Rethinking GeoEngineering

We’re careening down a road to where the unthinkable is looking increasingly inevitable.

But, see below, we’re still a ways from remotely knowing what we are doing.

Bloomberg:

Diplomats from 197 countries agreed earlier this month to new rulesgoverning how they can buy and sell credits to neutralize carbon emissions. But while they were deliberating, some of the biggest names in climate science, who defined “net zero” in 2009, found something wrong with the math underlying those debates.

“Achieving ‘net zero’ no longer means what we meant by it,” said Myles Allen, professor of geosystem science at University of Oxford, one of the authors of a new paper published last month in the journal Nature.

Their new analysis skewers an assumption at the heart of how countries and companies track emissions — that a ton of CO2 is the same everywhere, whether it’s dispersed in the atmosphere, embedded in forest wood or pulled from the air and pumped deep underground forever. That fungibility is the foundation of carbon markets. It lets a ton of CO2 in a forest stand as a fair trade for a ton put in the atmosphere.

That rule-of-thumb turns out to be a vast oversimplification that could render many well-meaning net-zero efforts meaningless.

The confusion stems from a basic fact about how the Earth’s carbon cycle works: Scientists know what humanity emits into the atmosphere doesn’t entirely stay in the atmosphere. Less than half of that total stays in the atmosphere on average. The rest flows into the land and ocean. To keep track of all that carbon — and how they assign responsibility for removing it — scientists keep two ledgers, one for nature and one for humanity. All the CO2 absorbed every year into land, trees and water is a service the planet offers to wash humanity’s past CO2 emissions out of the air. So, these carbon drawdowns go into the nature ledger.

It’s important to emphasize that land and oceans are drawing down past emissions. That means they cannot be relied on to also neutralize future emissions. This is where the revelation comes in: Countries may have been double counting.

In other words, it’s redundant for countries to claim credit for CO2 for work already being done by land and oceans. Those emissions are already spoken for.

“We can’t count on them [emissions] to do two jobs at once. That’s the point,” Allen said. “If we’re going to count on them to mop up our historical emissions… we can’t at the same time use them to offset future fossil fuel emissions.”

These differences between natural and industrial bookkeeping add up. For example, Allen said, consider a situation in which — using current carbon accounting — the world was expected to stay below 1.5C. The flaws in accounting are so significant that they could be concealing another 0.5C rise. (Allen is also chair of the advisory board of Puro.earth, a carbon registry.)

There are consequences of this accounting mismatch. The first is, it increases the urgency to stop burning fossil fuels, the authors write, or to capture and bury pollution with emerging methods. The climate that humanity grew up in relied on millions of years of coal, oil and gas sitting underground. The main solution therefore is to leave it there, capture the carbon from smokestacks and permanently bury it, or clean it out of the open air. 

Returning carbon underground is “geological net zero,” and it’s what the authors originally had in mind in 2009. No countries are currently pursuing it. 

Separate from fossil fuel burning and carbon capturing, they write, nature must be left alone, to passively soak up history’s CO2. And all that land needs to be conserved, undeveloped, to keep the carbon out of the atmosphere and pull down even more. Rich countries bear historic responsibility for ensuring that happens, they write.

As if this weren’t complicated enough, there is more to the story than two ledgers, with past carbon falling into nature and future carbon captured and stashed underground. That’s because there is value to human management of land that reduces atmospheric CO2. In other words, if “managed land” is proven to take down CO2 then those tons can be counted against emissions, the scientists say.

What “managed land” means is a headache to pin down. Countries have no uniform standard, and often claim all of their land as managed. In fact, so much land is claimed that their combined pledges are virtually impossible to foresee happening. They may be taking credit for emissions already in nature’s ledger.

There are other reasons why storing carbon in the biosphere is inferior to geological storage, they write. As wildfires continue to show every year, there’s nothing permanent about living things. In 2023, the hottest year on record, trees and land absorbed virtually no carbon. Any potential slowdown in the land and ocean carbon sponges would leave a greater amount sitting in the atmosphere, further aggravating warming.

6 thoughts on “Rethinking GeoEngineering”


    1. I note that the time axis only expands back about a thousand years and that the CO2 axis only moves down to 200 at the base. CO2 concentrations have been much higher over earlier geological time.


  1. “[So not] BREAKING: Joe Biden’s new NASA chief climate change advisor has made clear that even with aggressive emissions reductions we should be prepared for global warming levels that will likely wipe out half of Earth’s species and threaten the lives of billions of people this century.“ Ben See

    “I’ve long said we’re at risk of losing essentially everything due to global heating – all of modern life, much of life on Earth, billions of human lives, our super habitable planet. More and more climate scientists are coming to see this. Please start listening.” Peter Kalmus @ClimateHuman

    “the idea that emissions could continue till 2050 and still achieve the 1.5–2°C goal was always a con; now it is fully exposed”
    “What once might have been construed as deeply problematic but not yet terminal co-option was revealed, in Dubai, as the fully corrupt shit-show that it really is.
    The likelihood that such a process will ever get anywhere near the kind of agreement that would make any real impact, within the timeframes still available to us, is preposterous.”
    Jonathan Porritt, “Mainstream Climate Science: The New Denialism?” March 7, 2024

    We all knew net zero & carbon markets—propelled by the idea of (ie, enabled by the chimera of) “offsets”— were bullshit. This is just one more of many reasons.

    Like the con called the Paris agreement, a mass murder-suicide pact, a twofer hit somebody put out on civilization & nature, what Joe Romm has called ripoffsets were always a multi-level scam. (For example, without drastically reducing the amount of wood cut, wasted & “used” globally, protecting one area from cutting just pushes the cutting somewhere else.)


  2. The proposal for underwater drones that would pump water onto the pack ice to thicken it doesn’t explain what would power them. The obvious solution is to use what already cruise around under the pack ice, can stay there for months without needing outside power or refuelling, and have copious surplus energy for drilling, or melting, holes through the ice, and for pumping water. The 130 nuclear submarines belonging to the United States, Russia, China, United Kingdom, France, and India have long experience in lurking under the polar ice, to avoid detection. They’ve been deterring the world powers from escalating conflicts for nearly seventy years, but saving the pack ice, while we get a handle on cutting emissions, would be a better use for them. Each has 30 or 40 megawatts of electrical power available; a ‘Swords to Plowshares’ program could replace missiles with drilling gear and pumps. One could do more work, more quickly, than hundreds of wind powered drones, even if a way to reliably power an underwater drone from an ice-mounted wind turbine could be engineered.

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