Inevitable

Ep 79: David Keith, Professor at Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences and the Kennedy School, and Founder of Carbon Engineering

Feb 6, 2020
David Keith, a Harvard professor and founder of Carbon Engineering, is a leading voice in climate science and energy technology. He delves into solar geoengineering, discussing its potential and associated risks. With a focus on the importance of rigorous research and global consensus, he emphasizes ethical considerations in implementing these technologies. The conversation also covers the growing need for funding in this field, alongside the need for comprehensive strategies to effectively combat climate change.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

What Is Solar Geoengineering?

  • Solar geoengineering means deliberately altering Earth's radiative balance to reduce climate risks from greenhouse gases.
  • It usually involves scattering sunlight back to space using aerosols, thus offsetting some warming effects of CO2.
INSIGHT

Geoengineering's Global Impact

  • Though forcing can be applied locally, climate impacts are globally interconnected and cannot be isolated geographically.
  • A uniform global radiative forcing likely best reduces climate risks evenly without leaving regions worse off.
INSIGHT

Sulfate Aerosols Deployment Basics

  • Stratospheric sulfate aerosols can be deployed globally from tropical aircraft to achieve uniform radiative forcing.
  • This technical approach is low cost and feasible with existing technology, but requires precise tuning and deployment.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app