial discrimination which is what kept slavery alive in the US for as long as it was... long after virtually every other nation had outlawed it.

        If they had paid just reparations back then, we wouldn't be hearing about demands for reparations now.

        While it's probably true that simply freeing the slaves did not go far enough, I b

    • When it turns out that human-caused warming is a small percentage of the warming, people are going to have to do geoengineering if they want the planet to stay cold.

      They ought not do that, but the rich who own the coastal cities don't want to lose their investments and the people who want to centralize power and levy more taxes are happy to cooperate.

      The people claiming "precaution" also stand to benefit from not cooling the planet (in their lifetimes).

    • by Shotgun ( 30919 )

      Except, now we have Affirmative Action, which is pretty much that some "you got turned away before so the other gets turned away now"

    • You don't solve a problem by trying to tip the scales in the other direction. You solve it by doing things in a balanced way from now on so that over time, the net result is balanced.

      It's not like Lincoln said "okay, that's enough with black slavery, let's make the white man be slaves for a couple of centuries to balance things out"

      You fix a problem by doing the right thing, today, and moving forward.

      I'm not sure that's the best example as it's ended up being pretty unfair to black people. Even if you ignore Jim Crow and all that and fast forward to the 60's when official discrimination ended being black still left you at a huge disadvantage.

      It's not enough to just solve the problem, you need to start undoing the damage as well.

      In this particular case, it means passing laws which put stricter limits on emissions than what currently exist, so that manufacturers are forced (yes forced, because as much as we might want them to, they aren't going to do it entirely voluntarily... or certainly not at the speeds that are required) to innovate and come up with long term environmentally friendly solutions to the problems that we are facing.

      Yes you need to do that. But you also need to realize that even if we stopped emitting tomorrow the existing carbon in the atmosphere might have a lot of nasty warming built in.

      W

  • Mark Shepard on Restoration Agriculture - "Annual agriculture is all about living through our concepts... our idea we've imposed on reality & when reality doesn't behave according to our idea, what do we do? We input... we can never input enough to make our false concept correct." http://bit.ly/1GnbtAA [bit.ly]
    • Good thing California doesn't use annual agriculture then....the alfalfa grows all year round.
  • You don't care about fixing a problem but forcing a preferred solution down people's throats.

    You can see the same thing in the way nuclear isn't even a thought in the Green New Insanity.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      "You can see the same thing in the way nuclear isn't even a thought in the Green New Insanity." - Are you high? Nuclear is going under because the MARKET isn't viable anymore, mainly because renewables are cheaper and less involved.

      You're basically advocating socialism to fund nuclear power. It's ironic you'd reference "Green New Insanity" while mindlessly advocating massive public spending anyway. You're not only a hypocrite, you're an idiot.

      • "You can see the same thing in the way nuclear isn't even a thought in the Green New Insanity." - Are you high? Nuclear is going under because the MARKET isn't viable anymore, mainly because renewables are cheaper and less involved.

        Due mostly to outright unrestrained barratry by the self-proclaimed "Greens". This is the "Erik and Lyle Menendez demand the Court's mercy because they are orphans" argument.

    • Nobody is stopping you from investing time and money to solve the problem. But nobody's doing that seriously, I for one, have not heard of a realistic proposal, or for one without significant side effects for that matter.

    • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Nuclear can't be part of the Green New Deal because the economics don't work. Too expensive, too few jobs created, too little financial benefit to anyone but the plant owners, and too many socialized costs.

      The Green New Deal has to fix things like former coal miners needing jobs, and nuclear doesn't do that.

    • You can see the same thing in the way nuclear isn't even a thought in the Green New Insanity.

      Nuclear has a massive problem with waste that has not been solved, and likely can not be solved. It isn't a technical problem, it's a political one.

      Massively increasing the waste problem does not solve it. Especially when the "exciting new designs" keep not working out as well as predicted, and the cost is higher than renewables + storage.

  • by vix86 ( 592763 ) on Friday March 15, 2019 @12:12AM (#58276326)

    We'll revisit this proposal in 20 years when its obvious that everyone's efforts to try and curb emissions has completely failed. Keeping with the trend of humanity being completely reactionary in all this.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Why wait? Let's revisit what they were screeching about 20 years ago.

      New York, Miami, New Orleans all under water by now.

      Tenfold the strength and quantity of hurricanes and tornadoes.

      Hundreds of millions dead, billions displaced. Wars, famine, collapse of economy.

      Oh wait. It was all fucking lies then, it still is now, and will be in 20 years.

  • APGW is too much of a cash cow for Political leaders to sacrifice power over. The solution can only allowed to be a political one, it can never be an economic or technological one.

    The proposal should go forward if for nothing else than to learn more, regardless of whether the technology/research is useful or not... used or not. Everyone nay saying it likely feels threatened because they are only driven by fear and ignorance. Seriously what is it going to hurt to research it? Other than your personal pol

    • Re:Course not! (Score:5, Informative)

      by skoskav ( 1551805 ) on Friday March 15, 2019 @04:26AM (#58276802)

      the research could actually go towards helping prove that APGW is real, rather than just a theory.

      I disagree with your choice of words, as "just a theory" makes it sound as if it's someone's hunch/idea/opinion/guess/hypothesis. A scientific theory [wikipedia.org] is something very different, and presents both explanatory and predictive claims that have been tested and stood up to falsification attempts. A scientific theory can never be "proved," as those hard statements are reserved for mathematics and philosophy. Religious folk would muddy the waters with the same "just a theory" argument about the theories of evolution and heliocentricism, and it's very misleading.

      It may also help identify better metrics so we can make an accurate prediction as well... since we know they have only failed in all of their models.

      I must disagree here as well. Climate models tend to do pretty well at making predictions that are subsequently backed up by observations. See https://www.skepticalscience.c... [skepticalscience.com] for a primer on the topic, along with some illustrative videos.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The solution can only allowed to be a political one, it can never be an economic or technological one.

      Cleaner energy sources are destroying coal in the US because they are cheaper, despite politicians trying to stop it. The solution very clearly can be economic.

  • And herein we see the Dunning-Kruger effect. Nuclear good, geo-engineering bad! Am I a nuclear engineer or a climate modeler? Why no of course not! But I read third hand sources that wrote opinion articles on these subjects that tangentially might be related to these professions. Thus hear me internet! Hear me when I say we should do nothing to stop the doom of all human civilization. All is well!
  • Observers at the U.N. Environment Assembly in Nairobi said the Swiss-backed proposal was rejected in part because it called for a "precautionary principle" approach to geoengineering the climate.

    Setting aside the logical impossibility of applying the "precautionary principle", the sentence is ambiguous. Who is the "it" calling for the precautionary principle? Is it the Swiss plan, as the wording implies, or the Assembly, which makes more sense in the broader context of the piece? If "it" is the plan to

  • So, obviously, curbing emissions is clearly the best approach to arresting climate change. Lowering emissions is Plan A.

    But what is wrong with creating a Plan B? Or a complementary project that enhances Plan A?

    That study is basically a detailed look at some technologies that might help. It wouldn't implement them; it wouldn't change anything. The purpose of that study is nothing more than to understand our options.

    This decision is asinine, but I wouldn't expect anything else from a denialist administration.

  • Yes, we should clean up after ourselves and not leave a toxic waste dump for the generations to come, yes, we should limit toxic emissions that can hurt our atmosphere and the air we breath but as it relates to climate changing it's time to adapt to a changing environment rather than trying crazy experiments to "cool" the planet because as the sci-fi geo-engineering joke goes ... this is how the world will end. Large scale focused human meddling with the atmosphere/climate will never end well .... we don't
  • Is Mr. Burns trying to sell more Nuclear power again?!

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