October 25, 2006: President's Page
THE ALUMNI WEEKLY PROVIDES THESE PAGES TO THE PRESIDENT
George Scherer,
Princeton’s William Knapp ’47 Professor of Civil Engineering
and a member of PEI’s Carbon Mitigation Initiative, at work
in Teapot Dome, Wyoming, where he is retrieving samples of cement
used to seal abandoned oil wells. The goal of this project is to
determine how long these plugs can withstand the corrosive effects
of geologically sequestered carbon dioxide.
Coming
to Grips with Global Warming: The Princeton Environmental Institute at
Work
The earth is growing warmer, thanks to elevated concentrations of greenhouse
gases, and the vast majority of scientists now believe that human activity,
especially the burning of fossil fuels, is primarily responsible. In June,
the National Research Council concluded with a “high level of confidence”
that the earth is warmer now than at any time since 1600 and, quite possibly,
since 900, and this global rise in temperature is expected to accelerate
if the emission of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide, methane, and
nitrous oxide is not curtailed. The consequences of unchecked global warming,
even within the limited timeframe of the next 100 years, are potentially
disastrous. Higher temperatures will erode the polar icecaps — Greenland’s
ice is melting three times faster than it was only five years ago —
and lead to significantly higher sea levels, inundating low-lying areas;
evaporation and precipitation will intensify, increasing the severity
of hurricanes and the likelihood of flood and drought; ecosystems will
be disrupted and food production jeopardized; and tropical diseases will
spread to higher latitudes.
Fortunately, the dangers of inaction are becoming more and more apparent
to society, and research into the wide array of questions posed by global
warming is well advanced in many countries. On our own campus, the Princeton
Environmental Institute (PEI), a multidisciplinary venture launched in
1994, is playing a pivotal role in the global search for viable solutions
not only to the scientific challenges presented by global warming but
also to the complex social and economic problems associated with it. PEI
brings together the talents of scientists, engineers, social scientists,
humanists, and policy experts from across the University. Indeed, it can
be argued that PEI represents a greater concentration of talent in this
field than any research university in the world today, thanks, in part,
to its close relationship with two laboratories on the Princeton Forrestal
campus, the federal government’s Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory,
which specializes in climate modeling, and the Princeton Plasma Physics
Laboratory, which focuses on fusion energy and its potential to provide
a limitless supply of clean, safe, and inexpensive power. Under the aegis
of PEI, hundreds of scholars, researchers, postdoctoral fellows, and graduate
students are conducting fundamental research on climate change; developing
technologies that will make a major reduction in emissions possible; and
exploring the material and human costs of conducting business as usual
versus changing the way we consume and generate energy.
This is interdisciplinarity at its best. By creating a flexible but intellectually
rigorous framework in which the brightest minds at Princeton can pool
their knowledge, and by establishing an equally fruitful partnership with
government and industry, PEI has the perspective it needs to assemble
a blueprint for keeping the concentration of greenhouse gases in our atmosphere
within relatively safe limits. The good news is that for the next 50 years,
a viable blueprint is substantially complete. As the co-directors of PEI’s
Carbon Mitigation Initiative, Professors Robert Socolow and Stephen Pacala
(who also serves as PEI’s director) point out, “Humanity already
possesses the fundamental scientific, technical, and industrial know-how
to solve the carbon and climate problem for the next half-century.”
The Carbon Mitigation Initiative, which has been generously funded by
BP and the Ford Motor Company, has developed a practical framework (known
as the “wedges concept”) to stabilize emissions at their current
levels prior to achieving an overall reduction in the second half of the
21st century. Mutually reinforcing strategies to achieve this goal range
from the adoption of carbon capture and storage technology, which has
the capacity to prevent roughly 90 percent of the carbon dioxide now released
by power plants from reaching the atmosphere; to the production of biofuels
such as ethanol; to the prevention of tropical deforestation; to improvements
in energy efficiency. Perhaps the most encouraging aspect of this vision
is that it should be possible to achieve and still maintain the economic
vitality necessary for our own well-being while allowing the developing
world to climb out of poverty.
It would be naïve to think that halting the growth in emissions
will be painless and straightforward, or that every variable and contingency
can be addressed as scholars endeavor to project the course of climate
change and the kind of changes we will have to make to both sustain our
natural environment and the economic health of the global marketplace.
There are also many problems still to solve. Scientists have found it
easier to develop global climate models than to calculate the effects
of global warming on specific localities, such as Africa’s Sahel
on the margins of the Sahara Desert and the tropical forests to the south,
where even minor changes can wreak havoc. Engineers are grappling with
challenges that range from perfecting new combustion processes to preventing
leakages of geologically sequestered carbon dioxide, particularly through
abandoned oil wells. And economists and political scientists are probing
everything from the merits of “cap and trade” programs for
emission reduction to the relative costs of securing foreign-based energy
supplies and achieving energy independence.
PEI is making a difference on all these fronts, adopting a broad and
positive approach to addressing environmental challenges. And while the
research I have described is enormously important, so, too, is PEI’s
teaching mission, which seeks to give our students the insights they need
to comprehend and, one day, shape our delicate relationship with our environment.
This fall, an undergraduate seminar will consider what our own University
community can do to counteract global warming, pushing us to define what
our fair share of this worldwide effort should be. This initiative, like
the work of PEI as a whole, gives me hope that both the will and ingenuity
exist to bring an end to man-made climate change, if not for our sake,
then for our children’s.