http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-19371833

Geoengineering: Risks and benefits

Few issues arouse as much controversy in environmental circles these days
as geoengineering - "technical fixes" to tackle climate change, by sucking
carbon dioxide from the air or by reducing the amount of sunlight hitting
the Earth.And here's why.If Planet Earth is facing a climate "emergency",
as some people believe we are, then we should leave no option for combating
it unexplored, they argue.While very few scientists advocate deployment of
geoengineering now, many believe we ought to be getting on with research
now in order to have technologies ready in 10-20 years when they might be
needed.On the other hand, many environment groups and some scientists argue
that diverting attention and research funds towards geoengineering means
people will take their eyes off the more important tasks of reducing
greenhouse gas emissions and adapting to climate impacts.Some also argue
that politicians and the public will see geoengineering research going on
and believe it constitutes a "get-out-of-jail-free" card, reducing the
incentive to cut emissions.Add in the fact that the easiest technical fixes
might constrain temperatures but won't tackle the problem of ocean
acidification, and you have a rich cocktail of scientific, economic and
social issues to discuss.The arguments were on display this week in a
symposium at Oxford University, which recently set up a multi-disciplinary
research programmeon the issue.The SPICE test would have pumped out water
droplets 1km above the groundPresent were not only physical and social
scientists but officials from government departments and funding agencies,
representatives from environmental groups and a few journalists.The hottest
current issue in UK geoengineering is the SPICE project.Its most obvious
component, the deployment of a tethered balloon to disperse water into the
air, was postponed and probably cancelled earlier this year when some of
the team found out that a patent had been lodged on some of the
technology.What was most interesting in the SPICE-related discussions,
however, was the question of whether the balloon should be deployed or
not.It's basically a technology test. Researchers want to gather data that
could potentially be used in future to make much bigger systems capable of
spraying tiny sulphate aerosol particles into the upper atmosphere,
mimicking the cooling effect of volcanic eruptions.The team, led by Matt
Watson of Bristol University and Hugh Hunt of Cambridge, have repeatedly
stressed that they don't advocate doing this yet and perhaps never will
advocate it; they just want the technology to be ready in case it's
needed.Clearly, the SPICE balloon itself would have no climatic impact.
Even so, a number of environmental groups lobbied against the research, for
reasons enumerated above, with one, the ETC Group, dubbing it the "Trojan
Hose".They and others advocate a tough international regime for all
research that would permit laboratory studies but prevent anything
happening in the real world.Others say that's far too draconian, and point
to what appears to be the self-contradictory stance of some groups opposing
genetically engineered crops - to say there's no research proving they're
safe, but then to trash research projects that could provide the
proof.Could geoengineering research be blocked, even when it might prove
safety?For example, it was pointed out, spraying sulphate particles into
the stratosphere might ruin the ozone layer. You'd want to know that before
you contemplated using the technology; but how are you going to find out
unless you spray a little bit?Some rules already exist.By far the most
researched technology is ocean fertilisation, where iron is used to
stimulate plankton growth in the ocean, increasing uptake of carbon
dioxide. Something like 12 large-scale projects have been carried out, with
mixed results.From the regulation point of view, it's also the most
advanced field, with the London Convention having agreed rules in recent
years that restrict research on the basis of its potential utility and
potential risks.Commercial interests are forbidden, countries must "use
utmost caution and the best available guidance to evaluate the scientific
research proposals to ensure protection of the marine environment".
Deployment - as opposed to research - is not allowed.Elsewhere, the UN
Convention on Biological Diversity in 2010 agreed that for now, "no
climate-related geoengineering activities that may affect biodiversity take
place... with the exception of small scale scientific research studies...
and only if they are justified by the need to gather specific scientific
data and are subject to a thorough prior assessment of the potential
impacts on the environment".The ETC Group and others describe this as a
"moratorium" on geoengineering. But it isn't a complete one, as much
geoengineering research, even on a large scale, would have no impact on
biodiversity...... whereas climate change, of course, will.Some argue
failure to constrain carbon emissions mean we will need "tech fixes" soonIf
the situation weren't complex enough, another issue's arisen lately - what
you might call "dual-use" research.More than 10 years back, I talked to a
US scientist just back from an iron fertilisation experiment who explained
that personally, he wasn't interested in geoengineering; really, he wanted
to answer more academic questions about iron distribution in the water and
derive answers about what the oceans used to look like in the past.He
dressed the funding proposal up in geoengineering language because that was
the way to get funds - a tactic scientists in all fields have used down the
years in order to ensure their research happens (witness the boom in
"bioterror"-related research after the US anthrax scares of
2001).Fast-forward to the present, and we're seeing the opposite phenomenon
- research that could give geoengineering answers, but isn't labelled as
such.Last year, US scientists ran a project on the behaviour of aerosols in
clouds.Such research is standard; what was new about the E-Peace
project was the inclusion of "controlled release and atmospheric
distribution of three different size ranges of [aerosol] particles in
flight and on or by a dedicated ship".Geoengineering research by another
name?Now, a UK team is proposing "seeding" clouds out at sea to control
hurricane strength, and perhaps stop them forming at all.Clouds would be
sprayed with minuscule droplets of seawater. This would make them whiter so
they reflect more sunlight back into space, reducing the sea surface
temperature - which is the primary driver of hurricanes.Other researchers,
including the UK's Stephen Salter, are proposing using the same apparatus
to whiten clouds in order to reflect sunlight and cool the world; in
another word, geoengineering.So when some argued in Oxford that research
should be constrained if it's tailored towards geoengineering but permitted
if it's not, I wondered: how?What you might regard as an optimistic note is
the degree of thought and debate that's going into the issue of how to
regulate geoengineering research before it happens.Nothing like this went
into other controversial but important issues such as genetically
engineered crops, shale gas or nuclear power before it began.But whatever
rules are eventually developed, one suspects they're going to have to be
applied with common sense.In 1997, while making a radio series on climate
change, I went to a roof-whitening ceremony in Miami.Attended by marching
bands and flags and encouraged by a district mayor, the good burghers of
several streets were painting their roofs white, to reflect sunlight and
cool the Earth.They were deploying geoengineering. As far as I know, the
world is still turning.

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