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  • September27th

    I’m in the UK, finally back home after flying in early morning yesterday and going straight to Oxfordshire to attend the wedding of friend (and co-director of ReAgency) Quentin Cooper to his (now) wife Suba.

    The flight turns out to be more inspirational than I might have expected. By luck I find myself sitting next to Imran, who’s returning to the UK after a week’s training in working with Autistic children. Imran radiates positive vibes and practical optimism, which is all the more surprising when he tells me some of his life story. As a Pakistani Muslim who fell in love with an Indian Catholic, he was ostracised by his entire community. His family won’t speak to him. “It was complete rejection,” says Imran. “I mean, I lost everything”. The couple have two daughters, the youngest of whom was born with autism (hence his trip to the States). You might expect someone facing the twin challenges of cultural abandonment and a child with developmental problems to be rather serious. Imran by contrast almost exudes light. I don’t get the feeling this is over-compensation, a contrived cheery demeanour that seeks to reject or not look at what has happened. More that these experiences have helped him find the essence of who he is. He just seems to embody himself without artifice, sacrifice or apology.

    Both of us find the muffin that comes with breakfast hilarious, made as it is by US food supplier Otis Spunkmeyer. I kid you not.

    Questionable taste

    Questionable taste

    Before parting we agree to meet up sometime back in London. I’m looking forward to that. Imran is as inspirational as any of the ‘great thinkers’ I’ve been meeting.

    After touching down at Heathrow I head not home, but north to Quentin and Suba’s wedding, via the Aylesbury Holiday Inn. I eat a lunch that reminds me of something Frank Zappa once said before heading over to the nuptials.

    There’s a certain cachet to saying you’ve just ‘flown in from New York’, especially at a wedding – which makes up for the fact you feel jetlagged and jaded. I think I managed to pull off an acceptable appearance, with the help of not insubstantial amounts of champagne, and I met some lovely people, including the incomparable Vivienne Parry (something of a science presenting deity), Mai Davies (who you’ll know if you watch TV in Wales) and uber-music journalist Mark Ellen (the man who set up both Word and ‘Q’ magazines and presented the Old Grey Whistle test). I like weddings. Everyone looks their best and most people are usually in a good mood.

    I finally made it home this morning to a pile of junk mail and brain full of new ideas. It’s fair to say the world doesn’t look the same anymore. When I started this project I thought it was going to be a journey to understand how the science happening now will impact on my future. What I have found out so far has blown my mind. In fact I’ve got used to having my mind blown. But that science is only half the story.

    In the very early stages of researching this book I met with a futurist called Stephen Aguilar-Milan, a key player in the European chapter of the World Future Society. He told me that there were two historical ways of looking at the future. “One way is to say that technology leads society,” he said. “This is the American model of futurism that says technology drives societal change”. The other ‘European’ perspective is that society leads technology. “This argues that we create the technologies that society demands.” But there’s a third model. “This is the Asian school of futurism. That actually it is our values that lead both society and technology”. There’s something happening at the back of mind that I can’t quite put my finger on, but I know it’s going to be important to the book. It has something to do with values, but that’s not all of it. I think it’s something to do with attitude…

  • September23rd

    It’s a big question, but one that is particularly pertinent to my interview today with Robotics and Artificial Intelligence researcher, Hod Lipson. Because Hod and his team build machines that find truths.

    The search for truth has a long history (one could argue it is history) which I’m not about to get into (and it’s not the book I’m writing) but if someone said to me ‘Go on then, history of truth in 5 minutes’ I’d probably reach for two key figures – Socrates (born Greece, 469 BC) and Francis Bacon (born England, 1561), not least because they both died in interesting ways (which is useful for storytelling).

    Socrates was put to death by the state of Athens for “refusing to recognise the gods recognised by the state” and “corrupting the youth” (explaining perhaps why Black Sabbath rarely toured in Greece). Despite clear chances to escape his fate, Socrates placidly took a drink containing poison hemlock prepared by the authorities. Francis Bacon, many believe, died as a result of trying to freeze a chicken. It might seem odd therefore to hold up both as key figures in the history of reason.

    Socrates natural hier?

    Socrates' natural heir?

    You may also wonder why I am suddenly diving into the past when I’m writing a book about the future. Bear with me, and blame Hod Lipson and his robots.

    Both Socrates and Bacon were very good at asking useful questions. In fact, Socrates is largely credited with coming up with a way of asking questions, ‘The Socratic Method’, which itself is at the core of the ‘Scientific Method’, popularised by Bacon during ‘The Enlightenment’ – a period of European history when ‘reason’ and ‘faith’ had an almighty bunfight and the balance of power between church, state and citizen was being questioned. Lots of philosophers and scientists challenged the prevailing orthodoxy of religious authority by saying ‘we need to make decisions based on critical thinking, evidence and reasoned debate, not on sacred texts and religious faith’ and the church replied with ‘yes, but we own most of the land, plus people really like the idea of God. Ask them’.

    I'm pretty popular, actually

    I'm pretty popular, actually

    The Socratic Method disproves arguments by finding exceptions to them, and can therefore lead your opponent to a point where they admit something that contradicts their original position. It’s powerful because it kind of gets people to admit to themselves that they’re wrong. It’s also pretty good at exposing your own (as well as others’) prejudices and gaps in reasoning. Lawyers use it a lot. Don’t let this influence you against it. Lawyers also use toilet paper and you’re not about to reject that idea.

    Used by lawyers

    Used by lawyers

    Here’s an example.

    During excessive bouts of hard and progressive rock emanating my older brothers’ bedrooms my dad used to say, “people only play electric guitars because they can’t play real ones” (by which he meant acoustic guitars played by nice chaps called Julian with sensible haircuts, as apposed to electric guitars played by long haired geezers called Dave and Jimmy).

    First step of Socratic method: assume your opponent’s statement is false and find an example to illustrate this. This You Tube clip of Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour playing acoustic guitar for instance. Clearly Dave Gilmour can play a ‘real’ guitar as well as an electric one and my dad must grudgingly accept the fact. At this point dad would assert that Dave Gilmour was ‘the exception that proved the rule’.

    Next step. Take your opponent’s original statement and restate it to fit their new modified position. “So, dad, you’re saying that people only play electric guitars because they can’t play acoustic ones, except for Dave Gilmour who can do both?”. Then return to step one.

    Ironically this led us to playing dad far more Black Sabbath, Pink Floyd, Aerosmith and Led Zeppelin than if he’d kept his theory to himself. (MTV’s ‘unplugged’ series would become his nemesis). Eventually dad would have to admit the truth – which was not that the rock musicians we listened to weren’t talented, but that he just didn’t like rock music.

    This example is trivial but you can use the method to demonstrate some pretty esoteric points, and expose fundamental new insights. A popular example that can really annoy your mates in the pub is proving that things don’t have a colour.

    Socratic argument, while undoubtedly one of the most useful things ever devised can also annoy the tits of people, as the man who lends it his name found out to his cost. The story is that Socrates used his technique to prove a lot of bigwigs in Athenian society were mistaken in their thinking – and they responded by having him killed. This proves that engaging people’s brains is never enough if you want change. You have to engage their emotions too. As Professor George Church said to me during our talk last week “Politicians know how effective emotion is in comparison to rational thought. You can really move mountains with emotion.  With rational thought you just end up getting people to change the channel”.

    By the time Francis Bacon went to university, teachings of one of Socrates’ students, Aristotle, had become entrenched as the way to conduct ‘scientific inquiry’. Aristotle had pioneered deductive reason, the practice of deriving new knowledge from foundational truths, or ‘axioms’. In short, it was generally believed that if you got enough boffins together to have a solid debate, scientific truth would be teased out over time. This worked well for mathematics where axioms had been long established (e.g. the basic mathematical operations – plus, minus, divide, multiply) but was less good for finding out new stuff about the physical world. Much to Francis’ dismay it seemed that science involved sitting around in armchairs. Nobody was getting off their arse and observing anything new or doing any experiments. Nobody was finding the ‘axioms of reality’ (which is arguably a good name for a progressive rock outfit).

    'Let's do it in 13/8!'

    'Let's do it in 13/8!'

    In common with Socrates Bacon stressed it was just as important to disprove a theory as to prove one – and observation and experimentation were key to achieving both aims. In a way he was Socrates 2.0 (which is another good name for a prog band). He also saw science as a collaborative affair, with scientists working together, challenging each other. All of this is hallmark of scientific good practice today – observe, experiment, theorise… and then try to prove yourself wrong – all in collaboration with peers who can give you a hard time. It’s important to note that Bacon himself wasn’t a distinguished scientist. His main contribution was the articulation and championing of an empirical scientific method. That said, he did do the odd experiment, including the one that killed him.

    While traveling from London to Highgate with the King’s personal physician, Bacon wondered whether snow might be used to preserve meat. The two got off their coach, bought a chicken and stuffed it with snow to test the theory. In his last letter Bacon is said to have written, “As for the experiment itself, it succeeded excellently well.” Some historians think the chicken story is made up, but the popular account is that the act of stuffing the chicken led to Bacon contracting fatal pneumonia. This is possibly the only instance of bacon being killed by eggs.

    Reason's nemesis?

    Reason's nemesis?

    Hod Lipson looks like a very friendly bear. He has a round, but not chunky frame, thick black hair and looks healthy and happy. His features are open and innocent. He’s almost childlike if it weren’t for his demeanour – a kind of solid confidence that only comes with age. You get the feeling Hod knows exactly what he wants to achieve. I suspect he was a mischievous child, curious, poking his nose into most things. And whilst most of the scientists I’ve met are driven by an almost insatiable curiosity, Lipson takes curiosity to a new level, literally. He’s curious about curiosity.

    “ ‘Artificial Intelligence’ is a moving target,” he says. “So, you can build machine that plays chess, then you build one that can drive through city streets and so on. People argue about whether it’s really intelligent or not – and usually it’s argued it isn’t. I want to create something where nobody can argue it isn’t intelligent. So, I was thinking about what’s an unmistakable, unequivocal hallmark of intelligence, and I think it’s creativity and particularly curiosity.”

    “Does a curious and creative machine mean a sentient machine?” I ask.

    “Well, what does that mean?” asks Hod. “I have to push you on what you mean by ‘sentient’.”

    Bollocks. I’ve just been asked by a leading researcher into intelligent machines to define sentience – one of the biggest pending questions in philosophy. This is worse than when Cynthia Breazeal asked me to come up with an alternative word for ‘robot’. Or if Andrew Lloyd Webber asked me to say something nice about one of his musicals. I feel out of my depth and we’re barely into our chat. I do the only thing I can.

    “Well, let me ask you,” I say. “What do you mean by it?”

    Hod pauses. I’m not sure he was expecting a return serve, especially one that in any decent rule book would be considered cheating.

    “I interpret it as deliberate versus reactive. Er… human-like…” He pauses again. “I don’t know.”

    A-ha! Well, like I said, it is one of the biggest pending questions in philosophy.

    “Alive?” I venture.

    “It’s difficult to identify what life is right?”

    And there’s the rub. Life has avoided a definitive definition for as long as we’ve tried to make one – as has ‘intelligence’. So if you’re trying to create ‘artifical intelligent life’ you’re already in a quagmire of semantic lobbying. I’m reminded of my chat last week with George Church (Professor of Genetics, Harvard Medical School). “I think life is actually quantitative measure,” said George, by which he means something that can be defined not with either a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ but on a scale. “It’s not something where either you either have it or your don’t. So I would say that there are some things that are more alive than others.” And  I don’t think it’s overstating things to say that Hod certainly has made machines that are ‘more alive’ than many others.

    Then he says an interesting thing. “I think men have this hubris of wanting to create life. We try to create life out of matter.”

    ‘Hubris’ is one of those words like ‘semiotics’ and ‘insurance’ that I’ve heard a lot but didn’t really know what it meant for a long time (I’m still struggling with ‘insurance’). I look up ‘hubris’ when I get to back to my hotel. It means excessive pride or arrogance. In classical literature it’s usually a precursor to, and the cause of, a character’s downfall. The legend of Icarus is a good example. With that one word Hod has encapsulated the two defining criticisms aimed at Artificial Intelligence research. On one end there are those who say we’ll never create a truly artificial intelligence and that we’re arrogant to believe we can. On the other there those who worry we will build smart machines and in our arrogance be blind to the danger that they will one day do away with or enslave us. (There are more measured positions in between the two such as Hubert Dreyfus’s and Hod’s own – both of who suggest that a lot of AI research has been in the wrong direction).

    Hod doesn’t believe in the latter James Cameron-esque scenario, but sees a confederacy of man and machine. He has some sympathy for the ‘singularity hypothesis’ of Ray Kurzweil (who I’m interviewing early next year) which talks of a ‘merger of our biological thinking and the existence of our technology’ but doesn’t see a machine-human hybrid (Juan Enriquez’s Homo Evolutis) as the only scenario. “Merging could also mean intellectually merging, meaning that they explain stuff to us.”

    Lipson became famous (in robotic circles) for his work building robots that are arguably self aware. His Starfish robot, which I see sitting forlornly on a shelf in his lab, is iconic for learning to walk from first principles. It wasn’t given a program that told it how to move its various motors and joints to achieve locomotion. Instead Lipson gave it a program that enabled it to learn about itself – and use this knowledge to subsequently work out how to move.

    “The essential thing was it created a self image,” Lipson tells me. “It created that self image through physical experimentation. So it moved its motors, it sensed its motion and then it created various models of what it thought it might look like – ‘maybe I’m a snake? maybe I’m a spider?’ We told it to create models – multiple different explanations that might explain what it knows so far.”

    The robot then stress-tested those models by sending them into competition with each other. “It creates an experiment for itself that focuses on the area where there’s the most disagreement between what the models predict. We put in the code to look for disagreements,” explains Hod.

    For example, let’s say the robot is wondering which move to do next in order to learn about itself more. It could try a movement that, when completed, the models all predict it will be sitting at an angle of about 20 degrees. One model might predict 19 degrees, another 21 degrees, a third 21.2 degrees. However, if it tries another move the models have very different ideas about the result. One says the robot will be at an angle of 12 degrees, another predicts 25 degrees, a third says 45. This latter movement is more likely to be the one the robot chooses next, because it will learn the most from it, and get an idea of which model is closer to the truth. It’s where there’s most disagreement that there’s most to learn. “We tell it ‘you create models – multiple different explanations for what you see – and then look for what new experiment creates disagreement between predictions of these candidate hypotheses,” says Lipson “That’s the bottom line of curiosity”.

    The models that do best ‘survive’ and the program kills off the others. The remaining models ‘give birth’ to a generation of slightly mutated tweaked versions of themselves and another round of ‘survival of the fittest’ ensues. Or to put it another way, over many iterations the program hones in on a model that describes reality. The predictions get closer and closer to what actually happens until one model is deemed sufficient for the robot to say ‘this is what I look like’.

    If all this talk of ‘mutation’, successive ‘generations’ and ‘survival of the fittest’ sounds slightly familiar that’s because this kind of mathematics takes its inspiration from Darwin’s theories of evolution. Mathematicians might call it ‘reductive symbology’ or say Lipson’s work is a good example of ‘genetic algorithms’ – and it’s a technique that’s been around for decades. What’s different about Lipson’s work is the implementation, something he calls ‘co-evolution’.

    “We set off two lines of enquiry. So one of them is the thing that creates models and the other is the thing asks questions, and they have a predator/ prey kind of relationship. Because the questions basically try to break the models.” The questions try to find something the models disagree about so they can kill off the weaker ones. It’s like Anne Robinson in code.

    It has to be said that if you see the Starfish robot ‘walking’ you wouldn’t immediately think it had a future career as a dancer. It doesn’t so much walk as stagger and flop forward. It’s less Ginger Rogers and more gin and tonic. Still the achievement is not to be sniffed at. It had no parents and no role models. This was a robot actively learning to do something no one had taught it to. And robots that learn this way have all sort of interesting possibilities – as Lipson was about to find out.

    You can see Hod’s demonstrating his starfish robot in this TED talk.

    With colleague Michael Schmidt he wondered if the same computer program he’d placed at the core of his Starfish robot could go beyond working out merely what its host body looked like and begin to reach useful conclusions about the wider world.

    “We said ‘let’s take it out of this particular body and let it control motors of any experiment’ ”.  Their first idea was to give the robot brain control of motors that set up the starting position for a ‘double pendulum’ before letting it fall. The robot was also able to record the results of each experiment using motion capture technology – allowing it to accurately record the pendulum’s motion.

    A double pendulum is a bonkers little contraption. It consists of two solid sticks jointed together in the middle by a free moving hinge. Double pendulums do wacky things (You can see one in action here). Whilst the top pendulum swings from left to right the bottom one likes to mix it up. Because it’s not attached to a stationary point (like the top pendulum) but something moving (the bottom end of that swinging top pendulum) it will swing left, swing right, spin round clockwise, or counter clockwise, seemingly at random. Lipson and Schmidt chose the double pendulum because it’s a good example of a system that’s simple to set up but which can quickly exhibit chaotic behaviour – and therefore would be a good test of the technology’s ability to build a useful conceptual model of what was going on. The results were startling. In fact, the program went a long way to deriving the laws of motion. In 3 hours.

    It followed the same process as it had when it sat in the robot – guessing at equations that might explain what it had seen so far, then setting up new experiments (in this case new starting positions for the pendulum) that targeted areas of most disagreement between the equations. “With the double pendulum it very quickly puts it up exactly upright, because some models say it’s going to fall left and some models say it’s going to fall right. There’s disagreement. It’s not a passive algorithm that sits back, watching,” says Hod smiling. “It asks questions. That’s curiosity.”

    Just like humans, it seems machines learn best when they ask their own questions and find their own answers, rather than being given huge amounts of data to absorb. “Most algorithms you see are passive. They’re data intensive. You feed in terabytes of data and these algorithms just sit back and watch. But in the real world you can’t sit back and watch. You have to probe, because collecting data is expensive, it takes time, it’s risky.” By constrast Lipson’s machine brain “only ever sees what it asks for. It does not see all the data.” In fact Lipson decided to compare the efficiency of this ‘active’ method of enquiry against a more traditional passive ‘here’s all the data, what can you tell me?’ method. “It doesn’t work. It has go through a reasoning.”

    Remind you of anyone? I see the hemlock taker and the chicken freezer partially re-incarnated in machine form. The programming consigns inaccurate models to the dustbin by getting the robot to admit there are others that offer a better explanation of the real world  (hello Socrates) and does this with evidence won via experimentation (hello Bacon). What Lipson has done is create a computational methodology for asking good questions. And asking good questions is what it is all about when it comes to understanding anything.

    “Physicists like Newton and Kepler could have used a computer running this algorithm to figure out the laws that explain a falling apple or the motion of the planets with just a few hours of computation,” said Schmidt in an interview with the US National Science Foundation (who helped fund the research).

    However, we’re still a long way off what I (or Hod) would call an intelligent machine. It still takes a human to work out if anything the machine has found is useful. The machine didn’t know it had found laws of motion, it took Hod and his colleagues to recognise the equations that were produced. “A human still needs to give words and interpretation to laws found by the computer,” says Schmidt. So, we’re still some distance from Hod’s confederacy of man and machine, where they explain stuff to us.

    One of the areas Hod’s brains could turn out useful is cracking problems where there is lots of data, but we still have little idea what’s going on. Indeed plenty of people with acres of data have been beating a path to his door including heavyweight data generators like the Large Hadron Collider at CERN near Geneva. “The people as CERN said ‘there is this gap in a prediction of particle energy. Here’s data for 3,000 particles. Can you predict something?’ ” The result was a strange mix of elating and disappointing. “We let it run and it came up with a beautiful formula,” says Hod. “We were very excited but it was a famous formula they already knew. So for them it was a disappointment…. But for us… We rediscovered something that people are famous for.”

    Again, the crucial insight comes from humans who can tell if something means anything or not. It’s the crucial step – and without it the results are largely worthless (which is not to say the time saved is not incredibly useful). I’m reminded of a scene from Douglas Adams’ comedy The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy in which a supercomputer called Deep Thought is built by a race of supersmart humanoids to answer the ultimate question. ‘What is the answer?’ ask the humanoids awaiting instant enlightenment. ‘To what?’ says the computer. ‘Life! The Universe! Everything!’ they respond. ‘The ultimate question!’ The computer announces there is an answer… but it will take several million years to compute. At the duly allotted time millennia later the humanoid’s descendants gather to hear the answer, which is announced to be ‘42’. The problem, suggests Deep Thought, is that they don’t really know what ‘the question’ is.

    "You're not going to like it"

    "You're not going to like it"

    No-one understands the irony in this story more than Hod Lipson. “In biology there are many systems where we do not know their dynamics or the rules that they obey”. So he set his machine looking at a process within a cell. True to form the program generated an equation in double quick time. But what did it mean?

    “We’re still looking at it,” says Hod with a smile. “We’re staring at it very intently. But we still don’t have an explanation. And we can’t publish until we don’t know what it is.”

    “You don’t understand what it’s saying?

    “No,” says Hod.

    “But in science you go from observations which produce data, to models which produce predictions, to underlying laws – and from there you go to meaning. What’s good is that we can go from data straight to laws, whereas previously people could only go from data to predictions. So now a scientist can throw it some data, go and have a cup of coffee, come back and see 15 different models that might explain what is going on. That saves a lot of time. Previously coming up with a predictive model could take a career. Now at least you can automate that so you can focus on meaning.” That’s a powerful enabling technology. More time to think. Hod is doing for thinking what dishwashers have done for after  dinner conversation. Although it may not always work out that way.

    Several months later I e-mail Hod to see if they’ve got anywhere with the equation his machine generated from the cell-observing experiment. “We’re still struggling,” he writes “We’ve been trying for months to get the AI to explain it to us through analogy. But we don’t get it.” It could be that Hod’s machine has discovered something our human brains are just not smart enough to see. “Maybe it’s hopeless,” he says “Like explaining Shakespeare to a dog.” This is why Hod is trying to convince his collaborators to publish the equation anyway – and see if anybody else out there can shed light on its meaning.

    "Shakespeare? It's above me."

    "Friends, Romans... Hey! Is that a biscuit?!"

    Because Hod is curious about what makes us curious I ask him if his program could come up with a model of how to learn.

    “Could we use your program to observe data about how machines learn, or how people learn, and come up with a model of learning?”

    We’re getting seriously abstract now.

    Hod laughs. “That’s what we’re working on now. We’re working on what we call self reflective systems. We want to make machines meta-cognitive – they are thinking about thinking.”

    This is something of a departure from a lot of AI research. “Almost all the AI systems program a way of thinking and they do that thinking for you – which is the extent of it. You could argue that’s about as smart as a lizard. But if you want to get to human-like intelligence, you need a brain that can think about thinking…”

    Sadly (for this blog) Hod’s work in this area is currently unpublished so out of courtesy I’m leaving a more detailed explanation of what we discussed until the book is published. In summary however, Hod is taking his model of ‘co-evolutionary AI’ to the next level. Instead of modeling robot physiology, the motion of pendulums or data from physicists in Switzerland he has one robot brain trying to model how another one learns – and then, in true Lipson style, he’s asking one to challenge the other – in order to find out more. In this way one brain builds a model of how the other learns, and can start to make helpful suggestions.

    “That’s self reflection,” says Hod. He adds, “That’s important in life. You can learn things the hard way, or you can think about how you’ve been thinking.”

    It’s something you can imagine Socrates or Bacon saying.

  • September22nd

    Today I take a five hour bus ride to the Ithaca campus of Cornell University, in preparation for my interview with Robotics and Artificial Intelligence researcher Hod Lipson, but not before eating the worst pizza in the world. My bus leaves from the Cornell Club on 44th Street, but having arrived three quarters of an hour before departure I decide to grab a bite to eat. This ranks as one of the worst decisions of my life, up there with asking out my landlady, arguing with security at the US embassy in London and agreeing to see Jimmy Nail live. There was once a rumour that Frank Zappa ate a shit on stage, which wasn’t true. As Frank pointed out, “the closest I ever came to eating shit anywhere was at a Holiday Inn buffet in Fayetteville, North Carolina, in 1973.” I don’t know how bad that Holiday Inn buffet really was, but I suggest it has stiff competition in the form of the Europa Café on 5th Avenue.

    Cornell’s Ithaca campus is beautiful. This part of town sits over one of the 100-plus verdant gorges that the city is famous for, along with a brace of impressive 19th Century Architecture dating from the College’s formation.

    Idyllic Ithaca

    Idyllic Ithaca

    There’s plenty of greenery and open spaces too and throngs of students wander about in a fantasy of American College life, their books clutched to their chests as they laugh, flirt and learn in equal measure. I feel incredibly old. And of course I am. It’s a fact that I’m over the twice the age of about 90% of the people I walk past. Another unequivocal fact is that there’s no shortage of students smoking weed at Cornell. I know this not because I see any toking on a huge bifter but because I find the Insomnia Cookies store advertising “Warm Cookies Delivered Late Night”.

    Like, you know, like, wow, I'm kinda hungry

    Like, you know, like, wow, I'm kinda hungry

    It is a store designed to perfectly service ‘The Munchies’ – and where better to put it than smack bang in the middle of a college campus? It’s a neat business model – and I subsequently find out that Insomnia Cookies has outlets on 18 university campuses throughout the states. Retail is all about location. I’m giggling uncontrollably as I walk past, which but for my age probably makes me look like a potential customer.

  • September21st

    I wake with a not insubstantial hangover. Colin’s tiny shower offers little solace for my aching head, but slowly I return to normality and head into Manhattan to meet Rachel Holtzman, my US publisher at Penguin Avery for lunch. This is the first time I’ve met Rachel in person, although we’ve had many phone conversations since she bought the American rights for the book (demonstrating her obvious good taste and intelligence).

    There’s an easy, but steely calm to Rachel. If she were an animal she’d be a swan, a powerful grace that I suspect, if necessary, could quite quickly become formidable, but rarely has a need to. “I don’t have trouble with many authors,” she says, “but some do turn out to be stealth assholes.” I laugh. I’m looking forward to working with her. She just seems, well, solid.

    I’m full of excitement about the book and talk hurriedly and a little disconnectedly about everything I’ve been discovering (there is so much in my head it’s still a little jumbled up). It’s pouring out of me in a less than coherent fashion, not helped I’m sure by the bath of red wine and beer I subjected my neurons to the previous evening. On the basis of this I suspect Rachel may be thinking ‘If he talks like this, then God alone knows how much editing his writing will need.’

    One thing that does concern me is the proposed publication date for the book, a whole 18 months after I’m due to deliver my manuscript. I’m worried this may compromise its grasp of the zeitgeist. For instance, there’s a very high possibility that synthetic life will have been created by the time the book hits the stores, yet my manuscript will read as if it hasn’t happened. Sub-orbital tourists will likely be in space by the time you can buy a book that describes them as a near-future possibility. Advances in machine learning (already moving faster than I had expected) may have delivered headlines in the time between the delivery of my manuscript and publication that will make my work seem, well, behind the curve (hardly good for a book about the future). I’m struck by how fast everything I am investigating is moving, and how slow book publishing seems in comparison.

    Ideally I’d like the book out before Christmas 2010 but both Penguin and Profile (my publishers outside the US) are talking of mid-late 2011. It seems impossibly far away, but there are a number of good reasons for the delay. There is the process of working with my editors to hone the manuscript – an experience I’m rather looking forward too (I tend to work better with a sounding board). There is the need to consider marketing strategies, design book covers, and schedule promotional activities. The various TV, radio shows, book fairs etc that will form part of my promotional duties need to be approached and slots booked well in advance. In the end, the speed of publication is largely dependent on the quality of my initial manuscript. The closer it is to the mark, the easier it is for Rachel and Mark (Ellingham, my publisher at Profile) to expedite its route to market.

    All that said, I’m feeling that the book will be a lot more about ethics, attitudes and moral frameworks than I had previously thought. These themes are perennial, and if I weave them well into the text, it should remain ‘current’ whatever the publication date. Indeed, Juan Enriquez’s As the Future Catches You is largely out of date, in terms of the statistics and studies he quotes, but the intellectual and moral issues he asks us to consider have a ongoing resonance. Perhaps I’m worrying too much…

    I spend the early part of the afternoon walking down the west side of Manhattan spending time in Rockefeller Park and watching yachts sail up the Hudson. On one I see an advert for ‘America’s only gay sailing tea dance’ – surely one of the few businesses where a single supplier can saturate the market. Seriously, how many gay sailing tea dances can one economy support? Wandering into the island I hit a sea of humanity, a wall of intent. Everyone has something to do in New York, somewhere to go, someone to see, something to be getting on with. I too have an appointment, with neuroscientist René Hen.

    René is the head of Colin’s neuroscience lab at Columbia University Hospital where his team research Stem Cell Biology and the ‘Neurobiology of Learning and Memory’. He’s also incredibly French. Immediately you know you’re in the presence of someone with a wildly playful spirit. It goes beyond the kind of comic book Gaelic exuberance you might imagine (although he has this in abundance). It’s a look in his eyes. They’re bright from deep within as if little pinpricks of pure inspiration are burning somewhere behind the retina. He smiles easily, laughs easier. He wears his brains like a great musician wears his instrument, not as a badge of honour, or a mark of their profession – but as something they just have a great deal of fun with.

    René Hen - impossibly French

    René Hen - impossibly French

    I ask René how he got into neuroscience. He laughs. “Um… it was my experience with magic mushrooms a long time ago. The idea a tiny amount of this discrete compound could have such a powerful behavioural effect was interesting. You take half of a mushroom and you get effects that are pretty profound and last for hours…”

    “In fact they’ll turn you into a neuroscientist,” I say.

    “Yes! But beyond that I thought that a lot of the mystery had gone out of biology and immunology. Then, and now, the biggest mysteries lie in the brain. That was the other attraction.”

    The problem with neuroscience, to put it bluntly, is it’s bloody complicated. One of the reasons ‘the biggest mysteries lie in the brain’ is that it is an inordinately complex piece of kit. There are, for instance, 400 miles of blood vessels and100 billion nerve cells in that jellylike mass of fat and protein sat inside your head (that’s approximately the same as the number of stars in the galaxy). Trying to understand the interplay of all that cognitive wetware is a mammoth task. Isolating and studying specific in-brain systems or processes is hard to do, akin to trying to concentrate on a single shade of blue throughout a picture of the entire ocean.

    For many years neuroscience made use of those unfortunate enough to have suffered a brain injury or ‘lesion’ as a way to try and understand how the whole system worked, the method of deduction roughly being, ‘well it seems if you take that chunk of the brain out then the patient loses the ability understand basic social etiquette’ (this is actually a direct quote from a physician looking at a brain scan of Boris Johnson).  The brain is not divided into neat departments. As René says, “you can lesion many parts of the brain and get similar behavioural deficits, say in memory or mood. Or, you can lesion one part of the brain and get a particular behavioural outcome, but there could be 50 reasons for it.” Similarly, even though the genetic mutations that are related to diseases like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s or Huntington’s are long identified we still don’t understand how these mutations eventually lead to behaviour we see in patients. There’s just too many variables to consider in the way the brain develops and compensates for us to have a model of how these diseases develop. “If you have a mutation early on, you have the whole cascade of developmental compensations, re-wiring afterwards, and at the end there is no way to trace it back to the mutation,” says René. At least not yet.

    Trying to ask specific questions about brain chemistry and physiology is a bit like asking my mum about whether she enjoyed her dinner. “Well, I had fish, which reminds me that there was a great deal on fish at Sainsburies this Saturday, which I found out from talking to Beryl, you remember Beryl? we met her on holiday in Greece and it turned out she lived just down the road in Dunchurch, where by the way the statue in the square was hit by a car, it was in the paper, front page, did you know your brother’s bought a new car…?” (My mum does an amazing thing. She will eventually tell you if she enjoyed her dinner and in the process of getting there will tie up any loose ends she’s left hanging during her tangential asides. It all comes together like the video of an explosion being played in reverse.)

    Because the physiology of the brain is not unlike my mum’s method of answering a questions (everything is related to everything else) isolating useful lines of enquiry is quite hard. You need to get rid of a lot of ‘noise’. This is why when I visit Colin’s bit of the lab (which I have to say needs a damn good tidy up!) he is peering at individual rat neurons under his microscope. Neuroscience is now a largely ‘bottom up’ profession. When neuroscientists therefore find a system that seems to behave in a predictable way within the brain they get excited. Neurogenesis – the ability of the brain to generate new neurons is one such system.

    That our brains generate new brain cells still comes as a surprise to a lot of people, even though it’s been 20 years since neurogenesis was discovered occurring in the hippocampus (a part of the brain associated with long term memory and spatial awareness).  “The dogma was that no new neurons are added in the mature brain,” says René..

    (Another popular myth is that alcohol kills brains cells. Roberta Pentney, professor of anatomy and cell biology at the University at Buffalo concluded it doesn’t, but it does hamper the ability of your brain cells to communicate – although the effects are not permanent. René, I notice has a fine selection of beers and spirits sat on his desk).

    “For some reason we still don’t understand anti-depressants stimulate the production of young neurons – neurogenesis – in the hippocampus,” says René. “So here we have a form of brain plasticity that’s very easy to manipulate, it’s a cell type that’s very unique, you only find it in the hippocampus and maybe one other area. So it’s a window into a brain function. In a sense nature gave us a tool here.”

    “Almost a little laboratory in the brain?” I ask

    “Exactly.”

    You can stimulate neurogenesis yourself. Exercise, learn something new. ‘Enrichment’ says René is good for your brain. “It’s probably a good idea to have more of these neurons,” he says. “We actually don’t know for sure how much more is good though”.

    The discovery and understanding of neurogenesis offers hope to those battling neurodegenerative disorders. If we can learn to switch on the process, coaxing stem cells in the brain to become neurons then we may be able to reverse the damage done to memory by Alzheimer’s, or to repair brain damage caused by more direct means (say a head injury or listening to James Blunt).

    Warning. May contain Andrew Lloyd Webber.

    Warning. May contain Andrew Lloyd Webber.

    “There are stem cells all over the brain,” says Rene. “So even though there are only two niches where neurogenesis is taking place in normal conditions you could wake them up in other parts of the brain. We know that they are elsewhere because if you lesion other parts of the brain, you can get neurogenesis there. So clearly the stem cells are there or are recruited from outside. Theoretically you could treat any neurodegenerative disease. Or a spinal cord injury. Or a cortical injury. That’s something that’s still science fiction but I would not be surprised if we can achieve that.”

    “That’s an incredibly exciting proposition?”

    “Yes, it is very exciting. The interest in this area is enormous.”

    My time with René is up, but I’ve been invigorated by talking to him. He’s like a cross between Winnie the Pooh, Jean Reno and Albert Einstein. That’s a compliment.

    Colin takes me to the pub with another neuroscientist, Clay, who I am reliably informed is ‘beyond clever’. We drink Guinness and talk about girls.

  • September20th

    New York. It’s not the architecture, or the hustle, or even the simple excitement of being somewhere different than home, it’s a feeling. To quote Billy Joel, I’m in a New York State of Mind. London, Paris, Swindon, New York. They’re all the kind of cities that feel like the penultimate chapter in a epic narrative, a story that somehow never ends but is always heading somewhere. (OK, I was joking about Swindon.)

    I sit in a park on the East bank of the East River directly opposite the United Nations, where this Wednesday president Mohamed Nasheed of the Maldives (one of my upcoming interviewees) will deliver a speech about the need for action on climate change. Not one of the 1190 islands that make up the Maldives is more than six feet above sea level. So as the planet warms and the seas expand the risk is that they’ll be less and less of the Maldives to see.

    Colin and I talk about his work as a neuroscientist and for the first time since I’ve known him I actually understand a lot of what he is taking about. All the research I’ve been doing for my interviews with George Church and Juan Enriquez has given me a small window into Colin’s world, and I like him even more. Colin is trying to get to the bottom of how memory works, and specifically how to cure or prevent diseases that affect our ability to recall things, notably Alzheimer’s. That makes him a hero in my world. He offers to introduce me to the head of his laboratory, René Hen, and I eagerly accept.

    NY city hero - Colin O'Carrol

    NY city hero - Colin O'Carrol

    Sunday evening and New York comes up trumps in the form of Lounge 47, a bar in Long Island I take myself to while Colin is trying (and so nearly succeeding) to get laid. I get chatting to the bar staff and clientele. Allie, who pours my pints turns, out to be a contemporary dancer and reminds me strongly of a significant ex – the same quiet intelligence and elegant poise. Caitlin (or ‘Sudsy’ as everyone seems to call her) is a sociologist. Allie’s boyfriend, Maurycy Banaszek joins us and turns out to be a charming and brilliant Viola player. The clients include Adrian, a videographer and one of the funniest men I’ve met in any city. It’s not that he cracks gags, he just talks like a good observational comic. “I still do a double take when I see Obama and I’m black, right? You know, it’s like seeing a woman cab driver. It’s not wrong, it’s just unusual”.

    ‘You should do stand-up,’ I suggest.

    ‘Too scary,’ he says.

    ‘That’s a reason to do it,’ I argue.

    Another customer Roland, a local entrepreneur, is deeply interested in the book and we have a long chat about the interplay of government and society. “Congress should review the constitution every year as their first action,” he says. “It’d keep their minds on the big picture and keep our politics fresh.” It’s not a bad idea in principle.

    This is New York, where you can walk into a regular bar and find a dancer, a musician, a stand-up in waiting and conversation enough for a month. I have a brilliant evening with a bunch of strangers. Allie, ever the diligent barwoman, makes sure my glass never runs dry. By the time I leave Lounge 47 I doubt I could even count to 47.

  • September18th

    Flanked by dudes - Wally Broecker (L) and Klaus Lackner (R)

    Flanked by dudes (L - Wally Broecker, R - Klaus Lackner)

    Today I meet Wally Broecker and Klaus Lackner, arguably two of the most important men on the planet. Wally, a “towering scientist”, has played a crucial role in alerting us to, and helping us understand global warming… and Klaus has developed a technology that can help reverse its effects. Wally isn’t always happy with how he’s described. “Of late, I’ve become known as the first person to use the words ‘global warming’. If my career has boiled down to that it’s a big failure”.

    My journey today starts with a weekly ticket for the New York subway which, by happy coincidence, has the word ‘Optimism’ printed on the back of it. First stop: Klaus’s 10th floor office at Columbia University (the building, inexplicably smells of ham sandwiches). Klaus is giving me lift to Wally’s office at the leafy campus of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, an institution dedicated to studying the planet at a ‘big picture’ level (understanding ‘earth-wide’ systems and how they interact).

    In the short time I have in Klaus’ beat up car it becomes abundantly clear he has a deeply analytical mind, inherited perhaps from his lawyer father who worked to build a fair judiciary in Germany after World War II. But as well as a scientist’s need for clarity there’s an empathy for the ambiguities of the human condition. As we cross the George Washington Bridge Klaus recalls in his perfect but slightly accented English the traumatic effects of conflict on his older relatives. Perhaps this gives some clue as to why Klaus isn’t just an ‘ivory tower’ theoretician. Like his father Klaus is determined to do, not just think. “I have an engineering bent,” he says. “So I’m not just looking at how and why things work, but how one can make things work. I’m very much interested in how to build things.” The world may one day be very glad that Klaus is like that.

    Before meeting Klaus I’d had time to wander around Columbia’s beautiful Manhattan campus. On Schermerhorn Hall I find the inscription “For the advancement of the Natural Science speak to the Earth and it shall teach thee”.

    Speak to the Earth

    If Wally wanted a better summary of his career than “the first person to use the words ‘global warming’ ” this might be it. He’s been speaking to the Earth and listening to its replies since 1952. In a dialogue that’s now lasted over 55 years the Earth and Wally have enjoyed a long chat, the latter always listening hard and famously discovering, amongst other things, Thermohaline circulation – often referred to as the ocean’s ‘conveyor belt’, a global pattern of shifting water that spans the globe.

    “I think the greatest pleasure is beating nature to one of her secrets,” Wally tells me later. “I’m an ‘inverse engineer’ in a sense. We have an Earth system and I’m trying to work out how it’s put together. Most engineers go the other way. They design a system and build it.”

    As Klaus and I approach Wally’s office I find a playful summary one of those conversations with the planet. Pinned to the wall outside his office is a huge furry pink and blue toy snake, underneath which a piece of paper bears the words, “I am the climate beast and I am angry!” It’s arguably Wally’s favourite metaphor. His assertion that “The climate is an angry beast and we are poking it with sticks,” is one of the most quoted summaries of our problems with Carbon Dioxide (CO2 being the ‘stick’ in question).

    Climate Beast goes Hannah Barbara

    Climate Beast goes Hannah Barbera

    At 78 Wally has a charmingly curmudgeonly manner that seems to have little time for indulging in niceties with visiting authors (“What are you doing here? You’re writing a book? Oh yes, I have some vague recollection”). But as our conversation progresses you begin to understand there’s good humour underneath. Wally likes to play. In fact, he has a long-standing reputation as a prankster, and is rather disappointed that his students aren’t equally mischievous. (Many of the professors I’ve been meeting see pranks as a good thing – a sign of creativeness and the playful spirit needed to ask new questions, devise experiments and think laterally).

    One of his own favourite pranks was, with the help of colleague Dorothy Peteet, jacking up the car of the normally calm George Kukla (another Lamont staffer) and placing it carefully on cinder blocks just a mite bigger than the normal gap between the chassis and the ground. When George tried to drive off his wheels spun impotently. The normally calm research scientist lost his cool, not least because he was entertaining “a very important man from China, one of the first Chinese visitors that came here.” Wally laughs. “We asked him whether Chinese did pranks like that and he said: ‘Only small children’ ”. He smiles and laughs again. Another favourite is a college escapade where Wally and friends captured the senior class president, locked him in a cage and hosed him with water. Rather unnecessarily Wally adds, “We didn’t like him much”. Of today’s generation of students Wally laments, “They’re too serious. There was one student who bought a dozen eggs and pitched them at my window. But that wasn’t a prank. He was just fed up with me”.

    Our meeting takes place in the Gary C. Comer Geochemistry Building, whose recent completion prompted Wally’s first office move in decades. Gary Comer was a successful businessman and keen yachtsman (with a particular interest in arctic waters) who wrote to Wally in 2002 after navigating the Northwest Passage, untroubled by ice.

    If you’re not familiar with the Northwest Passage the brief summary is this. For the best part of 400 hundred years European nations (and in particular Britain) launched scores of missions to try and find a navigable path through the Canadian Artic. The prize would be a sea route thousands of miles shorter (and therefore considerably cheaper) to China and the Far East. In commercial terms the rumoured Northwest Passage was a prize worth fighting and dying for. Indeed, many of those who went never came back. The stories are horrific – ships trapped in the ice for up to five years, decimated crews limping back in damaged craft, the disappearance of entire missions and, it is now largely acknowledged, cannibalism. Ice thwarted nearly every attempt. Others were scuppered by madness, mutiny and politics – before the ice could get them. In the end the passage was navigated in 1906 by Roald Amundsen, in the tiny, shallow hulled Gjøa. It was concluded that for anything but the tiniest vessels the Northwest Passage did not exist. (For a fuller history of the Northwest Passage, which I wrote for the National Maritime Museum go here.)

    In 2001 Comer and his crew decided to see if they could take his 151 foot motor yacht Turmoil through the passage, expecting to fail and having the safety of a sea plane on hand should they get into real difficulty. But despite the fact they were on one of the largest private yachts in the world Turmoil’s crew sailed right through in just 19 days with hardly any ice to bother them. Rather than being jubilant, Comer became deeply concerned. Global warming, it seemed, was already making some very real changes to the planet. Today, several large commercial ships have made the same journey. The ice barrier, at least for large parts of the year, has gone. For those who’ve studied climate change, or the history of the Northwest Passage, that is an incredible and incendiary fact.

    If you’ve suddenly been awakened to the reality of climate change and want to find out more, as Comer did, it won’t be long until you come across the name Wally Broecker. He’s variously described as “the Grandfather of Climate Science”, “one of the world’s greatest living geoscientists” and is the recipient of a brace of awards, which if listed would make your eyes glaze over, but include the US National Medal of Science and the Tyler prize (awarded annually “for environmental science, energy and medicine conferring great benefit on mankind.”) Smart chap. (That Wally chooses to hang out with Klaus is no small endorsement). Comer began dedicating what was left of his life to funding climate research projects (sadly he died from prostate cancer in 2006). Under Wally’s guidance he donated large parts of his fortune (built from the Lands End mail order clothing company) straight to respected scientists – as well as putting up the cash to erect the building I am now sitting in.

    Gary Comer Building

    The Gary Comer Building - Wally's office is at the front

    When Wally talks about climate, people listen. He insists the warming we’re seeing now is fundamentally different to historical shifts in the climate. In summary he says, “It’s bigger and faster”.

    A lot of people find the idea of manmade global warming hard to grasp – so called ‘climate sceptics’. Some argue that climate scepticism is driven by vested interests (those for instance represented by the oil industry), or by an unwillingness on the part of consumers who worry that accepting climate change will mean having forego energy-rich lifestyles. Those who don’t accept the prevailing scientific consensus can be vilified as selfish or simply burying their heads in the sand. My own feeling is that ‘man in the street’ climate scepticism is as much a function of not really understanding how global warming works as willful short-sightedness. I think it’s genuinely hard to believe in something you can’t personally make sense of, and not everyone has a scientific learning. Even one of the Twentieth Century’s greatest minds, physicist Richard Feynman famously said, “What I cannot create, I do not understand” meaning, “if I don’t know how it works, I don’t buy it”. And with a media that tends to report science with the same diligence that David Letterman studies employment legislation, it’s no wonder a lot us wonder if manmade climate change is really happening at all. But however you slice it, the fact is more CO2 means more warming, and most of the CO2 put into the atmosphere in the last 150 years has been put there by you and me using energy created by burning fossil fuels.

    This naturally begs the question ‘what are we going to do about it?’ As I see it there are four options. Do nothing. Cut CO2 emissions. Try to engineer counter-measures that will produce a counteracting cooling effect (this is generally called ‘Geo-engineering’ of which the wackiest idea is launching large mirrors into orbit) or invest in Klaus Lackner. Because Klaus has done something extraordinary.

    Klaus’ team has built a machine that strips CO2 out of the ambient air. Or to put it another way, on one side of Klaus’ machine is air that contains current levels of CO2 and on the other is air with roughly the same amount of CO2 in it as was present before the Industrial Revolution. “We got money from Gary Cromer and spent the last 5 years in Tucson, Arizona proving that this works,” says Lackner, the ‘we’ in question being Klaus and two brothers, brought to the table by Wally, Allen and Burt Wright (another set of Wright Brothers experimenting with air who may well go down in history).

    Think about this for a second. Klaus’ technology can begin to reclaim the CO2 we’ve been putting out, which is good news because the oceans and the land can’t sequester it fast enough to keep up with our prodigious output. This isn’t about reducing emissions, it’s about treating emissions in the same way we treat sewage. It’s a crucial component in a CO2 processing infrastructure for the planet.

    It isn’t the whole answer (although with enough of Lackner’s machines it arguably could be). “If you’ve built a coal plant with carbon capture in mind I can’t compete with that,” says Klaus. He’s clear that capturing carbon at source is the cheapest way to curb CO2 concentrations. But even if every power station suddenly became a zero-emitter of carbon tomorrow there are plenty of other places pumping it out, especially in the transport sector, which accounts for nearly a quarter of the world’s emissions. As Klaus points out, “an airplane has a hard job running on electricity”. A further ten percent comes from building heating systems. You cannot capture this CO2 ‘at source’ (the power station or oil refinery) and as the tax on carbon emissions inevitably rises, air capture may offer some emitters the best option for offsetting the CO2 they’re contributing to the atmosphere. And let’s not forget the huge amounts of the CO2 we’ve already emitted is still hanging around and needs to be dealt with too.

    The Lackner/ Broecker position is that creating waste isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Not dealing with it is the bad thing. Nobody suggests you stop going to the toilet, but we did install sewage systems once we began to suffer the numerous epidemics that lots of human waste visited on (especially) city-dwelling populations. (In the UK it was actually the fact that parliament got unbearably stinky, being next to the open sewer that was the Thames, that finally moved the legislators to action – a worrying parallel that has a resonance with how governments are behaving in response to climate change today). In short, we stopped adding to the pollution problem, but could still go to the toilet. You’ll find few people arguing against sewers and sewerage treatment today (and if you do, don’t accept a dinner invitation from them).

    A good idea

    A good idea

    Lackner’s carbon scrubbers are one option for treating our ‘carbon sewage’. It makes impossibly simple sense. What’s more Klaus’ machine isn’t just an idea on paper. Lackner’s self-confessed ‘engineering bent’ has delivered a working prototype.

    Carbon scrubbers aren’t a new invention. They’ve been used for decades, for instance, in submarines to keep the air breathable. Until recently however, the prevailing wisdom was that such scrubbing technology could not be adapted to remove the relatively small proportion of CO2 in the atmosphere without using up huge amounts of energy. Indeed the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) dismissed Klaus’ work with a single line in a report of carbon capture and sequestration. “The possibility of CO2 capture from ambient air (Lackner, 2003) is not discussed in this chapter because CO2 concentration in ambient air is around 380 parts per million, a factor of 100 or more lower that in flue gas”. In short you’d be nuts to try and find the CO2 needle in the atmosphere haystack. Anything that might work would take up too much energy (and thus add more CO2 to the atmosphere than it removed). Wally had his reservations too. The first time he saw Lackner talk he thought he was nuts. ‘Energetically nuts’ to quote him directly. “Then we had more time to talk, and I immediately tried to hire him.” Lackner was even on the IPCC committee that dismissed his ideas as fanciful, perhaps because at that point he didn’t have a working machine to show them. As with so many things, people have to see it before the believe it. That ‘engineering bent’ was about to come into its own. Lackner, set out to prove his methods could remove CO2 at acceptable levels of energy expenditure, and Wally was right behind him. That’s because Wally believes we’re not going to change over from fossil fuels fast enough to deal with the problem, and that a plan that only focuses on cutting emissions “is going to kill us”.

    “People like Jim Hansen [the NASA climate scientist the Bush administration tried to silence for saying, climate-wise, ‘Houston, we have a problem’] say we’ve got to stop burning coal and that if you can capture and store carbon that just encourages burning coal. We look at it the other way. Coal is there. It’s going to be burned. We better damn well figure out what to do about it.”

    Wally gives an example. “When the G20 met it Italy and said we’re going to stop the warming at two degrees, that’s madness.  That’s 450 parts per million…”

    “… and we’re only ten years away from that concentration of carbon in the atmosphere,” says Klaus, finishing Wally sentence for him (they do this quite a lot to each other, giving an indication of just how attuned they are).

    “There’s no way we can do that. We can’t change over from fossil fuels fast enough,” says Wally. “The world leaders still don’t really get it. That’s why we need air capture.”

    So how do Klaus’ machines work?

    The key component is a hanging gallery of strands of a ‘sorbent’ resin. If you were a chemist you’d call this sorbent sodium hydroxide and (if you were a chemist) you might know that sodium hydroxide will, given almost no provocation, react with CO2 to create another material with the equally catchy name of ‘sodium carbonate’. Even better (CO2 capture wise) this resulting concoction will happily bind with another molecule of CO2, creating sodium bicarbonate (or baking soda to you and me).

    Saving the planet with baking ingredients

    Saving the planet with baking ingredients

    Capturing CO2 though is only one half of the job. Somehow you’ve got to get the CO2 off the sorbent if you want the apparatus to be reusable and therefore cost effective. Restocking the whole shebang with a new supply of sorbent resin makes things prohibitively expensive and energy hungry.

    This is where Lackner’s resin comes into its own, by doing something that even Klaus admits is counter-intuitive. In the presence of water the resin changes its affinity for CO2. In fact it starts to shed its recently collected bounty. The ‘collection’ reaction takes a reverse step, moving from sodium bicarbonate back to sodium carbonate. What this means is that if Klaus pumps water vapour into his machines CO2 from the sorbent will ‘fall off’ the resin and quickly dissolve in the water. Condensing that vapour allows the captured CO2 to bubble out the top, in the same way CO2 bubbles rise to the top of fizzy drinks.

    There’s a kind of sweet poetry to one greenhouse gas (water vapour) collecting up another (CO2). After all, one of the problems with CO2 in the atmosphere is that it encourages more water vapour into the air, thereby amplifying the warming effect. Here, thanks to the chemistry of Lackner’s sorbent, the opposite is happening. Water vapour is being used to call CO2 out of the air (rather than CO2 calling water vapour into it).

    When I ask ‘Can the chemistry of the sorbent be improved further?’ Wally jumps in with a guffaw. “They don’t know how the chemistry works!” he exclaims with boyish joy. In short, Klaus isn’t sure why the water vapour makes his resin give back some of its CO2. “I can tell you for sure what it does. That we can see. But at the moment I can only speculate why it does it. I’ve a good theory, and in the next year we will prove whether I’m right or wrong. One of the reasons I’m excited about where we are right now is we are setting up experiments to understand the chemistry. Once we’ve done that we can engineer the chemistry. It is very unlikely that an adapted off the shelf resin picked by dumb luck will turn out to be the best solution. So I guarantee you these machines will get better.”

    In his office Wally’s points to a sealed tube (next to a can of Dr Fozzes Fart Beans) that contains some of the first CO2 captured by one of Lackner’s early prototypes, a machine that helped to take the ‘energy consumption’ argument against ambient air capture and kick sand in its face. Klaus now says that for every 20 CO2 molecules his machines will put in the atmosphere (if they’re powered by electricity generated from fossil fuels) they’ll take out 100. And he’s just at the beginning of his journey. With investment, experience and improved manufacturing that ratio will improve. (Klaus already has a long list of improvements he wants to research). Which is why it’s scandalous that Klaus has struggled to raise the $20million he estimates he needs to turn his working prototype into a blueprint for a mass manufactured unit.

    “Last summer we started to seriously try and raise money to build a company,” says Klaus. “And then the economy took a nose dive.” Wally makes a bombing noise. “The fact that Klaus has trouble raising money is absurd,” he says, bristling. In fact the two men are reeling from a recent decision by congress to block funding for a research hub dedicated to carbon capture and storage. The amount? $25 million a year for 5 years. Or  0.00016% of the $787 billion the US government pulled out the hat for its American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 – money for stimulating the economy out of the economic crisis. The great irony here is that ambient air carbon capture will likely be a trillion dollar industry.

    Klaus believes his machines can create CO2 cheaper than existing commercial processes. “The US consumes roughly 8 million tonnes of commercial CO2 a year,” he says. “Some of that I believe air capture could be competitive for and so you could push this forward and make it happen without having government support.” There’s a clear commercial model for Klaus’ machines which, says Wally, means they “can be implemented faster” than other solutions. “We have an edge,” says Klaus. “You start small, selling CO2 into the market, improving your technology, and you can be ready before the coal plants have figured out the best way to capture CO2 at source”. One area Klaus sees a clear market is for commercial growers who enrich the atmosphere of their greenhouses with CO2 to generate higher yield crops. “Rather than ship the CO2 in, you create a greenhouse with an air scrubber attached. It’s cheaper, and if you’ve any excess CO2 you can sell to the guy next door”.

    Using current market prices for CO2 and the current efficiencies of his machines Klaus estimates each unit will yield a 15% return on investment, and this is before you take into account the money saved from offsetting your emissions (the cost of which will only rise). “As a business it’s bigger than Exxon Mobil,” Wally suggests.

    It strikes me as ironic that when it comes to saving the financial system governments around the world couldn’t move fast enough to act, citing it as the platform our economies run on, therefore justifying swift and decisive action. Yet there is another platform all the banks run on. It’s called the planet and the social and financial implications of global warming will do more to hamper Wall St. than anything they’ve done to themselves. When, I wonder, did a human-friendly atmosphere not become an infrastructural investment? A back of a napkin calculation suggests that Klaus’ machines could offset all the carbon we pump into the atmosphere each year and start to reclaim the backlog for the equivalent of a 3% tax on car prices for the next 10 years.

    When I first came across Klaus’ work it was one of the most optimistic things I’d heard in years, and I’m an optimist by profession. When I tell people about what’s been going on in Tucson their eyes light up. ‘Really?!’ they say. ‘That’s great. How come I don’t know about this?’ When I tell them he’s finding it hard to get investment they’re dumbfounded.

    “I think it’s built in our nature that if the crisis is tomorrow we’ll jump, we’ll have the adrenaline to do whatever it takes to solve the problem,” says Klaus. “If I told you 50 years ago that what was happening in banking would lead to a meltdown… would we have done anything? We are not good at thinking beyond a 50 year timeframe.”

    I wonder if this is something to do with the length of our lives? Maybe one benefit of increasing life-spans (which I cover in my chapter on Transhumanism in the book) is that we’ll be more inclined to think long term. When you have to clean up your own mess you tend to make less of it.

    There’s no way around it. Klaus is good news for the planet, if he can get the money. Even better news is that he isn’t the only one developing machines that eat carbon out of the air. “I convinced David [Keith – renowned climate scientist] that this air capture stuff works so he now has a competing effort.” Peter Eisenburger, also at Columbia, is attacking the problem as well.

    The more people working on technologies to take back the CO2 we’re putting into the atmosphere the better. Someone has to win Richard Branson’s $25million ‘Earth Prize’ too, which will be awarded to any team that ‘can demonstrate a commercially viable design which results in the removal of anthropogenic, atmospheric greenhouse gases (although I’ve heard concerns that Branson’s ‘prize’ is actually a strategy to buy billion dollar intellectual property at a million dollar price). “Who will actually take it forward is now a horse race,” says Keith.

    Before I left for the US, Klaus was starting to get a little press in the UK. His technology was given the cautious thumbs up from both the Royal Society (a UK based Fellowship of “the most eminent scientists of the day”) and The Institution of Mechanical Engineers. Unfortunately the press hooked onto the term ‘synthetic trees’ for Lackner’s machines. The natural reaction to this from a lot of people was ‘sounds daft, why not plant real trees? They absorb carbon don’t they?’ The answer is that while trees do absorb CO2, they take a long time to do it and also put a lot of it back into the atmosphere when they die and decompose. We’ve poured so much CO2 into the atmosphere since the industrial revolution that trees simply can’t absorb the stuff fast enough, even if we planted billions tomorrow, and even if we could make sure they kept their carbon sequestered after death – perhaps by turning them into biochar (something I’ll investigate when I visit eco-entrepreneur Vicki Buck in New Zealand in November).

    “Let imagine a world in which we suddenly have lots of Lackner scrubbers and you bring the levels of CO2 in the atmosphere down to pre-industrial levels,” I say. “Does the planet start cooling almost immediately, does the warming stop?”

    “We’ve warmed up the ocean and that’s a damper,” says Wally. “That’s holding back the warming of the planet too, because it sucks up a lot of the heat from the atmosphere, but as we cool the planet the ocean’s going to give that heat back, and slow down the cooling process”.

    “The land would give its extra heat back in a couple of days,” explains Klaus, “but the oceans will take decades to give it all back, although you will see it going back down quite fast in the beginning”.

    Of course, we can’t suddenly snap our fingers and fill the world with enough of Klaus machines to offset our carbon emissions. “You can’t do it overnight, but I do believe you could do it in a decade once you know what you are doing,” says Klaus. “So, you have a 30-40 year delay until you are back to normal.”

    Our talk is nearly at an end and I ask how Klaus how he goes about convincing people he’s onto something.

    “The problem I’ve found (and it’s getting bigger all the time) is that I’m suspect to both sides of the debate. The people who make energy or are into coal feel I’m trying to stop them, because I’m saying you’ve got to take climate change seriously and business as usual is not acceptable. On the other side you have people who have some idea of what ‘being green’ means and that allowing people to use fossil fuels and then capturing and putting the CO2 someplace is not acceptable to them.” (The issue of sequestering CO2 raises traditional anti-pollution hackles of many green, ironically hampering experiments that might help us understand the safest and best way to lock it away – a subject I’ll cover in the book)

    “Are traditional environmentalists part of the problem now?” I ask.

    Wally snorts. “Oh yeah”.

    Is he optimistic we can solve the CO2 problem?

    “It’ll be solved. The question is where will CO2 get to before it’s solved?” Or to put it another way, how bad will things have to get? Klaus agrees. “I’m optimistic that ultimately it will be solved. But my view of human nature is that we will not solve it until we get seriously goosed.”

    “Maybe in twenty years when the impacts become obvious we’ll get serious,” says Wally.

    “But let me give you an optimistic view,” says Klaus. “Back in the 90s I was asked ‘how do you see this moving forward?’ and I said, ‘In this decade, the 90s, you will see scientists thinking about it and not much more. The next decade there will be a big political debate and not much more. The decade where steel starts to go into the ground is 2010 onwards. And people get really serious about it between 2020 and 2030. In a way, we are on that track.”

    Wally announces that he has to go for a beer with George Kukla (the car prank obviously long forgotten) and our meeting ends, but not before he shows me a picture of him getting an honourary degree from Cambridge University along with the other 9 recipients that year. One of them is Bill Gates. “Why isn’t he giving you some money?” I ask. “I did send him some stuff but didn’t get a reply. He likes David Keith, that’s why.” I bid Wally goodbye with my thanks and Klaus gives me lift to Dobbs Ferry train station for my trip back to Manhattan. As I get in the car I turn to Klaus and say, “You must be excited?”

    “Oh yeah,” he says. “Oh yeah.”

    As the train makes its early evening journey along the east bank of the Hudson river I watch the multiple reflections of fading sunlight flickering on the water and vow to do whatever I can to advocate for Klaus. But for now my mind is full. By the time I get downtown I need something trivial to refresh me. Colin comes up trumps and takes me and some other friends around a string of Manhattan bars where we drink beer and discuss the relative merits of 80s popsters The Pet Shop Boys and Duran Duran. The latter, I suggest, were more fun and had better songs. Other’s disagree. It’s the kind of conversation I need. Sometimes after a day talking about things that really matter, you need an evening discussing things that don’t.

  • September17th

    Tea

    Posted in: Uncategorized

    I spend today feeling really ill, and it’s not just the wine from the night before (3 glasses over 5 hours is hardly caning it). I think I’m beginning to suffer some kind of information-related malaise. Researching for my interviews, meeting a brace of super-brains, and processing what they are saying (whilst having innumerable new questions piling into my brain) is without doubt a wonderful and inspiring challenge… but I feel like I’ve been asked to compete in some kind of Olympic-level mental Decathlon…. In my short time so far in America I’ve met leading thinkers in robotics, urban development, solar energy, political science and genetics. Before I go home I will meet arguably the world’s two most important climate scientists, a leading neuroscientist and an AI pioneer who’s also building the very first version of Star Trek’s replicator. And I feel sick.

    Still, the good news is that the US has changed in a fundamental and joyous way since I was last here some years ago. Some might argue that America is now better to visit because of Barack Obama’s undoubted diplomatic renaissance. But for me, the most important change is that you can now buy a half decent cup of tea. It’s still not a good cup of Yorkshire Tea and some places still operate the bizarre and barbaric practice of offering you only lemon tea and asking if you want cream or warm milk in it – but these outposts of despair seem to be slowly disappearing, at least on the East Coast. I know one thing, and that is that the future, for me, must include strong tea.

    I spend the day researching and preparing for my interview with Wally Broecker and Klaus Lackner, in part by reading Wally’s book (co-written with Robert Kunzig) “Fixing Climate”. The book is a story of how we came to understand the contribution of carbon emissions to climate change (and Wally’s key role in facilitating it) as well as advocacy for carbon scrubbing technology invented by Klaus. It’s the only ‘joint’ interview I’m doing.

    Colin returns from San Diego in a dilemma. The job looks perfect, he’ll get his own lab, but it would mean leaving his beloved New York. Colin likes a bit of angst – but this tussle is heart vs. head battle of mammoth proportions for the poor man. I feel we’ll be talking about it a lot during my stay.

  • September16th

    juan enriquez

    It’s a rollercoaster. Today I meet Juan Enriquez, described by himself as a ‘quasi-catholic in a Jesuit tradition’ and as a ‘renaissance futurist’ by his wife (whom I’m lucky enough to meet later). To be honest it’s hard to pigeon-hole Juan. His CV includes ‘peace negotiator’, ‘Harvard professor’, ‘urban development Tsar’ and ‘biotech investor’. During our conversation he says, “there’s only two things that matter: Nike and Nissan”. This strikes me as rather a trivial observation for one of America’s leading thinkers. He explains: ‘Just Do It and Enjoy the Ride’.

    He’s a surprisingly reserved and gentle man in person, for someone who says quite remarkable and often strikingly important things. Voted best teacher at Harvard he’s regularly called upon to speak on how the future might pan out. This year he opened the mighty TED talks. His address was typically powerful, thought-provoking and very funny. He has an ability to synthesise and distil difficult and interweaved concepts into something you can get hold of. His book As the Future Catches You is one of the best attempts to make sense of how biology and silicon are combining in extraordinary ways and is an essential read (I think that’s the first book I’ve ever said that about). It’ll take you two hours. “It started off as 3,000 pages and took me six years to condense,” he tells me, reminding me of one of my favourite quotes, from George Bernard Shaw, who once wrote to a friend, “Sorry I wrote a long letter, I did not have time to write a short one”. You can see some of the themes in it discussed in this TED talk:

    Juan describes his life as “a series of strange accidents”. ‘Strange accidents’ is rather a self-effacing way of describing an impressively eclectic powerhouse of a CV. Those “accidents” arguably started rolling off the conveyor belt when as a young man living in Mexico Juan walked into his parent’s room and said, ‘I’m not learning enough here, so I’m going to go to school in the US’. “I applied late, I had no idea it was hard to get into these places and even though I spoke English (my mother’s American) I’d never studied and written in English. I have no idea why I was admitted. I mean during the admission exam I was asked to write a paragraph and I asked ‘what’s a paragraph?’. I had no idea.”

    He describes feeling “utterly stupid” for his first semester but obviously caught up fast and maintained that accelerated intellectual velocity, being admitted to Harvard to study Government and Economics, after which he returned home to ‘change Mexico’ – a childhood ambition borne out a belief that his home nation too readily disadvantaged those not in the ruling class. “I always thought I would work in and change Mexico. I was bothered by the poverty I saw there.” He became the youngest Budget Director ever (in the Ministry of Planning and Budget), then returned to Harvard before being offered “a dream job” back in Mexico as head of the Urban development Corporation. So far, so impressive (especially when you consider that during his time in Mexico Juan was also part of the team that negotiated peace with the Chiapas Indians). And then Juan discovered something more important. A revolution that would not only affect Mexico but the entire world. And all because of some lonely looking geeky guy at a New Year’s Eve party.

    “I’m at a New Years party and there’s this guy is sitting over on a corner table by himself and I think ‘poor bastard, it’s New Years’ and I walk over and sit down and talk to him for the rest of the night. By the end of the evening we decided to sail across the Atlantic together in 2 weeks. By the end of that trip I had decided that I was going to change my entire career and learn biology.”

    The guy in question was a young Craig Venter, who went from being an obscure scientist to sequencing the first human genome. Juan recalls, “That conversation was so interesting, all of a sudden I thought ‘I want to leant about this.’ I wondered, who gets affected by this stuff? What does it do? What does it matter?” In fact, Juan was so interested in these questions, he set up the Life Sciences Project at Harvard Business School.

    "Poor bastard" - Juan Enriquez

    "Poor bastard" - Juan Enriquez

    In As the Future Catches You Juan writes:

    “Your future, that of your children, and that of your country depend on understanding a global economy driven by technology. Understanding code, particularly genetic code, is today’s most powerful technology”.

    We talk about this in the context of a society that actually doesn’t seem to be engaging with the implications of the genomics revolution (as I wasn’t before researching my own book). Juan says, “I worry that if you’re not educated in this stuff, you’re toast.” He’s very clear that new technologies quickly change the fate of nations, especially as knowledge becomes ever more accessible.

    “You don’t have to own a large piece of land or a lot of resources to get rich very quickly, but you do need to go to school. That didn’t use to be true. It used to be that it didn’t matter how smart you were, if you weren’t the king or part of the noble classes you were toast” (Juan likes the word ‘toast’).

    “Now you can get wealthy, and you can do it very quickly, but you have to do it through education. You see, the consequences of not being educated today are far different from what they were. You know, in the 1950s you had a high school diploma, you went to Detroit you did fine. That’s not true anymore.” So, it’s no pleasure for Juan to recount a meeting he attended along with the governor of Michigan three years ago with GM workers, where “60% didn’t consider it necessary for their kids to go to college. There are consequences of that decision.”

    Don't become this - go to school

    Don't become this - go to school

    This is one example of what Juan calls an ‘anti-intellectual backlash’. I wonder, given that today more and more people have access to knowledge, why he perceives a rejection of engaging with it, applying it, or understanding it in some quarters? It’s something Mark Bedau talked about when I was in Denmark and it’s something I see too. I call it ‘aspirations to mediocrity’ and it worries me, because if you’re not informed you’re out of the loop, and you can get left behind. And people who get left behind tend to get angry at some point.

    Juan argues that to succeed as a nation, a corporation, an individual you have to be agile, to adapt. “It took me a damn long time to figure out. It’s Darwin. It’s the ability to adapt and adopt. It’s not the most powerful who survive, it those who best adapt to change.”

    “In the US there’s powerful anti-intellectual tradition that battles against the aspirations of the founding fathers. One of the most important things that people keep forgetting about America and the reason why I think America became truly a world power is because so many of the founders were adamant about education and science. Just look at Franklin, or Jefferson and you’ll see people deeply committed to critical thinking and education. There was a huge tradition of science and technology education, freedom of inquiry and that’s powered this country in an extraordinary way. But there’s a backlash to that.”

    Juan believes the backlash is born of (reasonable) fear. “If you look at and a lot of the things that we’re building, they’re scary as hell to some people. You talk about programming cells or sentient robots or evolution of the species using technology – that is profoundly disturbing to some people because this stuff is very powerful. It upends industries, it changes how long we live, it changes what our kids may look like. I look at that stuff and say, ‘OK, it allows people who couldn’t have children to have children. We’re going to do away with some of the diseases, and so on’. Other people look at that in absolute horror. They say, ‘Stop the world. This isn’t natural. This isn’t what God ordered. I want to get off.’ They’re looking for an element of stability and certainty. This desire tends to manifest most during the periods of fastest change, like now. You want something to hold on to. And if you’re not part of that ride, if you don’t think you can play in that game then you get this anti-intellectual counterpoint.”

    Hello creationism.

    It strikes me that maybe one of the implicit drivers behind the creationism renaissance is so profound a fear of the possibility of us deliberately evolving into something else (Juan dubs this next technology-enhanced hominid homo evolutis) that one line of defence is to deny evolution’s central role in the world. In the Edge Foundation’s lovely book What are you optimistic about? Juan wrote an essay in which he said that our change as a species “will involve an ever-faster accumulation of small, useful improvements that eventually turn homo sapiens into a new hominid. We will likely see glimpses of this long-lived, partly mechanical, partly regrown creature that continues to rapidly drive its own evolution. …many of our grandchildren will likely engineer themselves into what we would consider a new species, one with extraordinary capabilities”. Intelligent design indeed. If you’re religious (or even if you’re not) it’s no surprise that the ‘Man playing God’ argument is strongly attractive. It’s a worry for a lot of people, and, I’d say, not an unreasonable one.

    Juan isn’t worried about our self-directed evolution. “The notion of evolving into something else is terrifying until you consider the question ‘Are Russ Limbaugh and Howard Stern the be all and end all of evolution?’ If that’s all she wrote, then I’m scared. I look at this stuff and say, ‘if my kids could live 200 years with a good quality of life, if they could see a lot further than I could, if the could re-grow their joints, if they can hear a lot better than I can, if they could have brains that were 50 times as powerful as mine? Good for them. Cool. I’d rather things carry on.’ ”

    Evolutionary work-in-progress 1

    Evolutionary work-in-progress 1

    Evolutionary work-in-progress 2

    Evolutionary work-in-progress 2

    But can our moral frameworks keep up? (Einstein famously said “It has become appallingly obvious that out technology has exceeded our humanity”.) Juan has an interesting observation. “To me religion looks like an evolutionary tree. Every civilisation has to a greater or lesser extent some religious moral background. There has to be some evolutionary advantage to having that kind of moral backbone and that kind of belief system, and I think it’s because it traces how you move from a hunter-gatherer society, where everybody knows each other and watches each other all day, into a town, into a city, into an empire… And just like most animals almost every religion and God has gone extinct. The interesting question is which ones survive and how do they survive and how do those moral backbones evolve? And what does a moral ethical background look like, should you start to speciate, should you start to alter fundamental characteristics of what we consider human?”

    One thing history has taught us is that knowledge advances no matter how hard you try to suppress it. As Septimus Hodge says in Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia “You do not suppose, my lady, that if all of Archimedes had been hiding in the great library of Alexandria, we would be at a loss for a corkscrew?” You can stop knowledge’s advance in some places for a while if you’re brutally draconian or conservative but not for long – and the more technology allows autonomy of the individual (from wireless internet access to the world’s knowledge, to power independence through solar technology) the harder it becomes to suppress the spirit of enquiry that characterises enough of the human race to ensure that the growth of knowledge marches on. It’s harder to stop people discovering stuff when we aim to give a laptop to every child. “When you start putting every MIT course online, when kids start having access to TED talks…” Juan looks into space. “You know, knowledge is the great equaliser”. Knowledge is growing exponentially, and for those who want to engage, access to it is becoming easier.

    I return to my current preoccupation – what moral frameworks are useful in this ever changing world? Well, if we take the evolutionary argument, it’s the ones that adapt and adopt. Those belief systems that are agile enough to keep us kind while embracing change are likely to prevail. If there is an evolutionary advantage to having a moral set of beliefs or a God that embodies them then you can’t keep your God static. Your God better evolve with you. This, I think, doesn’t mean watering down the essential need for compassion, it means helping us work out how to continually keep it central to what we do in a rapidly changing world. This is why Karen Armstrong’s ‘Charter for Compassion’ is so interesting.

    The future won’t be a smooth ride. “Things evolve at different times at different paces, people make different choices and that’s one of the reason countries disappear so often. There really are consequences to your choices. If you choose to shut your doors and not follow technology you will vapourise your sovereignty. So, there are galactically stupid policies as far as individual countries are concerned. The future of the species worries me a lot less”

    One thing Juan is worried about is what happens to those nations that don’t engage with the knowledge revolution. “There’s going to be a great deal more failed states. That’s bad. I mean there used to a restructuring mechanism for failed states – Genghis Khan would come by and install a government. Today, in a knowledge economy, why would you want to go and take over a failed state?”

    I’d argue that a failed state represents an opportunity, an under-utilised platform of potential human innovation. After all, Singapore was a failed state 50 years ago, an example Juan uses regularly to demonstrate how nations can turn themselves around in short order if they invest in education and knowledge creation. Perhaps it won’t be Genghis Kahn coming by looking for natural resources, perhaps it’ll be Craig Venter or Google looking for untapped smarts. Let’s insist they bring Karen Armstrong with them.

    I’ll leave the interview there – if I covered everything we spoke about I’d be writing the book. There’s a lot of ideas here I’m still not pulling together coherently, but it’s a start and I welcome comment.

    By coincidence my interaction with Juan doesn’t end when I say goodbye to him at his office. I bump into him and his wife – a warm and sociable curator – at the airport, flying to New York to celebrate their anniversary. It’s a rare opportunity to discuss things ‘off topic’ and it’s nice to hear them talk warmly of their children and upcoming birthday celebrations. There’s something deeply comforting about hearing one of the most interesting thinkers on the planet discuss what flavour of birthday cake to get.

    It's not just the future I think about...

    It's not just the future I think about...

    I arrive in New York and make my way to Long Island City, where I’m staying with my friend Colin, a neuroscientist that I once shared a house with in London, and a man equally caressed by doubt and genius. He’s actually in San Diego tonight being courted by a biotech research laboratory so I have his place to myself. The apartment is full of papers with titles like: “Hippocampal CA3 output is crucial for ripple-associated reactivation and consolidation of memory”. What’s different about seeing this sort of thing today as compared to coming across similarly titled documents during the time we lived together is that now I want to pick these things up and understand them. Not tonight though, my mind is full of everything I’ve learned in Boston – I feel like a glass of wine.

    Round the corner from Colin’s I find a great little wine bar called Domaine where I fall into a long conversation with Johanna, a friend of the owners and a fashion designer originally from Peurto Rico. In the end we talk for about 5 hours, drinking fine wine provided by the establishment and cover every subject from religion to politics to art to relationships. It’s just what I need and a perfect New York kind of evening, the city where you can meet just about anyone if you’re willing to start a conversation…

  • September15th

    I spend today with the good people of Konarka, a ‘thin film’ ‘organic’ solar panel manufacturer with a nascent manufacturing facility in Bedford, (a 45 minute drive south of Cambridge). Konarka is one of a gaggle of solar power start-ups that are vying to move us to renewable solar energy and make a tidy profit in the process. I’m hoping to visit a several of these firms for chapter 3, which is nominally entitled “Energy Crisis? What Energy Crisis?”

    After all, just 0.3% of the energy hitting the Earth’s surface in the form of sunlight would meet all our needs. We’re awash with it. So, what we have is actually an energy conversion crisis. Or more specifically a cost of energy conversion crisis. That’s why fossil fuels have done so well, because they pack a lot of energy punch in ratio to the amount of money it takes to release that energy in a usable form. This was obvious as far back as 1861 when French inventor Augustin Mouchout developed a steam engine powered entirely by the sun. Of the burgeoning Industrial Revolution he prophetically remarked, “Eventually industry will no longer find in Europe the resources to satisfy its prodigious expansion. Coal will undoubtedly be used up. What will industry do then?” But despite patronage from Emperor Napoleon III Mouchout’s invention never caught on. High costs of manufacture, coupled with the low price of coal made other power conversion technologies more economically viable – a problem that has dogged the solar energy industry ever since. But that’s about to change.

    There are two key technology battles that the solar energy industry is fighting that are worth highlighting –

    • reducing the cost of manufacture and ownership of solar power hardware (e.g. solar panels)
    • making it more efficient (i.e. increasing the amount of sunlight converted into electricity).

    More specifically, it’s the relationship between the two – how much energy do you get per buck? If that figure compares favourably to fossil fuels then you’ll begin to see large-scale take-up of solar power not for ‘green’ reasons but for commercial ones. And as fossil fuels get more expensive (as they become more scarce) and solar gets cheaper (as the energy:cost ratio improves) that inflection point draws ever closer. In fact, it’s arguable that it just happened. (I won’t get into a discussion of costs per watt here, because untangling the relationship between such measures and real world deployment of the technology is no small task - hence my use of the word ‘arguable’ above – but it will be covered in the book).

    Tracy Wemett, Konarka’s PR woman and, it turns out, a passionate advocate of education (she mentors disadvantaged teenagers when she’s not helping her clients) drives me to the firm’s manufacturing facility. Tracy, it has to be said, drives like she’s immortal (i.e. has no fear of death). Still, death if it comes will probably be swift, we’re in her open top sports car on a beautiful sunny day. I need to look up sometimes and enjoy these moments of the trip. After all, there’s an elevated chance this could be one of my last moments on the planet.

    We make it, still alive, to Konarka’s facility which is actually an old printing plant that belonged to Polaroid. Because Konarka print solar cells. It’s a hell of a printer I can tell you – Larry Weldon, Konarka head of manufacturing takes me on a tour – but the result is a flexible solar panel no thicker than a few sheets of paper. There’s no bulky, rigid silicon-based panels here. Konarka’s technology centres around ‘organic nano-particles’ (essentially long chains of polymers) that have energy generating characteristics. I’ll make this chemistry understandable in the book (it’s pretty cool) – and one of the guys who helped Konarka make use of it is Nobel Prize winning Alan Heeger. Heeger won the 2,000 Nobel Prize for Chemistry (along with Alan MacDiarmid and Hideki Shirakawa) “for their discovery and development of conductive polymers.” That’s enough geek speak for now. Anyway, you can wrap this stuff around laptop bags, garden furniture or roll it on top of your garage. It’s mobile solar energy generation, something that I’m becoming increasingly interested in, and its implications for our future. But more on that below.

    I love the way engineers talk. They’re so matter-of-fact that sometimes you can miss that what they are saying is often quite extraordinary. Larry is no exception. He’s at the centre of a revolution, developing ways to turn the science of solar energy into a cheap manufactured solution. He’s one of the guys addressing that central problem of the cost:energy efficiency ratio (and by extension, helping to end our dependence of fossil fuels). Later I update my twitter status to read: “I like engineers – they talk revolution like it was replacing a fuse”.

    Touring the factory is fun. It’s nice to see the future being made rather than just talked about. At the end of the production line is the quality control facility – including a test bed with powerful lamps that are ‘calibrated to 1 Sun’. This is where that all important efficiency rating is determined. Rather annoyingly the solar industry tends to quote a misleading efficiency metric (based on a standard called AM 1.5). For instance, let’s say a manufacturer claims that their cells have an efficiency rating of 10%. This infers that they convert 10% of the light energy hitting them into usable electric current, an inference the PR machine is happy for us to make. However, what ‘10% efficiency’ actually means is, ‘this panel will convert 10% of the light energy hitting it into usable electric current if it’s midday, if the panel is at the equator, and there’s no clouds in the sky’. The measure doesn’t take into account how, for instance, some technologies can generate electricity in low light, or from ambient angles. So a technology that generates lower levels of energy but can work in more ‘difficult’ light conditions (say earlier in the day, or later at dusk, or in cloudier climates etc) might actually generate more energy over a day than one with a higher efficiency rating. Bad solar power industry! Please start using some metrics that reveal the whole story. The test bed looks beautiful, the blue plastic sheeting surrounding it giving off a kind of ethereal sci-fi luminescence.

    Konarka test bed

    I have to confess I’m also amused by a machine I see on the tour which proudly displays its function as ‘BUTT SPLICER B’. Larry, Tracy and I joke that when this factory used to manufacture asses this machine was where they put in the crack. It’s actual function is far more prosaic – simply butting two films up to each other for joining together, but I’m adamant that whoever named this knew what they were doing. And to be honest who can blame them? Given the option of ‘dual film joiner’ or ‘butt splicer’ I know where I’d go.

    Konarka's butt splicer

    I thank Larry for taking the time to show me around and head out of the factory with some trepidation, because I know the only way I’m getting back to Boston (and my talk with Konarka’s CEO Rick Hess) is with Tracy at the wheel. The photo she takes of me outside the plant could be last of me breathing.

    Rick Hess is what I would call ‘very CEO’. He’s confident, relaxed with the air of man who can smell bullshit from 3 miles away. He’s also got the easy manner of a man who probably doesn’t have to worry too much about his pension. What I like about him is he’s honest and generous about his competitors – about where they have advantages or niches that he can’t exploit.

    Soon our conversation begins to echo the themes that emerged during my talk with Bill Mitchell the day before – about technological advances that fragment existing models of behaviour or business. “Phones went wireless, Internet went wireless and the only thing that’s left you have to find a wire for is power,” says Rick. It’s an obvious statement but incredibly powerful – and it has interesting implications for the utility model of getting your power. At the beginning of August, Colorado’s biggest utility, Xcel, tried to put a surcharge on homes and businesses using rooftop solar power. Hmmm…

    This  article from Newsweek has some interesting observations:

    In 2008, rooftop solar added more than 10 times the amount of power to the country’s grid than utilities did. Maryland-based Sun Edison, the country’s biggest installer of solar panels in the retail market, added more electricity to the grid last year, 25 megawatts, than did the entire utility industry.

    …and…

    “The utilities are more interested in protecting their stranglehold on the power grid and preserving their century-old business model than they are producing clean electricity,” says Jim Harvey, who heads up the Joshua Tree, Calif.-based Alliance for Responsible Energy Policy, an advocacy group that’s staunchly opposed to utility-generated solar power.

    The ‘off grid’ solar revolution has potentially massive benefits for the developing world. “If you look at the developing world in terms of communications,” says Rick, “they skipped wires and went straight to wireless and I think for power they’re going to do the same thing”.

    I try to imagine what an alien visitor would say looking at the way we distribute power. “You do what? You wait for millions of years until old biomass has become coal or oil? Then you burn it, to turn a turbine? Then you send the electricity you genereate down a huge system of wires, and if someone wants some of it they have to find the end of one of those wires and plug in? And you charge them for this shambles?” At this point I imagine said visitor pointing upwards with whatever it points with and saying, “Never think about taking it straight out the sky then?” Mankind shuffles awkwardly on its feet. “Well, you know, we are starting to do that. And look! – we have a butt splicer too.”

  • September14th

    Today I meet Bill Mitchell, head of MITs ‘Smart Cities’ group. Bill’s an avuncular, friendly Australian who has a rather charming habit of saying incredible insightful things that seem remarkably obvious until you realise you haven’t heard anyone say them before. Originally from the Australian bush Bill’s come a long way, to be one of the world’s most respected thinkers on how cities evolve and how they can serve their citizens and the planet (including being part of the solution to global warming). In his native land his lectures sell out instantly. He’s become something of an architectural celebrity.

    One of his key themes is the cycles of ‘fragmentation and recombination’ that manifest as new technologies arrive on the scene. For instance, the village well loses its ‘focal point’ status when you get piped water. Now the focal point becomes the tap. It used to be that if you wanted to hear a song you had to go to see it performed, but technology advanced so you could listen to it on the radio, and now you can carry it around (along with a million others) in your pocket. In fact today you can pluck almost any song out the air (don’t you just love ‘Spotify’?). Years ago, if you wanted to make a telephone call you used to have be where the telephone was, now you can talk anywhere there’s cell phone coverage. The architectural shrines we made to facilitate private conversations (telephone boxes) are slowly disappearing. The role of the office is evolving too, as mobile technologies make the need to be next to your paper filing cabinet no longer an imperative. The office won’t completely disappear of course – humans need to get together – but it will become “a much more humane, collegiate space”. “When any place can be a work place there’s no excuse for making it anything other than a human, people-centred wonderful place,” says Bill. “You need to build environments that encourage serendipitous interaction, that encourage people to bump into each other. It’s important to make a great café for instance. I’ve a very strong belief in the potential of people to do amazing things if you just get out the way. We now have technology that is good enough to just work, but get out the way”.

    I wonder what technologies are coming down the line that will drive further fragmentation and recombination? One is likely to be power generation, particularly as solar power becomes cheaper and more efficient. When you can generate your power where you are and take your building, your company, your house, yourself potentially ‘off-grid’ another beneficial untying from a fixed, mandated framework occurs, another one of Bill’s ‘fragmentations’. In the back of my mind a thought starts to niggle… ‘When might something like this happen to our political structures?’ Indeed a thesis about how an increasingly networked world interacts with archaic hierarchical bureaucracy and government is beginning to form… maybe it’ll be one of the themes in the book. Networks subvert hierarchies, and our networks in many spaces are growing and becoming more responsive…

    Naturally there was a lot more we talked about that I’ll cover in the book, including the coalescence of Bill’s work with that of Cynthia Breazeal – and how our buildings may become sensate social beings that know us and work with us, dynamically adapting to our moods and needs. We also talked about how becoming less tied to infrastructure allows us to connect more readily around values. We also discussed how old cities can be adapted over time to become smarter, Bill talking about various doses of ‘urban viagra’. Indeed.

    Returning to my hotel I meet Kris and Arthur at the bar – a lovely couple from San Francisco, along with a gay couple (I didn’t get their names) who taught me the phrase ‘full frontal nerdity’. Arthur works for Google, being one of the brains behind their ‘Android’ mobile operating system. He’s interested in the book and asks if I’d like him to arrange  a ‘Google Talk’ when I’m at the Google campus in January. I’m flabbergasted. The Google Talks I’ve seen have been given by the likes of the people I’m interviewing, not novice authors, but he insists my journey and observations would be of interest. Arthur and Kris are generous and lively conversationalists and by coincidence we find out we’ll be in Sydney at the same time in November. They’re also coming to London to live of a while. I think I’ve made some new friends.