Draft:Outline of climate engineering
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to geoengineering:
Climate engineering (or geoengineering) is the intentional large-scale alteration of the planetary environment to counteract anthropogenic climate change. The term has been used as an umbrella term for both carbon dioxide removal and solar radiation modification when applied at a planetary scale. However, these two processes have very different characteristics, and are now often discussed separately. Carbon dioxide removal techniques remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and are part of climate change mitigation. Solar radiation modification is the reflection of some sunlight (solar radiation) back to space to cool the earth. Some publications include passive radiative cooling as a climate engineering technology. The media tends to also use climate engineering for other technologies such as glacier stabilization, ocean liming, and iron fertilization of oceans. The latter would modify carbon sequestration processes that take place in oceans.
What type of thing is geoengineering?
[edit]Geoengineering can be described as all of the following:
- a branch of engineering –
Branches of geoengineering
[edit]History of geoengineering
[edit]General geoengineering concepts
[edit]Geoengineering organizations
[edit]- Climate Justice Alliance – Coalition opposing geoengineering as incompatible with climate justice
- NOAA Geoengineering Program – U.S. government agency conducting geoengineering-related research
Geoengineering publications
[edit]Persons influential in geoengineering
[edit]- Ken Caldeira –
- Paul J. Crutzen –
- John D. Hamaker –
- David Keith (scientist) –
- Klaus Lackner –
- Christopher McKay –
- Nathan Myhrvold –
- Steve Rayner –
- Stephen Salter –
- Stephen Schneider –
- Lowell Wood –