LONDON - British tycoon Sir Richard Branson on Friday announced a $25 million
prize for the scientist who comes up with a way of extracting greenhouse gases
from the atmosphere.
Sir Richard Branson , left, throws a globe into the air
watched by former US Vice President Al Gore, right, at a presentation to
announce the Virgin Earth Challenge, in London, Friday Feb. 9, 2007.
[AP]
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The Virgin Group chairman was
joined by former Vice President Al Gore and other leading environmentalists, as
he announced the challenge to find the world's first viable design to capture
and remove carbon dioxide from the air.
A landmark report by the world's leading climate scientists and government
officials, published in Paris last week, warned global warming will continue for
centuries, creating a far different planet in 100 years.
"Man created the problem, therefore Man should solve the problem," Branson
said. "Could it be possible to find someone on Earth who could devise a way of
removing the lethal amount of CO2 from the Earth's atmosphere?"
Branson compared it to a competition launched in 1675 to devise a method of
estimating longitude accurately. It was 60 years before English clock maker John
Harrison discovered an accurate method and received his prize from King George
III.
"The Earth cannot wait 60 years. We need everybody capable of discovering an
answer to put their minds to it today," Branson said.
He said many remain skeptical about the reality of climate change.
"The plot is often that no one believes the threat until it is almost too
late and then the superhero steps in to save the day," he said. "Well, today we
have threat, we still have to convince many people that the threat is indeed
urgent and real. We have no superhero, we have only our ingenuity to fall back
on."
Gore said the planet now had a "fever" and the world had to listen to
experts.
He said last week's report offered conclusive evidence the planet was unwell.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said last week that temperatures
on Earth could increase by 43.5 Fahrenheit by the year 2100.
"Up until now, what has not been asked seriously on a systematic basis is, is
there some way that some of that extra carbon dioxide may be scavenged
effectively out of the atmosphere? And no one knows the answer to that," Gore
said.
Branson, whose business interests include Virgin Atlantic airline and Virgin
Trains, rejected charges that it was hypocritical for him to sponsor the prize.
He reiterated a commitment made in September to invest $3 billion toward
fighting global warming, saying he would commit all profits from his travel
companies over the next 10 years.
As part of that pledge, he launched a new Virgin Fuels business, which is to
invest up to $400 million in green energy projects over the next three years.
Experts agreed the challenge is difficult, saying no carbon capturing
technology exists. Scientists in Scandinavia have started to safely bury CO2
emissions before they reach the atmosphere, but no one has captured them after
they are released.
"I see no evidence that a quantifiably acceptable solution or pathway has
been identified," said Jerry Mahlman, the former head of the United States'
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association. "It's not what you say, it's what
you can do and at the moment you can't do a lot."
The organizers of the "Virgin Challenge" said the winner would receive $5
million once judges rule they have succeeded. The rest of the money will be paid
out over a ten year period if the judges decide the goal of removing significant
amounts of greenhouses gases has been met over the long term.