Geo-Engineering in the Southern Ocean

Ocean Dumping A German research vessel, the Polarstern, is on a 70 day exercise of dumping 20 tonnes of ferrous sulphate (iron sulphate, FeSO4) in the Southern Ocean at a latitude of 46° south. The LOHAFEX experiment of the Alfred Wegner Institute for Polar & Marine Research project will increas...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Paull, John
Other Authors: Domeney, Penny
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Bio-Dynamics Tasmania 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://orgprints.org/id/eprint/15528/
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spelling ftorgprints:oai:orgprints.org:15528 2023-05-15T18:24:42+02:00 Geo-Engineering in the Southern Ocean Paull, John Domeney, Penny 2009-03 application/pdf https://orgprints.org/id/eprint/15528/ en eng Bio-Dynamics Tasmania /id/eprint/15528/1/15528.pdf Paull, John (2009) Geo-Engineering in the Southern Ocean. Journal of Bio-Dynamics Tasmania (93), pp. 16-20. Environmental aspects Research methodology and philosophy Knowledge management Assessment of impacts and risks Journal paper NonPeerReviewed 2009 ftorgprints 2022-12-11T06:54:58Z Ocean Dumping A German research vessel, the Polarstern, is on a 70 day exercise of dumping 20 tonnes of ferrous sulphate (iron sulphate, FeSO4) in the Southern Ocean at a latitude of 46° south. The LOHAFEX experiment of the Alfred Wegner Institute for Polar & Marine Research project will increase the iron level of the treated ocean area by a factor of up to 24 times “the natural iron concentration”. The target area is 20 kilometres in diameter, i.e. approximately 320 square kilometres. It could be argued that the Southern Ocean being far away from sources of pollution,as well as international media, is an ideal place to conduct such a geo-engineering experiment, and that maybe this ocean fertilization experiment will be the seed for a whole new lucrative ocean-dumping industry that might even save the planet.Alternatively, it could be argued that this is a further exercise in Euro-arrogance, in an expropriation of the commons, and that it is a continuation and extension of the Northern eco-malfeasance that we of the South have witnessed too frequently. Europe has “form” for latitude-shifting its eco-crimes. France travelled half way around the planet to detonate its “safe” nuclear weapons in the otherwise pacific Polynesia. The eco-credentials of artificial fertilization are poor on both land and sea. Yes we can bloom the ocean, but because we can is not an argument that we ought. Shifting the carbon “problem” from the land to the sea may be just a new version of sweeping the dirt under the mat. In this case, Europe’s carbon “dirt” under the Southern Ocean“mat”. Article in Journal/Newspaper Southern Ocean Organic Eprints (Danish Research Centre for Organic Farming, DARCOF) Pacific Southern Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection Organic Eprints (Danish Research Centre for Organic Farming, DARCOF)
op_collection_id ftorgprints
language English
topic Environmental aspects
Research methodology and philosophy
Knowledge management
Assessment of impacts and risks
spellingShingle Environmental aspects
Research methodology and philosophy
Knowledge management
Assessment of impacts and risks
Paull, John
Geo-Engineering in the Southern Ocean
topic_facet Environmental aspects
Research methodology and philosophy
Knowledge management
Assessment of impacts and risks
description Ocean Dumping A German research vessel, the Polarstern, is on a 70 day exercise of dumping 20 tonnes of ferrous sulphate (iron sulphate, FeSO4) in the Southern Ocean at a latitude of 46° south. The LOHAFEX experiment of the Alfred Wegner Institute for Polar & Marine Research project will increase the iron level of the treated ocean area by a factor of up to 24 times “the natural iron concentration”. The target area is 20 kilometres in diameter, i.e. approximately 320 square kilometres. It could be argued that the Southern Ocean being far away from sources of pollution,as well as international media, is an ideal place to conduct such a geo-engineering experiment, and that maybe this ocean fertilization experiment will be the seed for a whole new lucrative ocean-dumping industry that might even save the planet.Alternatively, it could be argued that this is a further exercise in Euro-arrogance, in an expropriation of the commons, and that it is a continuation and extension of the Northern eco-malfeasance that we of the South have witnessed too frequently. Europe has “form” for latitude-shifting its eco-crimes. France travelled half way around the planet to detonate its “safe” nuclear weapons in the otherwise pacific Polynesia. The eco-credentials of artificial fertilization are poor on both land and sea. Yes we can bloom the ocean, but because we can is not an argument that we ought. Shifting the carbon “problem” from the land to the sea may be just a new version of sweeping the dirt under the mat. In this case, Europe’s carbon “dirt” under the Southern Ocean“mat”.
author2 Domeney, Penny
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Paull, John
author_facet Paull, John
author_sort Paull, John
title Geo-Engineering in the Southern Ocean
title_short Geo-Engineering in the Southern Ocean
title_full Geo-Engineering in the Southern Ocean
title_fullStr Geo-Engineering in the Southern Ocean
title_full_unstemmed Geo-Engineering in the Southern Ocean
title_sort geo-engineering in the southern ocean
publisher Bio-Dynamics Tasmania
publishDate 2009
url https://orgprints.org/id/eprint/15528/
geographic Pacific
Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Pacific
Southern Ocean
genre Southern Ocean
genre_facet Southern Ocean
op_relation /id/eprint/15528/1/15528.pdf
Paull, John (2009) Geo-Engineering in the Southern Ocean. Journal of Bio-Dynamics Tasmania (93), pp. 16-20.
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