A press release timed for Obama's energy hammer

Who sends out press releases on a Sunday? UCLA does when the content is expected to match Obama’s draconian climate announcement planned for Monday.

Reducing emissions will be the primary way to fight climate change, UCLA-led study finds

A new report by professors from UCLA and five other universities concludes that there’s no way around it: We have to cut down the amount of carbon being released into the atmosphere. The interdisciplinary team looked at a range of possible approaches to dissipating greenhouse gases and reducing warming.

Forget about positioning giant mirrors in space to reduce the amount of sunlight being trapped in the earth’s atmosphere or seeding clouds to reduce the amount of light entering earth’s atmosphere. Those approaches to climate engineering aren’t likely to be effective or practical in slowing global warming.

“We found that climate engineering doesn’t offer a perfect option,” said Daniela Cusack, the study’s lead author and an assistant professor of geography in UCLA’s College of Letters and Science. “The perfect option is reducing emissions. We have to cut down the amount of emissions we’re putting into the atmosphere if, in the future, we want to have anything like the Earth we have now.”

Still, the study concluded, some approaches to climate engineering are more promising than others, and they should be used to augment efforts to reduce the 9 gigatons of carbon dioxide being released each year by human activity. (A gigaton is 1 billion tons.)

The first scholarly attempt to rank a wide range of approaches to minimizing climate change in terms of their feasibility, cost-effectiveness, risk, public acceptance, governability and ethics, the study appears in the latest issue of the peer-reviewed scholarly journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment.

The authors hope the information will help the public and decision-makers invest in the approaches with the largest payoffs and the fewest disadvantages. At stake, the study emphasizes, are the futures of food production, our climate and water security.

Cusack, an authority on forest and soil ecology, teamed up with experts in oceanography, political science, sociology, economics and ethics. Working under the auspices of the National Science Foundation, the team spent two years evaluating more than 100 studies that addressed the various implications of climate engineering and their anticipated effects on greenhouse gases.

Ultimately, the group focused its investigation on the five strategies that appear to hold the most promise: reducing emissions, sequestering carbon through biological means on land and in the ocean, storing carbon dioxide in a liquefied form in underground geological formations and wells, increasing the Earth’s cloud cover and solar reflection.

Of those approaches, none came close to reducing emissions as much as conservation, increased energy efficiency and low-carbon fuels would. Technology that is already available could reduce the amount of carbon being added to the atmosphere by some 7 gigatons per year, the team found.

“We have the technology, and we know how to do it,” Cusack said. “It’s just that there doesn’t seem to be political support for reducing emissions.”

Of the five options the group evaluated, sequestering carbon through biological means — or converting atmospheric carbon into solid sources of carbon like plants — holds the most promise. One source, curbing the destruction of forests and promoting growth of new forests, could tie up as much as 1.3 gigatons of carbon in plant material annually, the team calculated. Deforestation now is responsible for adding 1 gigaton of carbon each year to the atmosphere.

Improving soil management is another biological means of carbon sequestration that holds considerable promise because soils can trap plant materials that have already converted atmospheric carbon dioxide into a solid form as well as any carbon dioxide that the solids give off as they decompose. Since the dawn of agriculture, tilling land has led to the loss of about half (55 to 78 gigatons) of the carbon ever sequestered in soil, the team reports. But such simple steps as leaving slash — the plant waste left over after crop production — on fields after harvests, so it could be incorporated into the soil, could reintroduce between 0.4 and 1.1 gigatons of carbon annually to soil, the study says. The approach would also improve soil’s ability to retain nutrients and water, making it beneficial for additional reasons.

“Improved soil management is not very controversial,” Cusack said. “It’s just a matter of supporting farmers to do it.”

The study also advocates a less familiar form of biological sequestration: the burial of biochar. The process, which uses high temperatures and high pressure to turn plants into charcoal, releases little carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Under normal conditions, decaying plant life inevitably decomposes, a process that releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. But charred plant material takes significantly longer — sometimes centuries — to decompose. So the approach can work to keep carbon that has become bound up in plant life from decaying and respiring as carbon dioxide. And like working slash into the soil, adding biochar to soil can improve its fertility and water retention.

“Charcoal has been used as an agricultural amendment for centuries, but scientists are only now starting to appreciate its potential for tying up greenhouse gases,” Cusack said.

But not all biological sequestration would be so beneficial. The researchers evaluated the idea of adding iron to oceans in order to stimulate the growth of algae, which sequesters carbon. The approach ranked as the study’s least viable strategy, in part because less than a quarter of the algae could be expected to eventually sink to the bottom of the ocean, which would be the only way that carbon would be sequestered for a long period of time. The study predicted that the rest would be expected to be consumed by other sea life that respire carbon dioxide, which would end up back in the atmosphere. Additionally, increasing the algae blooms would likely wreak havoc by decreasing the oxygen available for other marine life.

The study’s second most promising climate engineering strategy, after carbon sequestration, was carbon capture and storage, particularly when the technique is used near where fuels are being refined. CCS turns carbon dioxide into a liquid form of carbon, which oil and coal extraction companies then pump into underground geological formations and wells and cap; millions of tons of carbon are already being stored this way each year. And the approach has the potential to store more than 1 gigaton permanently each year — and up to 546 gigatons of carbon over time — the study says.

However, a liquid carbon leak could be fatal to humans and other animals, and the risk – while minimal – may stand in the way of public acceptance.

“With CCS we’re taking advantage of an approach that already exists, and big companies pay for the work out of their own pockets,” Cusack said. “The hurdle is public perception. No one wants to live next to a huge underground pool of carbon dioxide that might suffocate them and their children – no matter how small the risk.”

Reducing the amount of sunlight that is heating up the atmosphere through measures such as artificially increasing the earth’s cloud cover or putting reflectors in outer space ranked as the study’s second least viable approach. While cloud seeding is cheap and potentially as effective as improving forestry practices, the approach and its potential impacts are not well enough understood for widespread use, the team concluded.

“Cloud seeding sounds simple,” Cusack said. “But we really don’t understand what would happen to the climate if we started making more clouds.”

###

 

Cusack’s collaborators were Jonn Axsen, assistant professor of resource and environmental management at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, Canada; Lauren Hartzell-Nichols, acting assistant professor in the program on values in society and the program on environment at the University of Washington; Katherine Mackey, a postdoctoral researcher at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Mass.; Rachael Shwom, assistant professor in human ecology at Rutgers University; and Sam White, assistant professor of environmental history at Ohio State University.

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Alan Robertson
June 1, 2014 7:35 pm

John Slayton says:
June 1, 2014 at 3:54 pm
Alan Robertson:
”The only way to get our society to truly change is to frighten people with the possibility of a catastrophe.”
Emeritus Professor Daniel BotkinK

——————
“This quote rather sharply contradicts Botkins testimony in last week’s congressional hearing, so I have googled around all over the place to try to find a context. The quote appears everywhere, but I have yet to find the specifics. Can you give us a link?”
________________________
I agree. Thanks for bringing the matter to my attention. Dr. Botkin’s recent testimony makes clear where he stands. I haven’t even read that list in some months, just copy/pasted it and didn’t realize he was on the list, but that is feeble excuse for posting something incorrect. I should have searched the list myself, a long time ago, rather than taking someone else’s word for it. If I copied and posted something untrue about Dr. Botkin (which appears likely,) then I was wrong. I’ll search the list for other errors before ever posting it, again.
I am not sure, but believe that alleged “quote” was taken from a list at this link:
http://www.green-agenda.com/
A little perusal finds the “quote” at other sites, as well, although it appears to not be present at the following site, which has a rather extensive list of similar quotes:
http://www.c3headlines.com/global-warming-quotes-climate-change-quotes.html
I have not found the original speech/attribution, yet.
—————————————————————————————
Richard Sharpe says:
June 1, 2014 at 6:20 pm
“There is no need to attribute such a repugnant view to someone who does not hold that view.”
_______________________
I agree. Thanks for bringing the Botkin quote to my attention. I had not even noticed his name attached to the quote I’ll research for myself and if that or any other quotes don’t hold up, I’ll remove them from the list. Although, having a certain amount of trust in the mods here, I’ll expect to find that Dr. Botkin was unfairly treated with that quote taken out of context and by my re- posting it in the list. There may be other quotes similarly afflicted.That list was partially copied here from others posting quotes and partially from other sources on the internet. I agree that it is wrong to take a man’s words out of context and attribute a point of view to him which is wrong.
To Dr. Botkin, I apologize.
In most circumstances, I would say “in advance”, but I’ve no reason to believe I’ll find any other truth than that which has been brought to my attention here at WUWT.
Richard Sharpe
I see that you consider that list of quotes to hold “repugnant views”. You are correct.

Alan Robertson
June 1, 2014 7:56 pm

RACookPE1978 says:
June 1, 2014 at 6:37 pm
If so, should the original – in the first comment that printed it – be changed? Or deleted entirely?
_______________________
Oh, let it stand as example. There’s much to learn from the entire commentary which flowed from that misquote, Wouldn’t you agree?

Alan Robertson
June 1, 2014 8:08 pm

“I have not found the original speech/attribution, yet.”
Richard Sharpe already gave a link to the original WSJ article where Dr. Botkin’s words were first seen, before being misquoted, out of context.
http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB119258265537661384

beng
June 2, 2014 6:49 am

***
Original post:
“With CCS we’re taking advantage of an approach that already exists, and big companies pay for the work out of their own pockets,” Cusack said.
***
Sure, “big companies pay” — she just forget the “and then pass it on to consumers” part. Her culture thinks since “big companies pay”, it’s free.

June 2, 2014 7:50 am

Why in the world would you sequester CO2 in anything but an oil or liquids reservoir, using it to bring them to surface ….. oh, right …… oil and NGLs are bad, bad, bad ….
The idea is that we have a growth economy with a shrinking energy economy. Sounds like a perfect plan …. you can’t improve energy functioning by technology, so you just keep people at home.

Jim Clarke
June 2, 2014 7:56 am

Let’s pretend ‘what if’! Decades ago, Saturday Night Live had a skit that featured a fictitious panel of ‘experts’ contemplating the question: ‘What if Napoleon had a B-52 at Waterloo?’ The skit was ridiculous and funny as these experts explored the ramifications of a 20th Century flying war machine at that famous, early 19th Century battle.
Climate science is nothing more than a Saturday Night Live skit, in which a bunch of self described ‘experts’ contemplate the question ‘What if relative humidity is always constant in the Earth’s atmosphere and the average global temperature went up 1 degree from a doubling of atmospheric CO2? What would happen then?’ Of course, there is no evidence for, or any reason to believe that relative humidity is a constant in the atmosphere, regionally or globally. We don’t see it in the data and it is not indicated in the paleo climate record. It is as ridiculous as a B-52 at the battle of Waterloo, even though the average lay person may not realize it.
On Saturday night live, the concept of playing ‘what if’ was amusing. It is not so funny when the global bureaucracy wants to make our lives more difficult and expensive solely based on a ridiculous ‘what if’ game. Scientists love to play this game because they get paid to do it. The bureaucrats who pay them then point to the scientists and proclaim “It must be true because the scientists are all playing the game!”
It is just insane!

Margaret Smith
June 2, 2014 9:22 am

I don’t understand the alarm at CO2 at 6,000ppm or so. Been higher than that in the Holocene and much higher before the current Ice Age and life did just fine, including our primate ancestors.
When I and 7 others were in a people-carrier in the US, with Climate Control on to keep us cool, the car was sealed. CO2 must have greatly built up but all that happened eventually was we began to get sleepy – due not to the CO2 because it is, in fact, a symptom of O2 depletion. As far as I can see, CO2 only kills when oxygen is excluded but is not itself a killer. But then any other innocuous gas would do the same. CO is, of course, a killer – what a difference a single oxygen atom makes!

June 2, 2014 10:45 am

Statement in an email today from John Podesta: “Power plants currently churn out about 40 percent of the carbon pollution in the air we breathe, and contribute to hundreds of thousands of asthma attacks and thousands of heart attacks.”

Zeke
June 2, 2014 11:05 am

eric1skeptic says:
June 2, 2014 at 10:45 am “Statement in an email today from John Podesta: “Power plants currently churn out about 40 percent of the carbon pollution in the air we breathe, and contribute to hundreds of thousands of asthma attacks and thousands of heart attacks.””
Removing these academics, Hollywood actors and actresses, intellectuals, progressive scientists, and politicians from their large homes to prevent the inhalation of indoor dust particles (PM2.5) should be the first measures society takes to protect these vulnerable populations from potential health problems. Next, the EPA and DOE, which produce nothing and yet cost billions of dollars per year and cause all other sectors to become full time paper trail makers to satisfy their need for endless regulation, should be removed as unsustainable. That is, the spending in billions per hectare is over recommended rates – and the output of “toxic” and “dirty” foreign NGO environmental activism and UN taxation is unwanted.

Terry Comeau
June 2, 2014 11:24 am

You’d think that University professors who think themselves intelligent enough to tell us what to do would understand the not so subtle difference between carbon and carbon dioxide. I can understand that and forgive idiot politicians for making that mistake, but university professors? Nope.

June 2, 2014 12:04 pm

Chuck L says:
“This is the same UCLA that has invited “Hanoi Jane” Fonda to address their School of Theater Film & Television”
Funny, true story about Jane Fonda. She was a guest speaker at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor in the 1970’s. A friend who was in a local fraternity, told me about a couple of his fraternity pals that volunteered to be her chauffeur, picking her up at Detroit Metro Airport, then driving her to Ann Arbor for her speaking engagement, then back again to fly out.
I don’t know or remember the details except that they rented a limo and thought it would going to be really cool, driving this big celebrity around in a limo.
When they met her at the airport and she found out they had a limo, she went nuts because she said that it would project the wrong image of her. I don’t know all the details except that they had to go back to the rental place, return the limo and get a Volkswagen.
Apparently, getting off on the wrong foot, causing her to wait for the politically correct vehicle to finally be acquired, resulted in them getting shit on the rest of the time.

June 2, 2014 12:10 pm

Did they calculate the emissions reduction of going nuclear, or of fracking and natural gas, or of returning to leaded petrol?
I understand the last would cause a 3% reduction in the world’s CO2 emissions. If the crisis is as bleak as they claim, it should certainly be on the table. I have heard it claimed, without myself being certain of the facts, that “leaded petrol can cause lead poisoning, but unleaded petrol can cause cancer. We can cure only cure the first one.”

Joe R
June 2, 2014 1:12 pm

I’m still wondering how CO2 is such a big contributor to the “warming” when the thermal conductivity of it is essentially the same as air, water vapor and argon.

empiresentry
June 2, 2014 4:18 pm

To Joe,
C02 is a contributor ONLY because leftists can charge you for it. I am still waiting for Iceland to cough up for all its C02 it emits via volcanic activity, the slash and burn farming in Central America and Al Gored climokleptomanic for his jets.

empiresentry
June 2, 2014 4:28 pm

Enviro Scare blackmail at the cost of the middle class propagated by rich Leftists.
– Fracking movies were found to be falsified but generated a lot of income for fascist liars.
– Steyer: making billions from coal overseas while closing ours down and paying off democrats. http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2014/04/the-epic-hypocrisy-of-tom-steyer.php
– Al Gore sold a failing tv station to middle east oil magnets for millions, the very same ones that want our oil shut down so they can keep their OPEC prices high. His big investors also have a high position in the Chicago Carbon Tax gimmick and continue to push carbon credit taxes.
Who will trade the carbon tax credits? The rich leftists who can afford to paid for by you
http://www.forbes.com/sites/larrybell/2013/01/08/al-gores-oil-fueled-al-jazeera-deal-follows-a-string-of-green-energy-fiascos/
– Hollywood’s anti fracking movie with matt Damon bought and paid for by Dubai.
– Hollywood anti-fracking producers busted by Veritas. http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Hollywood/2014/05/20/James-O-Keefe-Dupes-Hollywood-With-Fake-Anti-Fracking-Film
This is all a scheme to make themselves rich while peddling to lemmings in word only.
Don’t leave out Real Climate and Environmental Media Services who heavily promote the Obamer goals. Schardt who runs http://www.sciencecommunicationnetwork.org. and was Communications director for Al Gore’s 2000 Presidential campaign.
Environmental Media Services is run by Fenton Communications as a project from the Tides Center. EMS is available for hire to the highest bidder. You want coal shut down? Hire EMS to create the “data” and Fenton to send out the message. You want your soy milk to compete against milk? Fenton will produce proof cow milk is bad.

empiresentry
June 2, 2014 4:58 pm

This admin lies at every turn. You, your family and your life do not matter.
In every EPA assessments of deaths from power plants included deaths from cancer not related to lungs (uterine cancers that had metastasized to the lungs). Equally, CDC used the same numbers of deaths as resulting from smoking and second hand smoke (and included deaths from house fires). Which one is it?
Obamabots argue there are 5,000 prematue deaths in southern California every year from soot. (1) Stopping those deaths will reduce Healthcare costs, they say. Another EPA study claims 9,500 deaths from soot. (2) Where else have we heard the proposal to lower heatlhcare costs?
In all studies, a large portion of all estimates are deaths from ischemic heart disease: lack of oxygen to the heart. Obesity, cholesterol, diabitis, genetics, anyone?
Meanwhile, the same numbers of S. Cali premature deaths are argued in other studies as being from lack of healthcare. (3) Or second hand smoke. Or lack of excercise. Or GMA’s. Or red meat. Whatever the client wants, the same numbers are used over and over.
Tran, who wrote the original studies for premature deaths due to particulates…got his Phd through mail order after lying he went to UCLA. Then, looking at the study, the data is absurd. But this is what EPA and California call science/
Yet, not one study shows where closing a power plant in an area has reduced asthma, premature deaths, lower heatlhcare costs. Can EPA offer up the people they gased in their studies who suffered 0 consequences…other htan the fat obese lady with heart disease who “got dizzy”.
Premature death in Cali continues…oh gee I wonder why? Because they are chasing one thing only and it doesn’t exist.
Sorry for my rant. I am ticked off.

June 2, 2014 5:05 pm

Carbon Soot Pollution (not sure which thread to post this on since the EPA is acting “fast and furious”)
Since the President keeps referring to carbon pollution (Confusing it with CO2), where can I find a graph showing the reduction/increase of carbon SOOT pollution since about the 1950 or before?
Can’t find it on the EPA.
Specifically, how has carbon soot pollution decreased/increased at coal fired power plants if possible?
When I Google “carbon soot pollution EPA” I get references to Carbon Dioxide “pollution” – nothing specifically about USA Carbon Soot Pollution.
(I think the President is confused, to be polite)

amirlach
June 2, 2014 8:41 pm

US Co2 emissions at lowest level since 1994, thanks to Natural Gas and Fracking. Which is also opposed by Obama.

asybot
June 2, 2014 10:56 pm

emsnews says:
June 1, 2014 at 7:03 am
The rapid destruction of the rain forests is a huge problem. And yes, these are the ‘lungs of the world’ because in the cold climate forests, there is little uptake of anything during the long winters whereas rain forests grow year round and this is what is being decimated rapidly.
I beg to differ. The huge temperate forests in the NH do grow year round just look at the Western rain forests along the Pacific coast and in Scandinavia FI, they do uptake carbon and release O2. I have seen many evergreens deprived of water during winters and get nearly killed (that is in situations where they are out of their normal environment btw). I am glad to hear your trees are doing well, you are a lucky guy,I wish I had my own as well !

June 3, 2014 1:56 am

The idea of the forests being the lungs of the world is ignorant folly. The law of conservation of matter absolutely contradicts it.
Every atom of carbon that goes into the forests is matched by an atom of carbon released from them. Each tree growing is matched by a tree decaying. If the forest kept the carbon without releasing it back into the atmosphere, it would keep accumulating till it was much larger than Everest.
For the hard of thinking, don’t quibble that the balance is not matched at the same time every moment, or that the forest didn’t used to have as much carbon in it as it does now.
In the big picture, the above description is exactly true.
The things that absorb Carbon on a long scale are bacteria in soil getting buried in soil, carbon rich seaweed, fish corpses and fish poop falling to the bottom of the oceans and getting covered in sediment,

June 3, 2014 8:53 am

CAGW -alarmism, including Obama’s, has persisted solely through the censorship of truth. We need a website dedicated to the posting of comments delated by other media.

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