Preface Brian Launder and J. Michael T. Thompson
Part I. Scene Setting: 1. Geo-engineering: could we or should we make it work? Stephen H. Schneider
2. Reframing the climate change challenge in light of post-2000 emission trends Kevin Anderson and Alice Bows
3. Predicting climate tipping points J. Michael T. Thompson and Jan Sieber
4. A geo-physiologist’s thoughts on geo-engineering James Lovelock
5. Coping with carbon: a near term strategy to limit carbon dioxide emissions from power stations Paul Breeze
Part II. Carbon Dioxide Reduction: 6. Capturing CO2 from the atmosphere David W. Keith, Kenton Heidel and Robert Cherry
7. Carbon neutral hydrocarbons Frank S. Zeman and David W. Keith
8. Ocean fertilisation: a potential means of geo-engineering? R. S. Lampitt, E. P. Achterberg, T. R. Anderson, J. A. Hughes, M. D. Iglesias-Rodriguez, B. A. Kelly-Gerreyn, M. Lucas, E. E. Popova, R. Sanders, J. G. Shepherd, D. Smythe-Wright and A. Yool
9. The next generation of iron fertilisation experiments in the Southern Ocean V. Smetacek, and S. W. A. Naqvi
Part III. Solar Radiation Management: 10. Global temperature stabilization via controlled albedo enhancement of low-level maritime clouds John Latham, Philip J. Rasch, Chih-Chieh (Jack) Chen, Laura Kettles, Alan Gadian, Andrew Gettleman, Hugh Morrison, Keith Bower and Tom Choularton
11. Sea-going hardware for the cloud albedo method of reversing global warming Stephen Salter, Graham Sortino and John Latham
12. An overview of geo-engineering of climate using stratospheric sulfate aerosols Philip J. Rasch, Simone Tilmes, Richard P. Turco, Alan Robock, Luke Oman, Chih-Chieh (Jack) Chen, Georgiy L. Stenchikov and Rolando R. Garcia
13. Global and Arctic climate engineering: numerical model studies Ken Caldeira and Lowell Wood
Index.