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Off to Vancouver for AAAS: My Panel on “Getting to 350″ with James Hansen

James Hansen, Wiki Commons

Tomorrow I fly to Vancouver for the annual AAAS meeting (most of the geeks are already there already, of course). I’m going for this panel, which includes quite a luminary:

Climate Solutions: The Challenges of Getting to 350

Sunday, February 19, 2012: 8:30 AM-11:30 AM
Room 214 (VCC West Building)

Society is on a carbon dioxide emissions trajectory committing itself to dangerous climate change this century with potentially catastrophic effects. It has been argued that society can avert this dangerous climate change by stabilizing atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration at 350 ppm. Because of the climate system’s memory, the time window is relatively narrow for society to find solutions that avoid dangerous and largely irreversible rises in temperature, sea level, and the incidence of extreme weather events. The symposium will explore the challenges society faces in finding solutions to the problem of getting to 350 ppm. These challenges are not only scientific and technological; they are also economic, political, and ethical. The panel will discuss the scientific basis for targeting 350 ppm as a goal and describe the uncertainties involved as well as provide evidence that makes this goal compelling. The session will examine the role of science and technology in getting to 350, emphasizing that society can only be successful in getting to 350 by century’s end if it supplements aggressive emission reductions with carbon dioxide removal from the atmosphere and subsequent sequestration. Also explored will be the economic, political, and ethical challenges that must be overcome before society can effectively implement a climate and energy strategy that does not compromise the sustainability of the planet’s natural and human systems.

Organizer:
Charles H. Greene, Cornell University
Speakers:
James E. Hansen, NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies
Human-Made Climate Change: A Scientific, Economic, and Moral Issue
Charles H. Greene, Cornell University
Geoengineering: The Inescapable Truth of Getting to 350
Ruth Greenspan Bell, Woodrow Wilson Center
The Role of International Climate Policy in Getting to 350
Kristen Sheeran, Economics for Equity and Environment Network
Building the Economic Case for 350

Should be pretty provocative, no? Especially the geoengineering part.

I’m going to talk about climate communication and also the psychological roots of denial–which includes some material from the new book. How do we reach Republicans? Well, again, understanding this diagram should help, and I’ll talk about that more:

However, in line with my debate/dialogue with Dan Kahan, I am not going to soft-pedal it either. Some minds might be far, far too closed to make them reasonably reachable, even with the most deft quadrant-oriented framing strategies. And that’s something we have to face.

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