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Lucid Horizon's avatar

A problem with resistance to geoengineering is that there effectively isn't a "no geoengineering whatsoever" option either, because the whole point of "anthropogenic climate change" is that we're already doing it and have been doing it about as long as we've been human. (Not just since the Industrial Revolution or even agriculture - ancient humans would burn forests on purpose for reasons like flushing out game, or making more plains and clearings to hunt in.) Humanity has a lasting impact on the planet - this fact is already baked in - and our actual choice is what of that impact is intentional.

For that matter, Mother Nature is not a real person, has even less coordination than humanity, and will sometimes do things that don't contribute to a steady state equilibrium. Remember the ancient human wildfire strategy I mentioned? Several predator bird species do the same thing for the same reasons, if they can grab a burning branch from a lightning strike or something.

Anyway, a problem with comparing things to the size of the USA is that you have to specify the Lower 48, or the inclusion of other territories and Alaska in particular really changes the comparison.

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Brian Frantz's avatar

I'd also point out that we basically got into this mess through untinentional geo-engineering by pumping tons of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, so it's not like we haven't already been doing this. Now, that doesn't exactly make the case against unintended consequences, but reversing one form of geo-engineering with another doesn't sound quite as crazy. Especially if we take an incremental, conservative approach aimed at taking the edge off of climate change and buying time, rather than seeing this as a long-term solution. Ofc, that's going to be the temptation.

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