| 释义 | 
		Definition of geoengineering in English: geoengineeringnoun ˌdʒɪəʊɛndʒɪˈnɪərɪŋˌdʒioʊɛndʒəˈnɪrɪŋ mass nounThe deliberate large-scale manipulation of an environmental process that affects the earth's climate, in an attempt to counteract the effects of global warming. 地球工程(学) Example sentencesExamples -  The risk of unintended detrimental effects is inherently high because most geoengineering proposals are planetary in scale.
 -  Some rational people open to geoengineering (me) are worried by the fact that sulfates can't address ocean acidification.
 -  Our knowledge of climate is not yet sufficiently advanced to undertake real planetary geoengineering.
 -  Now, scientists could have dreamed up the most ambitious geoengineering plan to deal with climate change yet: converting the parched Sahara desert to a lush forest.
 -  Their silence, to look at its positive aspect, possibly reflects a refusal to be associated with the task of making geoengineering look respectable.
 -  By relying on technological innovation and development, geoengineering would increase the role of private actors relative to that of government.
 -  Why is it that so many people who consider geoengineering despite all the open issues and question marks - do not consider other solutions?
 -  This is an area where I think geoengineering has to be part of the debate.
 -  The wholehearted public embrace of geoengineering advocated by Benford, Michaelson and others in the nineties has not happened.
 -  Nevertheless, in the mid-nineties, valiant attempts were made to give geoengineering a good name.
 -  Leading climate scientist Stephen Schneider is strongly suspicious of what he calls 'geoengineering '.
 -  One reason for the successful conspiracy of silence may well be the still unresolved status of geoengineering under international law.
 -  He goes on to call geoengineering ' planetary methadone ', with dangerous potential side-effects.
 -  Wallace Broecker, a pioneer of geoengineering at Columbia University, could not find an outlet to publish his research papers in the 1980 s.
 -  The big environmental NGOs such as Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth or WWF do not try to glamorise or otherwise promote geoengineering.
 -  It surprises me that economists do not give more credence to the idea of unintended consequences of geoengineering.
 -  When you think of geoengineering as interfering in a spontaneously organized and self-regulating system, it sounds a lot like interfering in a free market.
 -  In addition, he proposes a geoengineering solution that we must hope for, because no current geoengineering techniques allow us to simply comb the atmosphere and remove carbon.
 -  A controversial report by the National Academy of Sciences in 1992 looked at iron fertilization, among other geoengineering options.
 -  As for geoengineering itself, of course we should be looking at it - we need to be looking at everything.
 
 
 Rhymesauctioneering, clearing, coasteering, earring, electioneering, engineering, gearing, orienteering, privateering, shearing    Definition of geoengineering in US English: geoengineeringnounˌdʒioʊɛndʒəˈnɪrɪŋˌjēōenjəˈniriNG The deliberate large-scale manipulation of an environmental process that affects the earth's climate, in an attempt to counteract the effects of global warming. 地球工程(学) Example sentencesExamples -  Their silence, to look at its positive aspect, possibly reflects a refusal to be associated with the task of making geoengineering look respectable.
 -  He goes on to call geoengineering ' planetary methadone ', with dangerous potential side-effects.
 -  Wallace Broecker, a pioneer of geoengineering at Columbia University, could not find an outlet to publish his research papers in the 1980 s.
 -  This is an area where I think geoengineering has to be part of the debate.
 -  Now, scientists could have dreamed up the most ambitious geoengineering plan to deal with climate change yet: converting the parched Sahara desert to a lush forest.
 -  It surprises me that economists do not give more credence to the idea of unintended consequences of geoengineering.
 -  Nevertheless, in the mid-nineties, valiant attempts were made to give geoengineering a good name.
 -  Some rational people open to geoengineering (me) are worried by the fact that sulfates can't address ocean acidification.
 -  As for geoengineering itself, of course we should be looking at it - we need to be looking at everything.
 -  The big environmental NGOs such as Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth or WWF do not try to glamorise or otherwise promote geoengineering.
 -  Our knowledge of climate is not yet sufficiently advanced to undertake real planetary geoengineering.
 -  In addition, he proposes a geoengineering solution that we must hope for, because no current geoengineering techniques allow us to simply comb the atmosphere and remove carbon.
 -  Why is it that so many people who consider geoengineering despite all the open issues and question marks - do not consider other solutions?
 -  A controversial report by the National Academy of Sciences in 1992 looked at iron fertilization, among other geoengineering options.
 -  When you think of geoengineering as interfering in a spontaneously organized and self-regulating system, it sounds a lot like interfering in a free market.
 -  One reason for the successful conspiracy of silence may well be the still unresolved status of geoengineering under international law.
 -  Leading climate scientist Stephen Schneider is strongly suspicious of what he calls 'geoengineering '.
 -  The risk of unintended detrimental effects is inherently high because most geoengineering proposals are planetary in scale.
 -  The wholehearted public embrace of geoengineering advocated by Benford, Michaelson and others in the nineties has not happened.
 -  By relying on technological innovation and development, geoengineering would increase the role of private actors relative to that of government.
 
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