Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Chad Charcoal Emergency

There are times that describing a situation as bone headed stupid just does not suffice. The people need fuel and the only fuel is charcoal. Anything else, by and large, just fails to exist.

There is obvious virtue in simply organizing the production of charcoal by designating a resource further into the available forest and sending out the charcoal makers. Everyone can live with such a plan. Chad is arid, but somewhere there is a resource.

It leaves me with little faith in the Chadian government.

Chad also has a massive resource in cattails choking the wetlands around Lake Chad. Organizing this particular resource is again a simple matter of a plan in which families are provided with a cattail paddy to harvest and work with. This will bring the profusion under control.

It could also be used to introduce ditch and bank agriculture to the culture. The initial food content subsidizes the build out of the banks.

CHAD: Panic, outcry at government charcoal ban

N'DJAMENA, 16 January 2009 (IRIN) - A government ban on charcoal in the Chadian capital N’djamena has created what one observer called “explosive” conditions as families desperately seek the means to cook.

“As we speak women and children are on the outskirts of N’djamena scavenging for dead branches, cow dung or the occasional scrap of charcoal,” Merlin Totinon Nguébétan, head of the UN Human Settlements Programme (HABITAT) in Chad, told IRIN from the capital. “People cannot cook.”

“Women giving birth cannot even find a bit of charcoal to heat water for washing,” Céline Narmadji, with the Association of Women for Development in Chad, told IRIN. Unions and other civil society groups say the government failed to prepare the population or make alternative household fuels available when it halted all transport of charcoal and cooking wood into the capital in December in a move, officials said, to protect the environment. Charcoal is the sole source of household fuel for about 99 percent of Chadians, N’djamena residents told IRIN.

With the government blocking all entry of charcoal into N’djamena, and reportedly confiscating any found in the city, charcoal has become nearly impossible to come by, aid workers and residents said. And when it is found, a bag that used to cost about 6,000 CFA francs (US12) is now sold, clandestinely, at about four times that.
Climate change

Government officials said the charcoal ban was part of an effort to halt tree-cutting for fuel, which they said was essential to fight desertification. The government has attempted to block tree-cutting in the past but has severely cracked down in recent weeks, aid workers and residents told IRIN.

“Chadians must find other ways to cook and forget about charcoal and wood as fuel,” Environment Minister Ali Souleyman Dabye recently told the media in N’djamena. “Cooking is of course a fundamental necessity for every household. On the other hand...with climate change every citizen must protect his environment.” Officials said the ban includes only charcoal made from freshly-cut trees, not that made from dead wood lying about. But all wood and charcoal is being blocked from entering N’djamena, residents said.

Amid panic and protests over the ban another government official said at a 14 January press conference that the government made a mistake in not preparing the public, but he announced no change. “It is a gaffe; to err is human,” said Nouradine Delwa Kassiré Coumakoye, president of the government’s Social, Economic and Cultural Council. He called on Chadians to stay calm, saying: “The government can resolve this crisis and find a solution.”

The Chadian Prime Minister on 15 January met with the leader of a national consumers’ rights association, according to the government website.

“Crying out”

Residents and aid experts told IRIN the charcoal ban has complicated already dire living conditions in the city.

“All families in N’djamena are crying out,” Delphine Djiraibé Kemneloum, coordinator of the Monitoring Committee for Peace and Reconciliation, told IRIN.

UN-HABITAT's Nguébétan said: “This is quite a grave situation because Chadians have always used charcoal for cooking and for heating water." Many Chadians also make a living from selling charcoal.

“We all agree that desertification is a serious problem that Chad must address,” he said. “But the government must supplement its measures with alternatives for the population.”

The government has mentioned alternatives such as propane but “only abstractly,” Nguébétan said.

Residents said few people use propane in N’djamena, and it is scarce. People who can afford to are traveling across the border to Cameroon to buy gas.
Protest put down

Soldiers and police on 14 January dispersed crowds who gathered in the capital to protest the government’s action as well as the overall high cost of living, people in the capital told IRIN.

“They hit demonstrators, who were mostly women,” said the women’s association’s Narmadji, who was among the marchers.

“Until the government makes a change we will not give up,” she said. “Better to die swiftly and en masse than to continue dying slowly as we are now.” Then she added: “We are already dead.”

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Call It Treason

Enough water has flowed under the bridge in the present financial crisis that a few historical questions might be asked. It is now clear how we got here. Politicians were persuaded to throw away the governors that managed credit since the thirties. They mistook constructive deregulation of the real economy for ill thought out deregulation in the financial sector which a little reading of history warned you against. And this is not ancient history. There is the savings and loan fiasco of the Reagan administration. There was the first mutual fund bubble in the late sixties. Then there is the rest of the sorry historic record. And after all, Fannie and Freddie paid well.

This bubble was willfully created and sustained by the central bank and the compromised political sector. They have inflicted massive damage to the global financial system that has chastened US trading partners world wide who all bought into the same train wreck.

It is time to talk of crime and punishment. This was an act of treason. It should be punished as such. Not because the multitude of participants is necessarily equally culpable but because none of them had the courage to stand up and say no.

Yes it was treason, in the same way that Nazis followed orders and participated in obvious crimes. And yes the crimes were obvious. AAA bonds do not fail unless collusion existed to subvert the credit system. Everyone who signed off on these pieces of script was guilty of treason. They need to be so charged and ordered to disgorge their illegal gains for an ounce of mercy. Those proceeds were proceeds of crime. If they are lucky, they will still have a good life afterwards. A lot better than their victims, the American people, will have with upside down mortgages.

You may ask why we do not just walk away and forget about it all. Getting your hands on the levers of banking is a sacred trust that must never be compromised. Without governors, this trust must turn into a bubble. The first financial credit bubble was John Law and the Mississippi bubble that bankrupted the richest nation on Earth at the time and created the preconditions of the French revolution and ultimately the Louisiana Purchase.

The first and foremost governor is the absolute certainty that you will pay if you willfully run with it. Stripping these masters of the universe of their spoils and placing them in jail loses society nothing since none own and operate tangible job creating businesses anymore anyway. They were never entrepreneurs. In fact, they distained entrepreneurs while they preyed on their capital and ideas.

The next generation of bankers needs to see these folks off to jail, or they will also succumb to temptation. Also recall that no one in a position of leadership can ever claim ignorance of the history of this style of folly or the inevitable consequences. Why do you think that they grabbed as much personally and ran for the hills as quick as possible?

Yes it truly matters that this generation of fools go to prison for this, because the damage wrought is as devastating as the loss of several aircraft carriers.

Machiavelli's Revenge

I find this item particularly insightful in that it clarifies the history of the management failure of the Iraq occupation.
Bandar’s advice was available to any student of simple history let alone the talent available.

And you put a boy in charge because he will blindly follow orders. Hitler had that trick down pat.

Why do we put boys in charge who lack a deep understanding of human nature? If I have a criticism of the modern polity, it is this visible lack of, for lack of a better term, street smarts. If you have them, you know it. If you do not, you betray your lack by the simple act of opening your mouth.

A great leader needs to have understood Machiavelli, have internalized his teachings and to then never admit any of it. Obama has yet to show me that he understands. Bush and Clinton both failed horribly in this respect on the international front. And before someone leaps to Bill’s defense, his error was one of active avoidance. This is subtle but nonetheless as damaging. Rwanda needed desperate immediate action. And Osama did everything except send a Western Union wire declaring war while we pussy footed around.

The only good reason for attacking Iraq was a belief in the intelligence assessment. Had that actually been correct, it would have been almost unique in the annals of war.

Today we have enthusiastic intelligence assessments on Iran’s developing nuclear capability. These are just as useful. George Bush had learned a bit of sense and thwarted any Israeli efforts this past fall. Can Obama keep from been roped into such folly?

The next logical step in forcing Iran to come to terms with the fact that its possession of nuclear weapons will not be tolerated is to interdict all shipments of oil. That includes bombing any pipelines going out of the country. After all we need to now reduce production anyway.

And while you are at it, ask the Russians to do the bombing as mandated by the UN. They need to showcase their air force.

If that debate does not start some serious negotiation then they are really nuts.

Machiavelli's Revenge

By
Jeremy Lott on 1.20.09 @ 6:06AM

George W. Bush's relationship with Saudi Arabia's Prince Bandar was a close one. They were sometimes spotted holding hands in public in observance of Saudi custom. So when Bandar came calling at the White House shortly after Baghdad had fallen to American forces, we might expect that what he said carried serious weight.

Bandar was worried about the stability of the country. He urged Bush not to disband Iraq's military or intelligence services. The prince advised that Bush should remove the Iraqi leadership "because of their bloody hands" but not do away with Iraqi institutions. Rather, he should fire everyone down to the rank of colonel in the military and a similar rank in the intelligence services, and use those underlings to find Saddam Hussein, who was still on the lam, and to root out Baathist loyalists and other troublemakers.

Bandar encountered resistance so he pressed the point. The underlings might not be the greatest people, but they could help to stabilize Iraq, and it wasn't as if the U.S. government would be obliged to hand the country over to them. "Look, bad people find bad people and then after that you get rid of them." Bandar said. "Double cross them. I mean, for God's sake, who said that we owe them anything?"

"That's too Machiavellian," said someone who took part in that White House meeting. According to Bob Woodward, the speaker was either President Bush or national security adviser and future secretary of state Condoleezza Rice. The Bush administration went ahead and disbanded the military -- with predictable results. Iraq devolved into chaos and sectionalism, and far too much blood was shed.

"Too Machiavellian..." It would be harder to come up with a more pithy summary of why Bush's foreign policy fell apart. He never understood that his soaring rhetoric of human freedom needed to be tempered by guile and the particular interests of his own nation.

It's one thing to say that "freedom is the universal gift of Almighty God" or that "liberty and justice light the path to peace," as Bush did in his final televised address from the White House. Those are fairly standard staples of presidential rhetoric. It's quite another to decide that the world should conform to your ideals and go mucking about the globe assuming that everyone -- from heads of state to angry mullahs to rock throwing, mortar-launching mobs -- will suddenly slap their foreheads and wonder, "Why didn't we think of that?"

Many critics claim that Bush lied us into war in Iraq but that gives him more credit than he merits. Bush is a decent but extremely naive man who could never see the wisdom in Machiavelli's advice that, say, a ruler should preach virtue but practice it sparingly; encourage the oppressed but not with the force of your own armies, unless you're in the market for new territory; regard reports of spies with skepticism; and be wary of the advice of flatterers and men with axes to grind.

Bush talked often of good and evil, but couldn't recognize evil when he observed it in its more banal permutations. He said publicly that Vladimir Putin had a good soul and then appeared shocked when Putin went on to behave like just about every other Russian autocrat save Czar Alexander II. He never could understand why many countries resisted going into Iraq to spread freedom.

In fact, Bush got so caught up in his notion of democracy promotion that his State Department insisted Hamas be allowed to stand for election in Palestine. The geniuses at Foggy Bottom looked at polls that predicted the terror-sponsoring organization probably wouldn't win, took a cue from their starry-eyed commander-in-chief, and figured, what could it hurt?

Archimedes Lost Book

I hope that you will excuse me if I share this item with you. I am one of those who deeply regret every loss of ancient writing, let alone texts on ancient mathematical knowledge. That rulers with mobs have chosen to burn out libraries every few hundreds of years or so has been a loss to mankind’s collective knowledge and experience.

I hope that the charred remains of that library in a villa in Italy can be teased into disgorging its knowledge. It appears possible, but likely not. That this item could have survived is amazing.

It is also ironic that a monk in his act of destruction actually saved a premier text of Archimedes work.

http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/8974/title/A_Prayer_for_Archimedes

A Prayer for Archimedes

A long-lost text by the ancient Greek mathematician shows that he had begun to discover the principles of calculus.

By
Julie Rehmeyer

http://www.sciencenews.org/view/access/id/30876/name/f8914_1623.jpg


The top layer of writing in this 700-year-old book describes Christian prayers. But underneath, almost obliterated, are the only surviving copies of many of the works of the ancient Greek mathematician Archimedes. The owner of the Archimedes Palimpsest.

For seventy years, a prayer book moldered in the closet of a family in France, passed down from one generation to the next. Its mildewed parchment pages were stiff and contorted, tarnished by burn marks and waxy smudges. Behind the text of the prayers, faint Greek letters marched in lines up the page, with an occasional diagram disappearing into the spine.

The owners wondered if the strange book might have some value, so they took it to Christie's Auction House of London. And in 1998, Christie's auctioned it off—for two million dollars.

For this was not just a prayer book. The faint Greek inscriptions and accompanying diagrams were, in fact, the only surviving copies of several works by the great Greek mathematician Archimedes.

http://www.sciencenews.org/view/access/id/30877/name/f8914_2660.jpg

These are two images of a single sheet from the book. The picture on the left is an ordinary photograph, with the Archimedes text barely visible. The picture on the right is a multi-spectral image, and the Archimedes text and diagrams are mostly legible. The owner of the Archimedes Palimpsest.

An intensive research effort over the last nine years has led to the decoding of much of the almost-obliterated Greek text. The results were more revolutionary than anyone had expected. The researchers have discovered that Archimedes was working out principles that, centuries later, would form the heart of calculus and that he had a more sophisticated understanding of the concept of infinity than anyone had realized.

Archimedes wrote his manuscript on a papyrus scroll 2,200 years ago. At an unknown later time, someone copied the text from papyrus to animal-skin parchment. Then, 700 years ago, a monk needed parchment for a new prayer book. He pulled the copy of Archimedes' book off the shelf, cut the pages in half, rotated them 90 degrees, and scraped the surface to remove the ink, creating a palimpsest—fresh writing material made by clearing away older text. Then he wrote his prayers on the nearly-clean pages.

What happened to the monk's book after that is unclear, but in 1908, Johan Ludwig Heiberg, a Danish philologist, discovered it in a library in Constantinople. He was astonished to find that the book contained previously unknown texts by Archimedes. He studied the book in detail, puzzling out the faint letters with a microscope. His efforts brought the works to the attention of scholars around the world, but after he had completed his transcription, the book again disappeared until nearly a decade ago, when it was auctioned off at Christie's.

http://www.sciencenews.org/view/access/id/30878/name/f8914_3929.jpg

Sometime after Johan Heiberg examined the book in 1906, someone painted gold-leaf images over four of the pages (left). Multispectral imaging couldn't peer beneath the reflective metal paint, but x-ray fluorescence imaging revealed the underlying text (right).The owner of the Archimedes Palimpsest.

The book's anonymous buyer has funded an enormous research project on the volume. First, intensive conservation and restoration stabilized the condition of the book itself. Then the researchers took digital pictures of it in different wavelengths of light, creating a multi-spectral image that could be manipulated to reveal the text by Archimedes. On four of the pages, forged paintings covered the entire text, so the researchers used x-ray fluorescence imaging to peek beneath the paintings and decipher the obscured text.

Two of the texts hiding in the prayer book have not appeared in any other copy of Archimedes's work, so no one but Heiberg had studied them until now. One of them, titled The Method, has special historical significance. It could be considered the earliest known work on calculus.

Archimedes wrote The Method almost two thousand years before Isaac Newton and Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz developed calculus in the 1700s. Reviel Netz, an historian of mathematics at Stanford University who transcribed the text, says that the examination of Archimedes' work has revealed "a new twist on the entire trajectory of Western mathematics."

http://www.sciencenews.org/view/access/id/30879/name/f8914_4774.gif

Archimedes showed that the area of this section of a parabola is four-thirds the area of the enclosed triangle (red). He did it using a straight-lined approximation (blue).Rehmeyer

In The Method, Archimedes was working out a way to compute the areas and volumes of objects with curved surfaces, which was also one of the problems that motivated Newton and Leibniz. Ancient mathematicians had long struggled to "square the circle" by calculating its exact area. That problem turned out to be impossible using only a straightedge and compass, the only tools the ancient Greeks allowed themselves. Nevertheless, Archimedes worked out ways of computing the areas of many other curved regions.

Such problems are tricky because solving them directly requires slicing up curved areas into infinitely many areas with straight boundaries. But the concept of infinity is a slippery and troublesome one that can quickly lead to paradox.

The Greek philosopher Aristotle built defenses against infinity's vexing qualities by distinguishing between the "potential infinite" and the "actual infinite." An infinitely long line would be actually infinite, whereas a line that could always be extended would be potentially infinite. Aristotle argued that the actual infinite didn't exist.

Archimedes computed the area of the curved figure (left) by enclosing it in a bigger one with straight edges (right). He then examined random slices to compute the volume—using the concept of actual infinity. The owner of the Archimedes Palimpsest.

Archimedes developed rigorous methods of dealing with infinity—still used today—in which he followed Aristotle's injunction. For example, Archimedes proved that the area of a section of a parabola is four-thirds the area of the triangle inside it (shown in red in the diagram below). To do so, he built a straight-lined figure that's an approximation of the curvy one. Then he showed that he could make the approximation as close as anyone could ever demand to both the section of the parabola and to four-thirds the area of the triangle.

Critically, Archimedes never claimed that by adding triangles forever, you could make the straight-line construction exactly equal to the section of the parabola. That would require an actual infinity of triangles. Instead, he just said that you can make the approximation as good as you like, so he was sticking with potential infinity.

Modern historians and mathematicians have always believed whenever Archimedes dealt with infinities, he kept strictly to the potential kind. But Netz, who transcribed the newly found text, says that the recent discoveries show that Archimedes indeed used the notion of actual infinity. Netz and the project's lead researcher, William Noel of the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore, have co-authored a new book, The Archimedes Codex, which describes this discovery and the other facets of the project. It is scheduled for release on Nov. 1 of this year.

Archimedes's key argument about infinity appears on pages so damaged that Heiberg had been unable to transcribe them. Archimedes calculated the volume of a body shaped something like a fingernail by enclosing it in a volume bounded by plane surfaces. But instead of making better and better approximations of the curved figure, as he had done with the parabolic section, he pondered a two-dimensional slice through the larger volume enclosing the smaller one.

Archimedes found a relationship between the full area of that slice, which was a section through the plane-sided volume, and the smaller area within it, which was a section through the curved shape. Then he argued that he could use that relationship to calculate the entire volume of the curved shape, because both the curved figure and the straight one contained the same number of slices. That number just happened to be infinity—actual infinity.

"The interesting breakthrough is that he is completely willing to operate with actual infinity," Netz says, but he adds that "the argument is definitely not completely valid. He just had a strong intuition that it should work." In this case, it did work, but it remained for Newton and Leibniz to figure out how to make the argument mathematically rigorous.

Newton and Leibniz also worked with actual infinity. Leibniz went so far as to say in a letter, "I am so in favor of the actual infinite that instead of admitting that Nature abhors it, as is commonly said, I hold that Nature makes frequent use of it everywhere, in order to show more effectively the perfections of its Author."

Modern calculus no longer makes use of the actual infinite; it sticks with Aristotle's distinction. Philosophers still argue over the legitimacy of the notion of actual infinity. Netz argues, however, that The Method reveals the originality and daring of Archimedes's thought and shows that he anticipated some of the bold steps that would later lead to the full development of calculus.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Fixing the Economy Now

This item describes the structural nature of the next and final wave of the credit disaster. I would like to say something that was reassuring, but how? Low interest rates will salvage some of this paper. But even if a lot is salvaged, a lot will not be salvaged. And it certainly cannot be rescued by further foreclosure sales. The resale market has totally failed and prices now are mostly underwater.

If foreclosure is impossible and millions of Americans will be deemed bankrupts, how do we imagine that the economy will rebound? We are losing a real percentage of the middle class consumer in the next wave. This is about millions of families. This will result in a substantial reduction in US tax revenue. All because our politicians could not resist the idea that they could gamble on the nations future by throwing of the governors of the credit system. Do not blame the brokers or the banks. They already proved that they were drunken sailors back in the great depression. We have actually had a repeat of the roaring twenties.

Throwing money at the problem is not restoring personal credit or inflating the price of homes back to where the owners become whole. All it is doing is replacing the money lost on the bad loans already made. This is not inflationary because we have already absorbed all that red hot cash – ask China.

We must restore personal credit and turn all the housing stock back into earning assets for the lenders. If we could do that at a stroke of a pen, the economy would be on a roll tomorrow morning.

I have already posted on the how in an earlier article, but it is timely to do so again. Maybe this can be circulated to politicians and other opinion makers who might be able to do some good with it.

Firstly, I spent two decades working in my own private market laboratory known then as the Vancouver Stock Exchange. I understand and know what happens from hands on experience. There is nothing harder to recover from and repair than a credit bubble of any kind but it can be done. All aspects of that laboratory passed through my hands sooner or later.

Our only way forward is to acknowledge that these losses are real and may never be recovered. We have to recover the customers first because their recovery and success will rebuild the whole credit business and from there our business.

All the losses stem from the housing credit bubble. Solve that, and the rest will in time sort itself out. If we do not solve that then the automobile industry becomes a money vacuum for years as everyone scrambles after a slice of a shrinking market. This will be known as a second great depression.

We start by setting a date such as the beginning of this presidential term as the mark to market date. We use a date in the past because it prevents nimble manipulation by anyone. We have had enough of that already.

We pass legislation that provides for a new rule kit for mortgage foreclosure from that date. We establish a rule, that if a property falls into default, the property is appraised as of the mark to market date. Once the emergency is over, this will be set at some other date such as year end.

That figure is used to complete the following transaction. Fifty percent of the title in the property is transferred to the lender in exchange for the write down he is about to incur. The original mortgage is replaced by a mortgage on the basis of eighty percent of mark to market price of the fifty percent held by the borrower.

As an example, a property carrying a $400,000 mortgage in foreclosure and presently appraised at $$250,000 gives up fifty percent of the ownership to the lender and the new mortgage is based on $125,000 and is $100,000. The lender immediately writes down $300,000 in exchange for an asset presently appraised at $125,000. The mortgage is a ten years mortgage at current rates, renewable every five years.

This is likely a worse case scenario, or at least should be. The borrower is paying off a mortgage that he should be able to afford. During the next few years, he will also easily clean up his credit and possibly pay off the mortgage.

When he pays off the mortgage, he then has the right to purchase the remaining fifty percent from the borrower at normal terms. He has been and continues to be a good bank customer.

How has the bank fared? The situation was taking a $200,000 loss if the property could even be sold. If everyone was also selling, then the price could easily decline to $100.000 to $150.000 leaving the bank with a fully realized loss of $250,000.

In our scenario, the bank writes off $300,000 now but retains an interest worth $125,000 for a realized loss of $175,000. However, they retain a customer holding a high quality mortgage in terms of income coverage and asset coverage. In ten years this mortgage is paid off.

Now the bank sells the fifty percent that it retains back to the borrower at current market price. Their customer owns fifty percent clear. He easily qualifies for a new mortgage and completes the purchase and the bank has another high quality earning asset.

Suppose the price has recovered from $250,000 to $350,000. That fifty percent is worth $175.000. That is the new mortgage supported by the entire property. In other words at the end of ten years the bank has recovered $275,000 while earning some income. The capital loss is still $125,000 but the this has been offset in part at least with good quality mortgage interest from a customer whose ability to borrow is improving every year.

This formula can also be used to sell off the entire present inventory as well. This means that in as little as twelve months the housing market runs out of supply. It can be that quick.

It is all financeable with cheap government financing which is what we are doing anyway, but not nearly as effectively.

This new rule applied in the normal course of business once this crisis settles down, will be quickly integrated into normal bank lending practice and properly priced. You can see that the loss is reduced for any defaulting mortgage and that the customer survives to fight another day. Please note that in a stable market, giving up half of your ownership is a loss to the owner and a gain to the bank.

It will require a change in banking rules to allow such equity to contribute to the bank’s capital base properly. This is the one case that will be hard for the banks to cook the books on, so it will be safe to allow.


The Second Half of the Credit Crisis

By Ian Cooper Saturday, January 24th, 2009

Could it be we've just entered the second half of the credit crisis?

Just as 2008 was the year of subprime woes, this one will go down as the year of Option ARM resets (or adjustable rate mortgage resets). With billions in Option ARMs resets in 2009 and 2010, this crisis is about to unleash a fury no one's prepared for.

It won't be as bad as subprime, of course. It'll be worse.

That's because lenders created these ARMs with "teaser" features to borrowers, which included making lower minimal payments for the first few years before the loan reset to a higher payment schedule. And if that weren't bad enough, there's another feature called "negative amortization," which means you're not paying back any principal.

In fact, with negative amortization loans, your loan balance increases over time. Incredulously, every time you make a payment, you owe the bank even more. These are the loans that allow consumers to buy a house they can't otherwise afford.

As for speculators, they may use negative amortization loans if they believe prices will increase at a fast pace. But with the opposite happening, they're out of luck.

And the banks will be left holding the bag.

So when your financial advisor tells you the financial crisis is well behind us, you'll know better.

Housing aside, despite repeated injections of taxpayer money, the financial system continues to teeter on the brink of disaster. And while hope abounds for Obama's new approach, described as a "fundamental reform of the $700 billion rescue plan," it may still require trillions more dollars, putting added pressure on our unstable economy.

And if you thought we were in bad shape... look no further than across the pond.

The UK, just like the U.S., consumed more than it could pay for in what's amounted to one massive liquidity bubble. The UK economy shrank 1.5% (vs. 1.2% estimates) in Q4, and the government announced it was in recession.

A House of Cards.

It was in February 2008 that British consumers owed $2.7 trillion on credit cards... when debt per capita was at a higher level even than for U.S. households... when British household debt stood at 164% of disposable income, as compared to 138% in the U.S... and when research suggested that one in four people were either struggling with debt or felt their debt was unmanageable.

Here in America, we're still wondering how it is that no one sounded the bell. Will we actually learn from our mistakes?

As the "sage of Baltimore" H.L. Mencken once said... "... the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard."

Superflare Superthreat

The only good thing about a super flare is that it is brief. This article is a reminder that they really exist. And it will still take a lot of time to recover services, particularly if all the transformers are fried.

Which truly begs the question regarding how well the system is protected? This is not difficult, but certainly costs money. It is surely not impossible to protect transformers in particular and those are the things that take time. Breakers protect cables surely even though most everything else is likely to be fried.

I doubt is any of our computers are protected. So while protecting the grid is a case of avoiding design negligence, the rest of the system needs regulatory standards.

This report is a loud warning that we have not done what common sense tells us to do. We need to pay attention. Why are our transformers and motors not wrapped simply in foil? Or is that just too cheap and brain dead easy? Of course most computers are in metal casings which do most of the job.

However, the mere fact that 130 main transformers are even vulnerable tells me that this issue is not on any design engineer’s radar.

It is simple to put the rules in place to lower exposure and simple obsolescence will resolve it all over twenty years. The only thing that requires immediate attention is the transformer inventory. There we are talking about Hurricane Katrina style negligence

Severe Space Weather

01.21.2009 January 21, 2009: Did you know a solar flare can make your toilet stop working?

That's the surprising conclusion of a NASA-funded study by the National Academy of Sciences entitled Severe Space Weather Events—Understanding Societal and Economic Impacts. In the 132-page report, experts detailed what might happen to our modern, high-tech society in the event of a "super solar flare" followed by an extreme geomagnetic storm. They found that almost nothing is immune from space weather—not even the water in your bathroom.

The problem begins with the electric power grid. "Electric power is modern society's cornerstone technology on which virtually all other infrastructures and services depend," the report notes. Yet it is particularly vulnerable to bad space weather. Ground currents induced during geomagnetic storms can actually melt the copper windings of transformers at the heart of many power distribution systems.
Sprawling power lines act like antennas, picking up the currents and spreading the problem over a wide area. The most famous geomagnetic power outage happened during a space storm in March 1989 when six million people in Quebec lost power for 9 hours: image.

According to the report, power grids may be more vulnerable than ever. The problem is interconnectedness. In recent years, utilities have joined grids together to allow long-distance transmission of low-cost power to areas of sudden demand. On a hot summer day in California, for instance, people in Los Angeles might be running their air conditioners on power routed from Oregon. It makes economic sense—but not necessarily geomagnetic sense. Interconnectedness makes the system susceptible to wide-ranging "cascade failures."

To estimate the scale of such a failure, report co-author John Kappenmann of the Metatech Corporation looked at the great geomagnetic storm of May 1921, which produced ground currents as much as ten times stronger than the 1989 Quebec storm, and modeled its effect on the modern power grid. He found more than 350 transformers at risk of permanent damage and 130 million people without power. The loss of electricity would ripple across the social infrastructure with "water distribution affected within several hours; perishable foods and medications lost in 12-24 hours; loss of heating/air conditioning, sewage disposal, phone service, fuel re-supply and so on."

"The concept of interdependency," the report notes, "is evident in the unavailability of water due to long-term outage of electric power--and the inability to restart an electric generator without water on site."

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2009/images/severespaceweather/collapse.jpg


Above: What if the May 1921 superstorm occurred today? A US map of vulnerable transformers with areas of probable system collapse encircled. A state-by-state map of transformer vulnerability is also available: click here. Credit: National Academy of Sciences.

The strongest geomagnetic storm on record is the Carrington Event of August-September 1859, named after British astronomer Richard Carrington who witnessed the instigating solar flare with his unaided eye while he was projecting an image of the sun on a white screen. Geomagnetic activity triggered by the explosion electrified telegraph lines, shocking technicians and setting their telegraph papers on fire; Northern Lights spread as far south as Cuba and Hawaii; auroras over the Rocky Mountains were so bright, the glow woke campers who began preparing breakfast because they thought it was morning. Best estimates rank the Carrington Event as 50% or more stronger than the superstorm of May 1921.

"A contemporary repetition of the Carrington Event would cause … extensive social and economic disruptions," the report warns. Power outages would be accompanied by radio blackouts and satellite malfunctions; telecommunications, GPS navigation, banking and finance, and transportation would all be affected. Some problems would correct themselves with the fading of the storm: radio and GPS transmissions could come back online fairly quickly. Other problems would be lasting: a burnt-out multi-ton transformer, for instance, can take weeks or months to repair. The total economic impact in the first year alone could reach $2 trillion, some 20 times greater than the costs of a Hurricane Katrina or, to use a timelier example, a few TARPs.

What's the solution? The report ends with a call for infrastructure designed to better withstand geomagnetic disturbances, improved GPS codes and frequencies, and improvements in space weather forecasting. Reliable forecasting is key. If utility and satellite operators know a storm is coming, they can take measures to reduce damage—e.g., disconnecting wires, shielding vulnerable electronics, powering down critical hardware. A few hours without power is better than a few weeks.

NASA has deployed a fleet of spacecraft to study the sun and its eruptions. The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), the twin STEREO probes, ACE, Wind and others are on duty 24/7. NASA physicists use data from these missions to understand the underlying physics of flares and geomagnetic storms; personnel at NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center use the findings, in turn, to hone their forecasts.
At the moment, no one knows when the next super solar storm will erupt. It could be 100 years away or just 100 days. It's something to think about the next time you flush.

Terraforming Transcript ABC

The idea that terraforming the Earth is a taboo subject is hardly a surprise since the instance you put it on the table, everyone must take responsibility for the Earth. Manufacturing biochar for soil creation is accepting the fact that burning oil and coal is not terribly clever. Managing fish stocks is accepting that the free for all in the commons is just as stupid.

This blog is about terraforming the Earth to accommodate our population comfortably while not mining our resources in such a way as to leave damage and a diminished environment. My main theme is to find ways that it can be done through the proper mobilization of agriculture. Little else will do any good.

Human agriculture has been terraforming the globe for thousands of years. This blog has discovered ways that we can go back and recover wasted lands as well as secure permanent fertility in the soils we use. We are also heralding the advent of the Eden Machine that will in time deliver water to every patch of usable land on Earth and directly employ every person on Earth in the process.

This transcript is a conversation addressing some of the issues and the usual dance around naming the name. One might offend someone.

11 January 2009

The climate engineers

For years it's been one of the science community's great taboos but the idea of global climate control is starting to be openly discussed. Ideas like placing giant mirrors in space or firing sulphur particles into the stratosphere to cool the planet are no longer just in the domain of science fiction. Many scientists now believe the time for these ideas will come. Reporter, Wendy Carlisle (This program was originally broadcast on 6th April 2008.)

Wendy Carlisle: Hello, I'm Wendy Carlisle, and this week on Background Briefing, how a very big idea has come out of the shadows.

With rapid Arctic ice melts and rising emissions, scientists are now beginning to think planet earth could be running out of time.

And they've begun to talk about what's possibly the most dangerous techno fix of all time: artificially manipulating the climate to cool the planet down.

It would be the equivalent of hitting the panic button.

David Keith: Now suppose that space aliens arrived - maybe they are going to land at the UN Headquarters down the road here, or maybe they will pick a smarter spot, but suppose they arrive and they give you a box, and the box has two nobs. One knob is the knob for controlling global temperature, and maybe another knob is a knob for controlling CO2 concentrations. You might imagine that we would fight wars over that box, because we have no way to agree about where to set the knobs. No global governance and different people will have different places they want it set. Now I don't think that's going to happen, it's not very likely, but we are building that box, the scientists and engineers of the world are building it piece by piece in their labs.

Wendy Carlisle: This is the voice of one of the world's top atmospheric scientists, Canada's Professor David Keith, speaking at a conference in California late last year. And he's describing how bit by bit scientists are learning how to artificially control the climate in a process called climate engineering.

David Keith: Even when they're doing it for other reasons, even when they're thinking they're just working on protecting the environment, they have no interest in crazy ideas like engineering the whole planet. They develop science that makes it easier and easier to do.

Wendy Carlisle: As a former lead author on UN Climate Change Reports, his credentials are impeccable. But he's also a maverick.

David Keith is at the forefront of a group of scientists raising what must be the most unpopular subject in science: climate engineering. It's a political bombshell and it could be highly dangerous, no-one really knows.

There are lots of reasons David Keith thinks climate engineering is a bad idea. But he's calling for a brutally honest debate.

David Keith: And so I guess my view on this is not that I want to do it, I do not, but that we should move this out of the shadows and talk about it seriously, because sooner or later we will be confronted with decisions about this, and it's better if we think hard about it, even if we want to think hard about reasons why we should never do it.

Wendy Carlisle: And on Background Briefing today, you'll hear why engineering the climate, as far out and crazy as it sounds, is now being seriously talked about by some of the world's leading scientists and thinkers.

Nobel Prizewinning economist, Professor Tom Schelling.

Tom Schelling: Back then, if I spoke to an audience about geo engineering, half the audience thought I was crazy and the other half thought I was dangerous. And I think scientists who spoke about it or wrote about it found that they either weren't taken seriously or they were taken too seriously and were believed to be mad scientists who wanted to try to control the climate, and I think now it's become a respectable subject to talk about, and write about, and I think over the coming years it's bound to receive a lot more attention.

Wendy Carlisle: Not all of them agree with it, in fact there's strong opposition to climate engineering in many quarters, not just because it might do more damage than good, but because it could trigger wars.
Thinking on climate engineering has done a complete u-turn in the last 20 years. From Colombia University, Professor Wally Broecker.

Wally Broecker: I used to say that if people had a list of things that they didn't want scientists to study, probably top of the list would be dependence of intelligence on race, you know, are Chinese really smarter than the rest of us? And then No.2 would be engineering the climate.

Wendy Carlisle: In the mid-1980s, he and a colleague, John Knuckles, decided to look at some modelling by a Russian scientist that suggested an overheated planet could be cooled by shooting sulphur particles into the stratosphere, and they concluded that the Russian was right.

But their research was never intended to give political leaders an excuse not to act on global warming.
It was meant to be a last resort.

Wally Broecker: When Knuckles and I wrote this paper we entitled it an insurance policy against a bad CO2 trip. So we were thinking of it as a bail-out, saying 'Well if nothing is done and the climate becomes everybody's evaluation a lot worse than it is now, then people are going to demand that we bail it out and that's the way to do it.' So we weren't proposing it as a solution to the CO2 problem, we were sort of proposing it as a way to salvage the situation if things went bad.
Wendy Carlisle: Their modelling was based on mimicking volcanic explosions which shot sulphur particles into the stratosphere.

But it wouldn't be without aesthetic problems.

Wally Broecker: I think one of the principal side effects would be a psychological one. If we did this, we'd never have a blue sky day again, because the things we added up there would bleach the sky, so it would always be a pale blue or white, and that would be worldwide.

In a sense the end of really blue sky days which sort of you know I think around here anyway, and probably in Europe and places where you don't have many, they buoy people's spirits, don't they. If you had them all the time, maybe like cloudy days, I don't know, you Aussies have a lot of blue sky days.

Wendy Carlisle: Professor Broecker told Background Briefing he thought that climate engineering was, 'the equivalent of screwing with the atmosphere'. But like many scientists, he's worried that when global warming starts to bite, the public will demand action to cool the planet.

Wally Broecker: Doubling of CO2 in models would say is 3-1/2 degrees warming. I think that's going to dry out Australia like mad; you ought to be scared to death of that. You're going to really be dry. Dry, dry, dry, dry. And you know, that's going to cause sea levels to go up and so forth. So even doubling is going to cause big changes, but if we don't get serious about it, we're going to triple or quadruple the CO2, no doubt about it. And that's going to drive us into the realm where people are going to scream, 'We've got to cool the planet off!'

Wendy Carlisle: But Professor Broecker's paper was never published. Not because it was junk science, it wasn't, but because the scientific community decided that a bit of self-censorship was in order.

Wally Broecker: And we wrote a paper about it, and we sent it around to prominent people in the field, and they said, 'By all means don't publish this; the world is not ready for it.' So we just put it on the shelf.
Wendy Carlisle: The view was that if politicians discovered you could artificially cool the planet, they'd do nothing to cut emissions.

Now 20 years later, there's been a sea-change. Instead of shutting the debate down, it's now game on. And the trigger for the debate has come from impeccable quarters.

Just two years ago at the end of 2006, the Nobel Prizewinning scientist, Dr Paul Crutzen, the man who received the Prize for his groundbreaking work on the ozone layer, wrote an important editorial under the heading:

'Albedo enhancement by stratospheric sulphur injections: a contribution to resolve a policy dilemma.'
In lay terms, it was about the possible use of technology to bounce the sun's rays off the planet, to slow down the rate of warming.

Some of the ideas he discussed were things like pumping sunlight-reflecting particles into the stratosphere, using balloons or artillery guns. Another idea was to create little 'nuclear winters', using soot.

Professor Crutzen's essay was clearly written in anger and frustration, at the lack of action to reduce emissions. He pointed out that messing with the stratosphere could blow a hole in the ozone layer and make ocean acidification even worse.

But he thought climate geo-engineering should be investigated, because it might be the only escape route.
Background Briefing sought an interview with Professor Crutzen, but he declined, telling us he'd said his piece.

Here's a reading from his editorial:

Reader: Building trust between scientists and the general public would be needed to make such a large-scale climate modification acceptable. Finally, I repeat: the very best would be if emissions of the greenhouse gases could be reduced so much that the stratospheric sulphur release experiment would not need to take place. Currently, this looks like a pious wish.

Wendy Carlisle: Support for Professor Crutzen's provocative editorial was by no means unanimous, and like Wally Broecker's experience 20 years before, he encountered substantial opposition. But this time the science heavyweights swung in behind him.

The President of America's peak science institution, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Ralph Cicerone, wrote in defence of his stance:

Reader: I am aware that various individuals have opposed the publication of Crutzen's paper, even after peer review and revisions, for various and sincere reasons that are not wholly scientific. Here I write in support of his call for research on geo-engineering.

Wendy Carlisle: And that, it seems, was all it took to liberate the discussion.

In November last year, an off-the-record gathering of North America's top scientists and economists met at Harvard University for two days to discuss climate engineering.
The meeting was organised by Professor David Keith whom you heard earlier in the program.

David Keith is the research Chair in Energy and the Environment at the University of Calgary in Canada, which is where he was when Background Briefing put in a call to him.

David Keith: That was an amazing fact about this meeting. So in some ways I found that meeting personally intimidating, because I was coming back to Harvard and co-organising this meeting in front of all the most famous crowd in the world. I mean it really was the 'brain trust', a bunch of the atmospheric science community as well as some of the public policy community, like the former Head of the World Bank the president of Harvard. So a really impressive crowd of people. And at the end of the meeting there was really an extraordinary level of agreement, not every person, but an amazing consistent level of agreement in the room, that we have to take this seriously. And you might think that I would feel this was a huge personal vindication after all I published an early paper in the early '90s arguing that we should take geo-engineering seriously. Not that we should do it, but we should take it seriously. So you might imagine that my reaction at the end of having this meeting of these famous people at Harvard, that people finally agreed, Yes, we should take it seriously, that I would feel some huge triumph. But it was the opposite. What I felt was fear.

Wendy Carlisle: What really shocked Professor Keith was to hear the urgency with which some of his fellow scientists were now viewing this.

David Keith: Also another stunning thing at that meeting was that there were several people who talking of doing it quite soon, so my line has always been, 'we should do some research about this now and think about the politics and ethics, because one day we're going to face it, 30 or 50 years from now.' But several credible people in the room were saying, 'well hold on, if the Arctic ice really keeps melting as fast as in the last few years, and we have some geo-engineering method that really seems like it might work, albeit with some side effects, why wouldn't you begin to do a little bit of geo-engineering even ten or twenty years from now to begin to take the edge off the rate of warming.'

Wendy Carlisle: And that surprised you, and frightened you?

David Keith: It surprised me a lot. And my instant reaction is that I disagreed with that. But then when you try and think logically about why exactly you wouldn't do it it's not so clear.

Wendy Carlisle: Sitting in that Harvard University seminar room, was Professor Scott Barrett, the Director of the International Policy Program at Johns Hopkins University in Washington. And as he listened to the presentations, he imagined a ghastly 'perfect storm' brewing, where political inaction collides with a worsening climate change forecast.

Scott Barrett: So there's almost a kind of a collision here between the world failing to address the problem in any kind of fundamental way on the one hand, and on the other hand the problem itself being perhaps even more concerning than was thought previously. And if this continues and we continue not to address the problem in this fundamental way, and the science of climate change reveals itself to be even more worrisome, with every passing year, then eventually we're going to get to the point where people are going to consider using a technology like this, whether we discuss it or not. So there was a sense of really necessity and that's really what I think was on a lot of people's minds at that meeting.

Wendy Carlisle: So when you went into this meeting at Harvard late last year, I suppose were you one of those people who thought this was really crazy science, and did you come out of that meeting thinking it still was crazy science?

Scott Barrett: No, I should say that the first time I heard of it, I thought it was crazy science; it sounded more like science fiction. It was something that we certainly didn't need to take very seriously; at the time I first heard about it about 1990 or so, and the idea of tampering with the global climate it is the stuff of movies, it's not the sort of thing that most scientists would think about. Scientists tend to be very conservative in their thinking, and also on the policy side, people like me were thinking very much about how to address the problem fundamentally. So I never went into this with great enthusiasm, and I deliberately neglected the topic actually until 2006, and I think that's true for a lot of people; I think a lot of scientists had known about it for quite a long time, but they have been working to help the world understand this challenge, and in the case of some scientists working to promote activities that will address the problem in a fundamental way. I think virtually everyone in that room really was there because of the realisation that all this effort really so far has not borne fruit.

Wendy Carlisle: The Harvard meeting was not the first top level scientific gathering convened in the wake of Professor Paul Crutzen's editorial. A previous meeting at NASA in California, brought together another gathering of scientists. Amongst the invitees was Professor Jim Fleming, a historian of weather and climate control.
Jim Fleming: I was invited as a historian working in the field and writing about this, and we went to the NASA Aimes campus, which is at the south end of San Francisco Bay, and it was a gated, it was relatively secure base, in which they do some classified experiments. And so we had to come in and show our identifications, and I remember the press was waiting there, wondering if they could get in, and it was a behind-the-scenes kind of meeting.

Wendy Carlisle: Professor Fleming told the scientists that efforts to control the weather were not new.

Jim Fleming: And that others had said it was OK to think about climate engineering. One of the most prominent others was John Fitzgerald Kennedy in 1962, who had called on the Soviets and the Americans, in fact all nations of the world, to work together on peaceful uses of outer space and peaceful ways that they could co-operate in weather programs, including climate studies, and as he put it, 'large-scale weather control'. And so I said this field has a very long history. It's not always the most dignified history, it's really quite a, what I call 'chequered history'. But it does go back in the US case at least, to the 1830s.

Wendy Carlisle: Jim Fleming had never met any of the people who attended. But one person he did know by reputation was Dr Lowell Wood, a charismatic and controversial figure.

Jim Fleming: The others were unknown to me before that time, but people like Lowell Wood, who was a very prominent defence intellectual, prot�g� of Edward Teller, (Teller was the father of the H-bomb) and Wood was very much engaged in SDI kind of Star Wars defence projects here in the United States, and was now advocating putting up sunscreens to shade the planet in case the CO2 warming gets out of hand. And Wood's a cultural icon, formerly with the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories and you would imagine if there is going to be a global thermostat, some people are assuming it might be built there, the temperature of the world might be adjusted there. It's a very centrally controlled kind of vision. He talked, in his presentation, about futuristic hardware, sort of stratospheric gigantic military balloons on which you could hang hoses to pump sulphates into the stratosphere. He is very sure of himself, he was very clear to the meteorologists who were in the group, that their expertise wasn't really relevant to this topic, it was, in his terms, all physics, he says, 'I understand the radiation budget, and I know how to attenuate these sunbeams.' And also I got an impression of him as a very self-assured but in a sense likeable fellow who was an icon of that era of SDI.

Wendy Carlisle: About a year ago, Rolling Stone magazine ran a feature profile on Dr Lowell Wood, who they called Dr Evil. The story was about his ideas on engineering the climate, and the story was called 'Can Dr Evil Save the World?' Here's a reading.

Reader: In scientific circles, Wood is a dark star. As a physicist at Lawrence Livermore National Lab in California for more than four decades, Wood has long been one of the Pentagon's top weaponeers, the agency's go-to guru for threat assessment and weapons development. Wood is infamous for championing fringe science, from X-ray lasers to cold-fusion nuclear reactors, as well as for his long affiliation with the Hoover Institution, a right-wing think-tank on the Stanford campus. Everyone knew Wood's reputation. To some, he was a brilliant outside-the-box thinker; to others, he was the embodiment of 'big science' gone awry.

Wendy Carlisle: Background Briefing requested an interview with Dr Wood, but he declined, with the following correspondence:

Reader: I've taken a 'vow of silence' after the Rolling Stone 'adventure'. ("Fool me once, shame on you! Fool me twice, shame on me!")

Wendy Carlisle: In another email, Background Briefing told Dr Wood that we wanted to address some of the claims floating around that the Pentagon might be interested in funding research into climate control as a tool of war, and we asked Dr Wood if this was the case.

Here's a reading.

Reader: No, the Pentagon has nothing whatsoever to do with this research, to the best of my knowledge. Why in the world would they? And no, I've never taken any money, or any other form of support from the energy/fuels industry etc., etc. I've also executed no contracts of any kind with the Devil, nor do I intend to do so ...

Wendy Carlisle: Lowell Wood recommended we speak to his colleague Dr Ken Caldeira, whom he has worked with in modelling climate engineering options. Ken Caldeira is the senior scientist at the Carnegie Institute for Science at Stanford University, and he's just about the only scientist working on this full time.

Because most of the work on climate engineering is back-of-the-envelope stuff by scientists dabbling in their spare time. But Caldeira is on a mission to make it a research priority for the US government.

But it's clear that when you talk to him, he's sickened at the prospect of the world resorting to climate engineering. But he can see it coming.

Ken Caldeira spoke to Background Briefing on a studio hook-up from California.

Ken Caldeira: Yes, I think that the fact that these ideas largely came out of the weaponeers and the nuclear weapons experts, gave this sort of a dirty or immoral kind of feel to it that it was something that was the domain of people who were ready to incinerate cities, and not the sort of thing that people who are worried about polar bears and ice sheets should really entertain. And so I think it was seen as the idea of sort of crazy weaponeers and not the domain of sober scientists.

Wendy Carlisle: The 'crazy weaponeers' that Dr Caldeira is referring to include not only Dr Lowell Wood, but Edward Teller, the father of the H-bomb. Edward Teller believed that technology would save humans from themselves. It was this kind of thinking that drove him to work on the H-bomb, and ultimately on engineering the climate.

Edward Teller.

Edward Teller: I myself was interested in theoretical physics in explaining atoms molecular vibrations, knowledge and more knowledge. I didn't want to do it, but then Hitler not only swallowed up half of Poland, he invaded the west, and two days later there was an invitation to a pan-American congress that Roosevelt, whom I have never seen before, was going to speak. And he made a remarkable speech, how the world is really endangered by Hitler among other things, and at the climax, he said 'You scientists are blamed for the weapons to be used, but I tell you that if you now won't work on weapons, the freedom of the world will be lost.'

Ken Caldeira: Yes, Edward Teller was optimistic about technology and pessimistic about human nature. For example, after the atomic bomb was used in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, he thought, 'well humans will never, through their nature, avoid using these weapons again.' And so what we need to do is to create a technology that would make these weapons unusable. And so his idea was to make the super bomb, which was later called the hydrogen bomb. And the idea was that this was a weapon so terrible that nobody could imagine a war like this and so nobody would use a regular atomic bombs. And by the early 1980s, the idea of a first strike nuclear war between Russia and the United States became thinkable, so then he said, 'Oh well, we'd better make this Star Wars missile defence system, that we can't trust treaties to prevent nuclear war, but we can create a technology that will shield us from incoming ballistic missiles. And so they talked to Ronald Reagan and got funding for the Star Wars missile defence program.

Wendy Carlisle: It was after the Star Wars adventure that Edward Teller and Lowell Wood turned their attention to global warming.
Ken Caldeira: And again he thought, Well we can't rely on fallible humans to reduce their carbondioxide emissions because humans are basically a selfish, corrupt organism, and will never co-operate on a global scale to achieve anything. But we could do a number of things to counteract the climate effects of greenhouse gases, and so one of his colleagues, James Early suggested that we could put satellites in space between earth and the sun, maybe a million miles out in space, that would deflect sunlight away from the earth. They also looked at designer particles that instead of just blocking the bulk of solar radiation the way sulphur might do, could just deflect the ultraviolet radiation, or primarily ultraviolet radiation, and since ultraviolet radiation causes skin cancer and damages crops, they were saying, 'well not only are we going to solve the climate problem, but we're going to improve crop yields and we're going to reduce skin cancer, and so it would be immoral not to do this kind of engineering of the planet.'
And so this is really the most extreme view, saying that we're not just engineering the planet to alleviate some of the negative effects or actions, but we could engineer the planet to make it a better place to live.

Wendy Carlisle: Dr Ken Caldeira.

But Professor Jim Fleming says the military has historically been interested in exploiting technological advances in weather control.

Jim Fleming: The US military has always been interested in controlling the weather, so it's not simply the modern pentagon. And even one strategic Air Command General was quoted as saying in the 1950s 'If you control the weather, you can control the world.' I think this interest has continued.

Wendy Carlisle: Yes, well I wonder if you could talk more about that, because you do see a real resonance between the weaponeers and the climate engineers, don't you?

Jim Fleming: Well I think the technology is potentially so powerful that once people begin to think that they can master it, the military has resources that private scientific labs or university scale laboratories simply don't have. And so once an enthusiastic person, for example, one of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, or the Secretary of Defence, begins to be convinced about this, they can throw vast resources at it. Some of it can be justified. During the Cold War there was an attempt to make it rain on demand. It was thought that we could have such precise forecasts using computers, that we could deploy field troops out ahead of the storms to sort of divert them to possibly calm the waters when a hurricane is coming onshore. And then in the Vietnam era, the Pentagon was secretly seeding the clouds over the Ho Chi Minh trail, trying to make it rain and make mud on the trail to reduce the trafficability.

Wendy Carlisle: It's Jim Fleming's view that climate engineering could be used as a weapon.

Jim Fleming: I think it could, if push came to shove. I have discovered there is just a tip of the iceberg showing on defence intellectuals interested in this. Because they're saying climate change is a national security issue, it's not simply cast in vague, apocalyptic terms, it's actually threats to their war fighting capability to national security. And when you see this tip, you must assume that there's more going on that's not being reported.

Wendy Carlisle: And that present-day military hardware, guns and artillery, could be retrofitted and used to launch weather-changing particles into the stratosphere.

Jim Fleming: Well there's comments like the original 1992 National Academy study, had concluded that it was simpler to shoot sulphates into the stratosphere using naval guns, than it would be to sequester or reduce carbondioxide in our environment. And when I mentioned this to one of the participants, he had been one of the chairs at that National Academy study and a former Navy official. He said, 'Sure, we've got the Navy guns, we still have them in mothballs; all we need to do is put liners in them, and we can be shooting sulphates very soon.' These are huge Naval guns that would lob basically in the military sense, they would be declaring war on the stratosphere by shooting sulphates up there to make it more reflective.

Wendy Carlisle: During his time at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, Ken Caldeira says he's been in a meeting to discuss the idea of manipulating the weather for war. But he doesn't think it's a realistic option.

Ken Caldeira: I used to work at Lawrence Livermore National Lab., which is basically the lab that created the hydrogen bomb. And one of the strange things that occurs when you work in such a place is you find yourself in odd meetings. And one meeting was this question of are there ways to use the weather or geophysical systems as a weapon. And it turns out that it's much easier just to drop a bomb on people, or do something much more direct than toy with the weather and try to get them through some weather manipulation. And so I really don't think that weather manipulation as a military weapon is a realistic concern. I do think that climate engineering could provoke wars and result in military actions.

Wendy Carlisle: And that's the heart of the problem. It's not that climate engineering could become a weapon of war, but it could be the reason for wars to begin.

For instance, what might happen if Russia or China or Canada decided that a few degrees of extra warmth was good, but Australia found this same temperature rise caused water shortages and crop failure? Whose priorities would prevail then?

Professor Scott Barrett.

Scott Barrett: The difficulty I think here is that as one country acts, other countries will be affected. Now they may be affected positively, but there's also the possibility that they would be affected negatively. And you really have the prospect here with this technology, of individual countries essentially having their fingers on the global thermostat. And that's why there's this question 'who decides?' It's not the same question we've been grappling with, about how much to reduce and which countries should cut back, by how much, when. This is much more what should the temperature be? And different countries of course will be affected by climate change in different kinds of ways, and they may have very different views about this. The technology also has the potential of allowing manipulation of the climate in different directions, so you actually can even entertain the scenario that one country may want to use geo-engineering to offset warming, to cool the planet somewhat, against this background of warming. And other countries might want to do the opposite. And so there will be the prospect, the potential for conflict, because of this new technology and the collision really with this environmental challenge, and our inability so far to address it fundamentally.
Wendy Carlisle: It's these issues that are now occupying minds at the Washington think tank, the Council on Foreign Relations. Next month, they've convened a meeting to discuss what they've termed a most unusual topic: unilateral planetary scale geo-engineering.

Those on the council think it's time that the policy community started seriously thinking about what might happen if climate engineering was deployed.

Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, Professor David Victor.

David Victor: The meeting that we're calling is particularly focused on how to manage the risk that countries will go off and unilaterally start engineering the climate. And that's the really difficult aspect of this question, because if a country decides that it very strongly, in its own merits, wants to do something about this, it'll find that isn't that expensive, and there isn't a lot of law or expectations to guide its behaviour right now.

Wendy Carlisle: In fact, David Victor says climate engineering effectively means that the geopolitics of climate change are turned upside down.

David Victor: When you're trying to control emissions, the only way to be effective is to get almost all the world's emitters together and get them to agree to undertake measures that could be expensive, to control their emissions. And every country has a strong incentive to defect, to free ride on the efforts of other countries. And this is what makes the climate change problem politically such a difficult issue to deal with at an international level. Geo-engineering is exactly the opposite. One country, or a few countries could get together and decide on their own to go out and intervene in the atmosphere to offset some of the effects of climate change, and maybe to intervene in ways that are beneficial to themselves, so high latitude countries that are worried about the loss of their ice cover might intervene to block some of the sunlight and help their ice recover, and that could be beneficial for them but it could be harmful to other nations on earth. And so it's this complete turning upside down of the politics that I think will come to be the big political issue in the geo-engineering debate.

Wendy Carlisle: In late last year, 30 of America's leading scientists and thinkers, including some of the people you've heard on this program, Professor Scott Barrett, Wally Broecker, David Keith, Tom Schelling and Paul Crutzen, wrote an open letter to US Presidential candidates. They urged them to fund a $30-billion clean energy research project, with the vigour of the moon mission, as conceived by President John F. Kennedy in 1961.

John F. Kennedy: We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that challenge is one that we're willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one we intend to win.

APPLAUSE

Wendy Carlisle: The scientists who signed the letter said they believed that private investment and the market alone was insufficient to drive the research needed in the limited time available. They said it needed to be funded by government.

Back in 1961, President Kennedy recognised that to put a man on the moon would need vision, commitment, leadership and money. What these scientists want is another Apollo effort.

John F. Kennedy: But if I were to say, my fellow citizens, that we shall send to the moon, 240,000 miles away from the control station in Houston, a giant rocket more than 300 feet tall, the length of this football field, made of new metal alloys, some of which have not yet been invented, capable of standing heat and stresses several times more than have ever been experienced, fitted together with a precision better than the finest watch, carrying all the equipment needed for propulsion, guidance, control, communications, food and survival, on an untried mission, to an unknown celestial body, and then return it safely to earthy, re-entering the atmosphere at speeds of over 25,000 miles per hour, causing heat about half that of the temperature of the sun - almost as hot as it is here today - and do all this, and do it right, and do it first, before this decade is out, then we must be bold.

APPLAUSE/MUSIC

John F. Kennedy: I'm the one who's doing all the work, so we just want you to stay cool for a minute.

SONG: 'Blue Moon'.

Scott Barrett: Yes, President Kennedy was an extraordinary President, because he showed real leadership. He made the country think about itself and its role in the world in a different way.

Wendy Carlisle: One of the other things I found extraordinary about President Kennedy's speech was he talks about this grand idea of putting a man on the moon, and he doesn't know how it's going to be done.
In fact he says in his speech that all this 'money will be thrown at it and we will invent alloys that we don't know about yet. We will invent energy systems we don't know about yet.' So there was no kind of the known knowns there, he was talking about the known unknowns.

Scott Barrett: Yes, that's exactly why we need basic research, that's exactly right. And when you contemplate the magnitude of this challenge, the idea that you're going to do it with just things that are on the shelf and so on, I mean to some extent, yes, we can take action using those existing technologies, but to really address it fundamentally we're going to need to have this incredible transformation and what you just said really explains why the science is needed and why basic research is needed, because we'll need to uncover things that we haven't contemplated, and that's what basic science and research does.

Wendy Carlisle: Professor Scott Barrett.

In 2005, the economist, Professor Tom Schelling received the Nobel Prize for his work on game theory. It's a branch of economics which describes how rational actors behave in a given set of circumstances. It's all about strategic behaviour.

Professor Schelling was the brains behind the thinking on nuclear deterrence during the Cold War.

In the 1980s he got involved with the global warming debate during the Carter Administration, and he's still involved. He doesn't think global attempts to reduce emissions through treaties or trading will work.
He thinks the developed world should show it's serious about climate change, by massively investing in new technology, just like the moon mission. But if that doesn't work, he thinks climate engineering could prove irresistible.

Tom Schelling: If geo-engineering should work, and we don't know whether it will, we don't know what the side effects might be, but it really transforms the problem from one of regulating the behaviour of 7 or 8 billion people in the way they cook their food and transport themselves, and warm and cool themselves, and all of that, instead of having to change lifestyles and behaviour of billions of people, it simply turns off the global warming, and that's bound to be very tempting.

And I think what is going to be needed is for some small scale reversible experiments, to find out just how well some of the ideas work, and what some of the side effect may be that we have to worry about.

Wendy Carlisle: And would you be able to gauge for me what you think is amongst the mainstream climate scientist community, what they're attitude is towards this now? Do they now believe, do you think, that this needs to be talked about? They've stopped self-censoring themselves, in other words?

Tom Schelling: I don't think we're there yet, but I think we're going to be there in a few more years. I think the argument in favour of at least testing some of the ideas about geo-engineering on a small scale, without any long-term commitment yet, until we've discovered how it works and whether it works, and whether there are serious disadvantages, I think gradually this is going to become a subject that eventually be on the editorial pages of newspapers in Australia or the USA or the UK, or Germany and such places.

Wendy Carlisle: Professor Schelling believes climate engineering is going to be a much more attractive option to wealthy nations than trying to reduce their emissions. And that's the problem, it's cheap and unilateral. Nations, he says, will act in their own self interest. And he says under this scenario, conflict is inevitable.

Tom Schelling: Ordinarily we'd think that the problem is going to be get all the nations together to co-operate at substantial sacrifice. On the other hand, if geo-engineering turns out to be as effective and as cheap as some people think it will be, then the question is, 'how many nations will there be any one of which could afford to undertake its own geo-engineering, leaving all the other nations to enjoy or suffer the consequences.' So that if it turns out that the Chinese decide they can afford to engage in geo-engineering and other nations don't like it, how do we arrive at a compromise? I think that's likely to be a matter of real dispute, especially if some people think that we want to reduce global atmospheric change in temperature by 1-degree Celsius, and others think we ought to do it by 4-degrees Celsius, there's a lot of room for dispute there, and I think we ought to recognise that geo-engineering may prove to be a too attractive solution to the problem. Too attractive to some nations that foresee that they themselves are going to suffer very seriously, while other nations would rather not take the risk.

Wendy Carlisle: So how does the world go about governing who should set the global thermostat? I mean how do we do that?

Tom Schelling: I don't think you can prevent the conflict, I think you have to recognise with respect to geo-engineering, there is almost certain to be a conflict over exactly what to do and how much to do and who should pay for it. I think reaching agreement on how much geo-engineering to engage in especially if it turns out that there are risks that we haven't yet identified with geo-engineering, it might appear more dangerous to some countries than others.

Wendy Carlisle: The idea of controlling the climate through direct intervention has been around for a long time. But it's true to say it's come a long way in a very short time, out of the realm of science fiction and into the science lab.

But the great dilemmas are no closer to being solved. How do you prevent climate engineering from happening once countries discover it could be do-able and cheap? And even then, no-one can be sure that the climate engineering option won't cause an environmental disaster.

As Professor David Keith stood in front of a spellbound audience of scientists at Harvard University, he laid out what has become a truly awful set of possibilities, that the more we engage in climate engineering, the more we walk away from our existing climate.

David Keith: So, here's one way to think about it, which is that we just do this instead of cutting emissions because it's cheaper. I guess the thing I haven't said about this is that it is absurdly cheap, it's conceivable that say using the sulphates method, or this method I've come up with, you could create an ice age at a cost of .001% of GDP. It's very cheap, we have a lot of leverage. It's not a good idea, but it's just important. I'll tell you how big the lever is, the lever is that big. And that calculation isn't in much dispute. You might argue about the sanity of it, but the leverage is real. But here's a case which is harder to reject.
Let's say that we don't do geo-engineering, we do what we ought to do, which is get serious about cutting emissions. But we don't really know how quickly we have to cut them. There's a lot of uncertainty about exactly how much climate change is too much.
So let's say that we work hard and we actually don't just tap the brakes, but we step hard on the brakes and really reduce emissions and then actually reduce concentrations, and maybe someday, like 2075, October 23rd, we finally reach that glorious day where concentrations have peaked and are rolling down the other side, and we have global celebrations and we've actually started to - we've seen the worst of it.
But maybe on that day we also find that the Greenland ice sheet is really melting unacceptably fast, fast enough to put meters of sea level on the oceans in the next 100 years, and remove some of the biggest cities from the map. That's an absolutely possible scenario. We might decide at that point that even though geo-engineering was uncertain and morally unhappy, that it's a lot better than not geo-engineering, and that's a very different way to look at the problem. It's using this as risk control not instead of action. It's saying that you do some geo-engineering for a little while, to take the worst of the heat off, not use it as a substitute for action.
But there is a problem with that view, and the problem is the following:
Knowledge that geo-engineering is possible makes the climate impacts look less fearsome, and that makes a weaker commitment to cutting emissions today. This is what economists call a moral hazard. And that's one of the fundamental reasons that this problem is so hard to talk about; in general, I think it's the underlying reason that it's been politically unacceptable to talk about this, but you don't make good policy by hiding things in a drawer.
Wendy Carlisle: Background Briefing's Executive Producer is Chris Bullock. Co-ordinating Producer, Linda McGinness. Research, Anna Whitfeld, and technical production this week, Mark Don. I'm Wendy Carlisle and you're listening to Background Briefing on ABC Radio National.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Natural Adaptation vs Natural Selection

It is obvious that adaptation is a far better explanation for the evolutionary process than natural selection ever was. This functions on the basis of the organism making choices.

I anticipated this in my manuscript ‘paradigms shift. It is good to see others coming to the same conclusion. All organisms can make choices, and they respond to the environment by adaptation. The tool set is already in place to grab from and this shows that the grabbing mechanism is not overly precise.

This is not the directed evolution that fundamentalists are calling for but it is directed nonetheless. Those folks pointed out an alternative to natural selection for all the wrong reasons. Their real error was to attempt faith based science, an oxymoron if there ever was one.

Been able to make adaptive choices on behalf of your offspring is such a powerful tool in your clan’s ability to survive, that natural selection demands it. This paper confirms it or at least begins the process.

If you feel up to it, you are now licensed to tell those who argue for directed evolution or whatever they call it, that science has discovered that it is true. Only the directing is coming from the organisms as part of our wiring.

http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Adaptation_Plays_A_Significant_Role_In_Human_Evolution_999.html

Adaptation Plays A Significant Role In Human Evolution

by Staff Writers
Stanford CA (SPX) Jan 22, 2009

For years researchers have puzzled over whether adaptation plays a major role in human evolution or whether most changes are due to neutral, random selection of genes and traits.

Geneticists at Stanford now have laid this question to rest. Their results, scheduled to be published Jan. 16 online in Public Library of Science
Genetics, show adaptation-the process by which organisms change to better fit their environment-is indeed a large part of human genomic evolution.

"Others have looked for the signal of widespread adaptation and couldn't find it. Now we've used a lot more data and did a lot of work cleaning it up," said Dmitri Petrov, associate professor of biology at Stanford University and one of two senior authors of the paper.

"We were able to detect the adaptation signatures quite clearly, and they have the characteristic shape we anticipated."

All genetic mutations start out random, but those that are beneficial to an organism's success in their environment are directly selected for and quickly perpetuate throughout the population, providing a uniform, traceable signature.

With the help of post-doctoral researcher James Cai and recent graduate student Michael Macpherson, Petrov and co-senior author Guy Sella, a biologist at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, used different methodology from what's been used before to look for signatures of adaptation left in the human genome.

"We detected a number of signatures that suggest adaptation is quite pervasive and common," Petrov said.

Humans have a very complex history from traveling around the globe, and the human genome is also highly structured, making it complicated and difficult to work with, he said.

To find the adaptation signal, Petrov and his colleagues looked for regions of the genome that "hitchhiked" along with an adaptation. When a genetic adaptation occurs and is passed on to offspring, other genes on both sides of the adaptation typically accompany it.

The result is a whole region of the genome where all humans are unusually similar to each other, referred to as a "selective sweep," that researchers can identify and trace through human genetic history.

"Adaptation becomes widespread in the population very quickly," Petrov said. "Whereas neutral random mutation doesn't and would not have the selective sweep signature."

"We tried to see if these regions of unusual similarity among all humans tended to be in particular places in the genome as the theory predicts they should be, and indeed we find them there," Petrov said. "The work suggests human beings have undergone rampant adaptation to their environment in the last 200,000 years of history."

In the past, these sweeps were difficult to discern because the data were not sufficiently abundant and were filled with noise. Depending on the methodology, estimates of the degree of adaptation in humans ranged from as high as 30 percent down to zero. Signatures were impossible to interpret with confidence.

"People would find changes in specific genes suggesting that recent adaptations in humans might be common but could not find genome-wide signatures of pervasive adaptation. That was unsettling," Petrov said. "I'm hoping that people will react with relief that things are starting to make sense."

Petrov hopes that researchers can now do a much better job of finding the regions within the genome responsible for specific human adaptations and relate them to changes in human history or past environments.

For example, one could trace the arrival of lactose tolerance to the domestication of cattle and the introduction of milk into our adult diet.

"As the data are going to grow, we should be able to locate specific adaptive events quite well," Petrov said. "By identifying specific genes, we can unravel this evolutionary history of adaptive change."

Another possibility is tracing the origin of skin pigmentation genes, which give people their different skin-color types. Many of these genes are linked to skin cancer. Researchers may be able to recreate past environments while better understanding how adaptation comes into play.

"We see signatures of possibly hundreds of recent adaptive events, and now we can ask what are they doing there," he said. "It's both exiting and puzzling."

This paper follows similar work in bacteria and fruit flies indicating adaptation is a significant contribution to evolution as a whole.

"We are on a crest of a wave showing that adaptation is a lot more prevalent than we thought," Petrov said