Engineering the climate is last and scariest option, says US scientist

The lack of international action on cutting emissions highlights need to 
research geoengineering further, says Jane C S Long

 *   Yale Environment 360<http://www.e360.yale.edu/>, part of the Guardian 
Environment Network<http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/network>

Jane C. S. Long, associate director-at-large of the Lawrence Livermore National 
Laboratory in California, is convinced that the only sensible way to combat 
climate change<http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/climate-change> is to work 
toward "a zero-emission energy<http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/energy> 
system as fast as possible." But as chairwoman of the Bipartisan Policy 
Center's 18-member task force on 
geoengineering<http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/geoengineering>, the 
hydrologist and energy expert realized two fundamental things: that the world 
has still not come to its senses on global warming, and that science would be 
remiss if it didn't consider the possibility that CO2 emissions will continue 
to soar for decades.This scenario lies at the heart of a report issued last 
week by the task 
force<http://www.bipartisanpolicy.org/library/report/task-force-climate-remediation-research>,
 composed of noted experts in climate science, social science, and foreign 
policy. It called for a comprehensive study of geoengineering options — 
including removing CO2 from the atmosphere and reflecting solar energy back 
into space — in case the Earth's climate crosses certain tipping points, such 
as a mass release of methane from the Arctic that would drastically warm the 
planet.

 *

The report drew sharp criticism from some climate activists, who accused the 
task force of trying to put a positive marketing spin on doomsday technologies 
by labeling them efforts at "climate remediation." But Long and her colleagues 
say it is best to be well informed about geoengineering options should they one 
day be needed. "Everyone I know who works on this is scared to death of this 
stuff," Long said in an interview with Yale Environment 
360<http://e360.yale.edu/> senior editor Fen Montaigne. "People aren't doing 
this because they think, 'Oh whoopee! We can change the Earth!' They're doing 
it because they just don't see any progress [on CO2 emissions] and it just 
seems to be getting worse and they want options on the table."

Yale Environment 360: What factors led the task force to the conclusion that it 
was time for the U.S. government to take a serious look at whether 
geoengineering, or climate remediation, was possible or advisable?

Jane Long: Number one, of course, is the fact that we're still producing 
greenhouse gases, and they are getting to be at a dangerous level and they're 
going higher and nobody really knows what's going to happen. The risks seem to 
be very large and there's a strong sense that even if we were by some magic 
wand able to stop emitting tomorrow, we still have a problem with a lot of 
unknowns. So in the long run the chance that we would hit something that was 
very, very difficult for both humans and ecosystems to be able to handle 
successfully was significant. And we felt it was prudent to start doing 
research. There are other factors, such as other countries beginning to look at 
this. Certainly the UK has and it behooves the United States to be a member of 
this group that's looking at it, rather than on the sidelines and just having 
to accept what other people do. There was definitely not a sense that we should 
get ready to deploy these things right now. We have to consider it, but we're 
not planning to do it. So the idea is just really to become informed.

e360: Were you driven by a sense that these geoengineering schemes have not 
been subject to rigorous, coordinated studies?

Long: Absolutely. What we thought was that we knew very, very little about 
whether these technologies could be effective, whether they were advisable, and 
whether they were even doable, and we were only at the very beginning of 
understanding that and that it would take a coordinated program by government 
research to get there. You weren't going to get there on the margins. You are 
going to have to do a coordinated, focused program.

e360: One thing you make very clear is that by far the preference of the people 
on the panel is to lower, or mitigate, greenhouse gas emissions. But given 
what's happening now — we had records emissions in 2010, China and India are 
booming, the U.S. is not making a lot of progress — are you optimistic that the 
world is going to get its act together in the next 10 or 20 years to really 
start lowering CO2 emissions?

Long: I think we will start, but we won't necessarily do it in time. I'm afraid 
it's going to become absolutely obvious that we have to do it. And we will 
start doing it for a variety of reasons. But will it change in time? I have to 
admit to a certain amount of pessimism. I don't think we will avoid some of the 
really difficult impacts of this.

e360: That leads to a much quoted part of your report, which was that 
geoengineering schemes may have to be tried if the climate system reaches a 
tipping point, an emergency situation. What kind of tipping points did some of 
the scientists have in mind that might speed up the necessity to consider 
climate remediation?

Long: Certainly methane issues in the 
Arctic<http://e360.yale.edu/feature/melting_arctic_ocean_raises_threat_of_methane_time_bomb_/2081/>
 and positive feedbacks in the Arctic. Also positive feedbacks that would 
change rainfall patterns dramatically and threaten food supplies. There are 
some perfect storms out there where the food supply and water supply available 
to humans is dramatically changed and at the same time population growth 
accelerates. So I think what we felt was it wasn't really possible to predict 
these things, but the possibility of them could not be denied.

e360: Among those was the potential impact of ocean 
acidification<http://e360.yale.edu/feature/an_ominous_warning_on_the__effects_of_ocean_acidification/2241/>
 on fisheries and marine life?

Long: Sure. And of course some of the technologies that are being thought about 
simply don't help that. I think that the situation now in the field of 
geoengineering — it's my guess and only a guess — is that pretty much 
everything that's been prominently discussed to date will be thrown away. And 
that what will happen as we begin to study this is we'll begin to find new and 
better ideas and it will take decades to sort through what might really be 
something you want to try if we absolutely had to. It's very likely that the 
things we're considering right now will not be the ones that we end up 
considering in 10 years.

e360: There was an interesting comment in the report concerning tipping points, 
that science to date has in fact underestimated some of the physical impacts 
taking place, such as the rate of melting Arctic Ocean ice.

Long: Absolutely. I mean [Harvard atmospheric chemist] Jim Anderson was on our 
committee and he was the most articulate about this issue. We're not even 
tracking what's actually happening the way we ought to be tracking it. We have 
the potential for the release of huge amounts of methane gas, but we have no 
methane observation system in the Arctic. And he points out that if a small 
percentage of the methane locked up in the Arctic were released every year, it 
would overwhelm, by a factor of ten, all emissions due to energy. If you reach 
one of these tipping points, it's conceivable that mitigation won't even make 
any difference anymore. And that is the nightmare scenario.

e360: And therefore you have to have in your quiver some geoengineering 
weapons, assuming you understand what they might do?

Long: Right. I mean the best way to solve a problem is not to have it. The best 
way to solve this problem is to mitigate as fast as we can manage. We should be 
talking about how we can get to a zero emission energy system as fast as 
possible. That's what the climate science tells you the context should be. The 
discussion about saying, "Well we're going to reduce by 10 percent or 20 
percent"— it doesn't really jibe with what the problem is. The problem is how 
fast can we go to zero and then probably below zero. Believe me, I know how 
hard it's going to be. Even if we had the will tomorrow to do it, it would not 
be easy. So the next arrow in the quiver is we know some areas are going to 
flood, we know we are going to have more forest fires, we know we're going to 
have more droughts. And how are you going to better manage these phenomena? And 
the last and the scariest is we're going to intentionally manage the planet so 
that climate change doesn't destroy us.

e360: Can you in a general way talk about the overall risks, costs, and 
limitations of trying to engineer the climate?

Long: It's a huge spectrum of issues that vary very much by the technique and 
approach that you're talking about. As [Harvard physicist] David 
Keith<http://e360.yale.edu/feature/geoengineering_the_prospect_of_manipulating_the_planet/2107/>
 pointed out, these solar radiation management techniques are so amazing 
because it's conceivable that you can do them for literally billions of dollars 
a year — peanuts in the scale of things, and you could significantly change the 
temperature of the Earth that way. So you have the possibility of being able to 
do it. You have some information about some natural phenomena like the eruption 
of Mount Pinatubo, which spewed a lot of sulfur aerosols into the atmosphere 
and cooled the Earth by a couple of degrees for a couple of years. But there 
are three pieces here — whether it's effective, whether it's advisable, and 
whether you can actually do it.

We can think of a lot of ways to deliver particles to the stratosphere at 
concentrations that would be sufficient to reflect enough radiation to make a 
difference. We think it would be effective because we have some information 
from natural phenomena, but it might be very, very inadvisable. And the 
scariest thing about this particular type of technology is that it might be 
very effective and is potentially very doable, but someone might decide to do 
it out of desperation when other parts of the world were not really in favor of 
doing it because they have real concerns about unintended consequences. So it 
has implications for international relations that are very important, and that 
is why it is very important that we begin to work with other countries so that 
we jointly discover the pitfalls and possible benefits of these technologies so 
that they are not used willy-nilly by a desperate nation.

Second, other kinds of technologies, such as carbon removal 
technologies<http://e360.yale.edu/feature/pulling_co2_from_the_air_promising_idea_big_price_tag/2197/>,
 have a very wonderful characteristic in that they remove the source of the 
problem, but they're very slow and can be very expensive and when you deploy 
them at scale they could have some pretty serious environmental implications 
that would need to be evaluated very carefully. And it could cost hundreds and 
hundreds of dollars a ton to remove carbon from the atmosphere. And then when 
you have removed it, you still have to do something with it. If you store it 
underground or dispose of it in the deep ocean, this is where your impacts are 
going to come from.

e360: Do you think it would be exceedingly difficult to get some sort of 
unified global action to reduce incoming solar radiation or pull C02 out of the 
atmosphere?

Long: To do that in a way that was consistent with international consensus 
seems to me to be nearly impossible. I think it's very unlikely that we would 
in an intentional way move to global methods because the governance issues will 
become extremely difficult to overcome. And it'll also very difficult to know 
that it's really the right thing to do. A lot depends on how desperate people 
begin to feel. And that I just don't know. But I do know one thing — it's 
better not to be ignorant. With the possibility of people becoming very 
desperate, it's better to know more. I do think what is very likely to happen 
is regional intervention, where a country could decide it just can't take any 
more of these floods, these droughts, these fires. These countries might try to 
do something to perturb the local climate if they can figure out a way.

e360: You're recommending a focused and systematic program of research on 
climate remediation. What does that mean in the United States? Which agencies 
or laboratories might be involved?

Long: That really caused us a lot of struggle because there is no one place to 
go, no place in government where environmental sciences, social sciences, and 
the humanities all meet. So we were pragmatic in the sense of, "Here's the 
government you've got, what's the best way to use it to its best advantage?" 
The most important thing we recommended is an advisory commission that would 
deal with the problem of both governance and risk-based decisions of whether or 
not you should go ahead with research, dealing with issues like public 
engagement, transparency, interaction with the similar bodies doing this work 
in other nations. Somebody has to have an overview. There is a tremendous 
tension between the need to get some information about these technologies so we 
can quickly determine if there are any ideas that have merit, and the need to 
have public engagement and transparent risk management of research so that we 
can make good decisions about using them.

If you just battle ahead without taking some time to do public engagement, 
you're going to end up doing what the Brits are doing right now, which is 
funding some geoengineering research [to spray aerosols into the atmosphere], 
sending the scientists out in the field to deal with the public, and then 
having to postpone the whole project because they just mismanaged it. So we 
feel that's a very good example about how not to run it, that it should be done 
in a much more deliberative way. It shouldn't just be science. It should be 
social science and law and humanities and members of the public that are 
debating about how we move forward, and then in the future if there is anything 
that we think would be a good idea to do, you are in a position to use the 
products of your research. A secret project in the back room is just the 
absolute wrong idea.

One of the first things the advisory commission could do would be to say, "Here 
is a bunch of all-indoor research and the government can proceed and you can 
get going." At the same time, this commission would begin its own learning 
process on how to govern stuff that was outside of that zone.

e360: Why do you think it is so important that the U.S. take a leading global 
role in this research effort?

Long: Well I guess as a citizen of the U.S. I would rather have us be engaged 
than having to accept other countries' interpretations of what is the right 
thing to do. I'm pretty unhappy with what the Brits have done right now in 
terms of how they're managing this experiment. I think we should take the 
leadership in building norms of behavior around geoengineering research.

e360: And you would envision in this research phase reaching out to other 
nations in Europe, to China and India, etc., to involve some of their 
government agencies or scientists?

Long: Yes. And reach out to them through science, not through diplomacy. 
Leading with cooperation in the sciences is the best way to develop the norms 
of behavior that we're looking for.

e360: Did you at times feel like you were a scientist who was in a scene from 
some futuristic Mad Max movie where you're having to even think about this kind 
of stuff?

Long: No. But there's also this complete sense of frustration that we have to 
be thinking about this, that somehow as a species we aren't able to recognize 
this horrible foible and deal with it in a rational way. But people's needs — 
their financial needs, their short-term needs — seem to prevent them from 
factoring in their long-term interests. And that's downright depressing. But I 
don't feel that sense of science fiction because everyone I know who works on 
this is scared to death of this stuff. People aren't doing this because they 
think, "Oh whoopee! We can change the Earth!" They're doing it because they 
just don't see any progress [on CO2 emissions] and it just seems to be getting 
worse and worse and they want options on the table.

One thing we didn't talk about is a concern I have that the only people who are 
engaging in this issue are people belonging to groups who think there is a 
geoengineering conspiracy, that the government is already doing climate 
modification and that's why we get all these jet contrails everywhere. I just 
think it's very important to expand the discussion beyond this group, which is 
not extremely legitimate as representatives of concerned society. I'm very 
concerned that we take this beyond the conspiracy folks.

As global warming intensifies, demands for human manipulation of the climate 
system are likely to grow. But carrying out geoengineering plans could prove 
daunting, writes climate change professor Mike Hulme, as conflicts erupt over 
the unintended regional consequences and over who is entitled to deploy 
climate-altering technologies.

e360: I have to ask you, did you find any evidence that anyone out there — a 
government or individual — was already engaging in any kind of secret 
geoengineering research?

Long: There wasn't anything that we know about that's going on like that. The 
conspiracy theorists have a right to their opinion, but I don't know of any 
evidence that would support what they think is going on.

e360: What is the reaction to the criticism that you're using the term "climate 
remediation" instead of geoengioneering as spin or a marketing move to make 
some terrible technology seem palatable?

Long: That was kind of a surprise. I don't think there was any motivation to 
make it palatable or spin it. The issue is that we thought the term 
geongineering doesn't seem to refer to climate — it's used in oilfields, in 
hydrology — so we wanted to have a term that would really talk about climate 
rather than focus on a word like geoengineering that is used for so many other 
things that it's not precise. Members also felt that the term "engineering" was 
misleading because we would never be able to design a new climate with a 
perfectly predictable outcome. It's in the report that not everyone on the 
panel agreed [on the term], and I really don't think it should be the thing 
that gets everybody worked up about the report. A lot of people thought that 
"geoengineering" was an unfortunate choice of words, and that maybe we should 
try to do something about the name at this point in time.

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