Some technologies are more science fiction than science fact
The hypothetical technology of terraforming (modifying another planet to make it habitable by humans) became a popular idea in the 1970s and early 1980s, because finding a new planet to inhabit seemed a necessity to some in an age when there was much pessimism about the Earth's carrying capacity.
Social revolution and unrest were common in the late 1960s, and photographs of the Earth taken from the Apollo spacecraft showed a tiny, vulnerable planet
More recently, attention has turned to 'engineering' our own planet rather than finding a new one
The 1973 and 1979 oil crises added to the sense of economic gloom
Planetary-scale engineering, referred to as geo-engineering, is seen by some as the way out of the global warming crisis
On a small scale, the $32 million artificial island of Hulhumale in the Maldives, built between 1997 and 2002, is an example of geo-engineering
Built 2m above sea level, it is designed to reduce overcrowding on existing islands, but also to
replace them as they are inundated by the sea-level rise generated by global warming
Geo-engineering is perhaps the ultimate technological fix, as it
seeks to control the nature of the entire planet
Sulphur Aerosols
Sulphate particles scattered in the stratosphere from balloons or planes block incoming solar radiation and cool the planet
A similar effect occurs naturally after a major volcanic eruption
Estimated cost - $50 billion every 2 years
Sulphur could damage the ozone layer
Polluting the atmosphere to solve a problem caused by pollution can be seen as unethical
Acid rain could occur
Global rainfall patterns might be disrupted
Space Mirrors
Launching giant mirrors into geo-stationary orbit to reflect solar radiation away from Earth, creating a cooling effect
A Russian attempt in 1999 failed
The technology for huge lightweight mirrors needs to be developed
Models suggest that this would create warmer high latitudes and cooler tropics - not a pre-industrial climate
Costs estimates
exceed $1 trillion
Ocean Fetillisation
Iron particles added to oceans to encourage plankton, which sequesters carbon dioxide as it grows
When plankton dies it sinks to the ocean flood
The company Planktos began trials in 2007 but abandoned them a year later
The UN agreed a moratorium on this technology
in 2008, fearing biodiversity would be harmed
Oceans could become acidified by the sequestered carbon dioxide
It could cost $5 per tonne of carbon sequestered
Uo to 6 billion tonnes per year would need to be sequestered at 2008 emission levels
Synthetic Trees
The 'trees', designed by Klaus Lackner, are intended to sequester 90,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide per year
They would use sodium hydroxide to capture carbon
directly from the atmosphere, which would need to be buried
Hundreds of thousands of trees would be needed, taking up large amounts of space
Costs are estimated at $30 per tonne of carbon dioxide
Trees would need to be powered
Deep burial sites for the captured
carbon dioxide need to be found