http://climateprogress.org/2011/04/17/aerosol-geoengineering-economics/

Science Sunday: “The economics (or lack thereof) of aerosol geoengineering”
Is the aerosol strategy intergenerationally unethical?
April 17, 2011
Joe Romm 


The Gist: Putting reflective aerosols high into the atmosphere to slow climate 
change is too risky and not cost effective.

That’s Climate Central describing the core conclusions of the Climatic Change 
paper “The economics (or lack thereof) of aerosol geoengineering,” (full paper 
online 
here):http://www3.geosc.psu.edu/~kzk10/Goes_et_al_geoengineering_cc_2009_submitted.pdf

This study would seem to support the view that if you don’t do aggressive 
greenhouse mitigation starting now, you pretty much take aerosol 
geo-engineering off the table as a very limited (but still dubious) add-on 
strategy — as even geo-engineering experts like climatologist Ken Caldeira have 
made clear.

What’s nice about this study is that it doesn’t just do an economic analysis, 
but also discusses intergenerational ethics.  I’ll excerpt the study itself at 
length — after the full Climate Central summary:


Summary: Some have argued that if human society cannot sufficiently reduce its 
greenhouse gas emissions, than we could still avoid the worst consequences of 
global warming by putting highly reflective particles, known as aerosols, high 
into the atmosphere. These aerosols would reflect light back to space, thus 
counteracting warming from greenhouse gases.

The authors of this paper use an integrated assessment model to determine how 
costly such a method would be. The authors discuss the potential side effects 
of this so-called “geoengineering” strategy, since adding aerosols to the 
atmosphere could have unintended consequences, such as significantly altering 
weather patterns and damaging stratospheric ozone. Also, aerosols are 
short-lived, and would have to be continuously added to the atmosphere in order 
for this scheme to work. If society stopped injecting them, the result would be 
a rapid shift in the climate, something this paper argues would be highly 
damaging.

The authors calculate that if there is greater than a 15 percent chance that 
such a method will be shut down, or if the unintended consequences of aerosols 
are greater than half a percent of the world’s economy, then this method of 
geoengineering is not worth the effort.

And let’s not forget that the aerosol ’solution’ does nothing to stop the 
consequences of ocean acidification, which recent studies suggest will be 
devastating all by itself (see Geological Society: Acidifying oceans spell 
marine biological meltdown “by end of century”).

Here is the conclusion to the study itself:

First, aerosol geoengineering hinges on counterbalancing the forcing effects of 
greenhouse gas emissions (which decay over centuries) with the forcing effects 
of aerosol emissions (which decay within years). Aerosol geoengineering can 
hence lead to abrupt climate change if the aerosol forcing is not sustained. 
The possibility of an intermittent aerosol geoengineering forcing as well as 
negative impacts of the aerosol forcing itself may cause economic damages that 
far exceed the benefits. Aerosol geoengineering may hence pose more than just 
“minimal climate risks,” contrary to the claim of Wigley (2006). Second, 
substituting aerosol geoengineering for CO2 abatement fails an economic 
cost-benefit test in our model for arguably reasonable assumptions. In 
contrast, (and as shown in numerous previous studies) fast and sizeable cuts in 
CO2 emissions (far in excess of the currently implemented measures) pass a 
costbenefit test. Third, aerosol geoengineering constitutes a conscious 
temporal risk transfer that arguably violates the ethical objectives of 
intergenerational justice.

Our analysis has barely scratched the surface and is silent on many important 
aspects. More than a decade ago, a Unites States National Academies of Science 
committee assessing geoengineering strategies concluded that “Engineering 
countermeasures need to be evaluated but should not be implemented without 
broad understanding of the direct effects and the potential side effects, the 
ethical issues, and the risks” (COSEPUP, 1992). Today, we are still lacking 
this broad understanding.

Caldeira made some similar points to me in a 2009 e-mail interview:

Nobody has written about this that I know of, but ….

If we keep emitting greenhouse gases with the intent of offsetting the global 
warming with ever increasing loadings of particles in the stratosphere, we will 
be heading to a planet with extremely high greenhouse gases and a thick 
stratospheric haze that we would need to main[tain] more-or-less indefinitely. 
This seems to be a dystopic world out of a science fiction story. First, we can 
assume the oceans have been heavily acidified with shellfish and corals largely 
a thing of the past. We can assume that ecosystems will be greatly affected by 
the high CO2 / low sunlight conditions — similar to what Earth experienced 
hundreds of millions years ago. The sunlight would likely be very diffuse — 
maybe good for portrait photography, but with unknown consequences for 
ecosystems.

We know also that CO2 and sunlight affect Earth’s climate system in different 
ways. For the same amount of change in rainfall, CO2 affects temperature more 
than sunlight, so if we are to try to correct for changes in precipitation 
patterns, we will be left with some residual warming that would grow with time.

And what will this increasing loading of particles in the stratosphere do to 
the ozone layer and the other parts of Earth’s climate system that we depend on?

On top of all of these environmental considerations, there are socio-political 
considerations: We we have a cooperative world government deciding exactly how 
much geoengineering to deploy where? What if China were to go into decades of 
drought? Would they sit idly by as the Climate Intervention Bureau apparently 
ignores their plight? And what if political instability where to mean that for 
a few years, the intervention system were not maintained … all of that 
accumulated pent-up climate change would be unleashed upon the Earth … and 
perhaps make “The Day After” movie look less silly than it does.

Long-term risk reduction depends on greenhouse gas emissions reduction. 
Nevertheless, there is a chance that some of these options might be able to 
diminish short-term risk in the event of a climate crisis.

I would add the grave risk that that after injecting massive amounts of sulfate 
aerosols into the atmosphere for a decade or more, we might experience some 
unexpectedly bad side effect that just gets worse and worse.  After all, the 
top climate scientists underestimated the speed and scale of greenhouse gas 
impacts (and the magnitude of synergistic ones, like bark beetle infestations 
and forest fires).

We would be in incompletely unexplored territory — what I call an experimental 
chemotherapy and radiation therapy combined.  There is no possible way of 
predicting the long-term effect of the thick stratospheric haze (which, unlike 
GHGs, has no recent or paleoclimate analog).  If it turned out to have 
unexpected catastrophic impacts of its own (other than drought), we’d be 
totally screwed (see “the definitive killer objection to geoengineering as even 
a temporary fix”).

Or, rather, our children and grand-children would be totally screwed, not that 
our actions today suggest we care about them very much (see Is the global 
economy a Ponzi scheme?).  The study has this to say about the 
intergenerational ethics issue:

While there have been careful analyses of the significance of intergenerational 
justice in the wider context of climate change (Gardiner, 2009; Page, 2006; 
Wolf, 2009), our study is the first to quantitatively examine issues of 
intergenerational justice raised by aerosol geoengineering for the case that 
aerosol geoengineering can be intermittent and the aerosol forcing can cause 
harm. Our analysis shows, for example, that substituting aerosol geoengineering 
for CO2 emissions abatement is a risk transfer from current to future 
generations (Figures 4 to 7). In addition, the impacts of the abrupt warming 
due to a discontinuation of the aerosol forcing would place a heavy burden on 
human communities and ecosystem integrity (Alley et al., 2002) and thus 
threaten the conditions required to satisfy basic welfare rights of future 
generations. Substituting aerosol geoengineering for CO2 emissions abatement 
decreases the required abatement costs in the near term but imposes sizeable 
risks for more distant generations (Figure 4 a, b). Since Rawlsian 
intergenerational distributive justice requires that current generations avoid 
policies that create benefits for themselves but impose costs on future 
generations, substituting aerosol geoengineering for CO2 abatement fails on the 
grounds of this particular approach to ethics.

It would appear that what science advisor John Holdren reasserted in 2009 
remains true today, “The ‘geo-engineering’ approaches considered so far appear 
to be afflicted with some combination of high costs, low leverage, and a high 
likelihood of serious side effects.“

Mitigate, mitigate, mitigate — or punish countless future generations.

Related Post:

Key ‘geoengineering’ strategy — cloud whitening — may yield warming, not cooling
Science on the Risks of Climate Engineering: “Optimism about a geoengineered 
‘easy way out’ should be tempered by examination of currently observed climate 
changes”
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