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Engineering the climate: research questions and policy implications
Earth’s climate appears to be changing faster than previously observed. Even with active mitigation and adaptation measures, additional efforts to avoid significant climate disruptions may be needed. Geoengineering the climate is an option that is now gaining scientific, policy, and public attention while raising important environmental, ethical, social, and political challenges.
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Available online: http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0021/002144/214496e.pdf
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
Published by: UNESCO ; 2012Earth’s climate appears to be changing faster than previously observed. Even with active mitigation and adaptation measures, additional efforts to avoid significant climate disruptions may be needed. Geoengineering the climate is an option that is now gaining scientific, policy, and public attention while raising important environmental, ethical, social, and political challenges.
Language(s): English
Format: Digital (Free)Tags: Climate ; Climate geoengineering ; Climate policies
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Geoengineering in relation to the convention on biological diversity: technical and regulatory matters
CBD, 2012
Geoengineering in relation to the convention on biological diversity: technical and regulatory matters
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Available online: http://www.cbd.int/doc/publications/cbd-ts-66-en.pdf
United Nations Environment Programme ; Convention on Biological Diversity
Published by: CBD ; 2012Notes: Part I. Impacts of Climate-Related Geoengineering on Biological Diversity; Part II. The Regulatory Framework for Climate-Related Geoengineering Relevant to the Convention on Biological Diversity
Language(s): English
Format: Digital (Free)Tags: Climate ; Climate geoengineering ; Climate policies ; Environment and landscape ; Biodiversity ; Impact studies
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Geo-engineering the climate? What benefits? What impacts?
As climate change impacts become more apparent and global negotiations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions are prolonged, have we adequately considered actions that complement carbon emission reductions, such as climate engineering or geoengineering? Geoengineering refers to deliberate large-scale interventions in the Earth’s climate system in order to moderate global warming. Do potential gains from using geoengineering to slow or contain climate change impacts outweigh possible negative impacts on people and biodiversity?
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Available online: http://www.climatefrontlines.org/blog/geoengineering-climate-what-benefits-what- [...]
Published by: Climate Frontlines ; 2012
As climate change impacts become more apparent and global negotiations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions are prolonged, have we adequately considered actions that complement carbon emission reductions, such as climate engineering or geoengineering? Geoengineering refers to deliberate large-scale interventions in the Earth’s climate system in order to moderate global warming. Do potential gains from using geoengineering to slow or contain climate change impacts outweigh possible negative impacts on people and biodiversity?
Language(s): English
Format: Digital (Free)Tags: Environment and landscape ; Climate geoengineering ; Impact studies
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The role of interactions in a world implementing adaptation and mitigation solutions to climate change
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, Vol. 369. N° 1934. Warren Rachel - The Royal Society, 2011The papers in this volume discuss projections of climate change impacts upon humans and ecosystems under a global mean temperature rise of 4°C above preindustrial levels. Like most studies, they are mainly single-sector or single-region-based assessments. Even the multi-sector or multi-region approaches generally consider impacts in sectors and regions independently, ignoring interactions. Extreme weather and adaptation processes are often poorly represented and losses of ecosystem services induced by climate change or human adaptation are generally omitted. This paper addresses this gap by re ...
[article]The role of interactions in a world implementing adaptation and mitigation solutions to climate change
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in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences > Vol. 369. N° 1934 (2011) . - P. 217-241The papers in this volume discuss projections of climate change impacts upon humans and ecosystems under a global mean temperature rise of 4°C above preindustrial levels. Like most studies, they are mainly single-sector or single-region-based assessments. Even the multi-sector or multi-region approaches generally consider impacts in sectors and regions independently, ignoring interactions. Extreme weather and adaptation processes are often poorly represented and losses of ecosystem services induced by climate change or human adaptation are generally omitted. This paper addresses this gap by reviewing some potential interactions in a 4°C world, and also makes a comparison with a 2°C world. In a 4°C world, major shifts in agricultural land use and increased drought are projected, and an increased human population might increasingly be concentrated in areas remaining wet enough for economic prosperity. Ecosystem services that enable prosperity would be declining, with carbon cycle feedbacks and fire causing forest losses. There is an urgent need for integrated assessments considering the synergy of impacts and limits to adaptation in multiple sectors and regions in a 4°C world. By contrast, a 2°C world is projected to experience about one-half of the climate change impacts, with concomitantly smaller challenges for adaptation. Ecosystem services, including the carbon sink provided by the Earth’s forests, would be expected to be largely preserved, with much less potential for interaction processes to increase challenges to adaptation. However, demands for land and water for biofuel cropping could reduce the availability of these resources for agricultural and natural systems. Hence, a whole system approach to mitigation and adaptation, considering interactions, potential human and species migration, allocation of land and water resources and ecosystem services, will be important in either a 2°C or a 4°C world.
Language(s): English
Format: Digital (Free)Tags: Climate change - Mitigation ; Climate change ; Climate ; Ecosystem ; Environment and landscape ; Climate geoengineering ; Global warming ; Scenario
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Climate geoengineering. Could we? Should we?
Global Change magazine, Issue 76. IGBP, 2011Radical technological responses to counteract global warming are receiving increased attention as a possible policy option. But is geoengineering a potential safety net, a distraction or a dead end? Phil Williamson explores.
[article]
in Global Change magazine > Issue 76 (January 2011) . - 4 p.Radical technological responses to counteract global warming are receiving increased attention as a possible policy option. But is geoengineering a potential safety net, a distraction or a dead end? Phil Williamson explores.
Language(s): English
Tags: Climate ; Climate change ; Climate geoengineering
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Ocean fertilization : a scientific summary for policy makers
The publication, commissioned by the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO and prepared with the assistance of the Surface Ocean Lower Atmosphere Study (SOLAS), summarizes activities and issues surrounding the use of ocean fertilization as deliberate interventions in the Earth's climate system that might moderate global warming.
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