http://www.earthisland.org/journal/index.php/elist/eListRead/if_we_could_fix_climate_change_would_it_be_more_palatable_to_conservatives

Geoengineering might get more conservatives to believe in global warming –
and I’m not sure that’s a good thing

As the consequences of climate change become increasingly obvious (you
know, floods, fires, and droughts), it’s becoming more and more difficult
for conservatives to dismiss global warming out-of-hand. Yes, the folks at
The Heartland Institute are still plugging along (thanks for sending me
your recent book, fellows). But – outside the shrinking band of dead-enders
– self-described conservatives are beginning to acknowledge that man-made
climate change is real and will require action. A recent Gallup poll found
that more than half of Republicans now acknowledge the existence of global
warming, up from 39 percent in 2011.On Thursday Earth Island Journal and
Grist are co-sponsoring a debate on geoengineering at the David Brower
Center in Berkeley. Get your tickets here.Having long denied the problem
exists and squandered precious time to mitigate it, some conservatives now
say it’s too late to do anything about climate change. This is what a
former Obama White House official has called “the sophisticated
objection” to taking action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Or
as Stephen Colbert explained the situation earlier this year in his
signature style: “It’s high time we stop denying the problem and resign
ourselves to each day getting worse.”In short, decades of delay and
geopolitical gridlock have become an excuse for inaction and
fatalism.That’s bad enough. It’s sort of like letting part of your house
catch fire and then saying there’s no reason to call 911 because, hey, the
neighbors aren’t calling the fire department, either. Might as well let ‘er
burn.But I have another worry. I’m concerned that, with global atmospheric
CO2 concentrations having topped 400 ppm (the highest in at least 800,000
years), conservatives will begin to say we have no choice but to embrace
atmospheric geoengineering: technologies that will manipulate the entire
planet by either blocking some sunlight from hitting Earth and/or finding
ways to modify plants or the oceans to suck up vast amounts of carbon
dioxide.My anxiety is based on an interesting study published last year by
Yale’s Dan Kahan and other researchers. Kahan and his colleagues wanted to
test what’s called the “cultural cognition thesis.” This is the idea
(fairly well documented by now) that most of us base our opinions – not on
evidence or rational thought – but on factors like the beliefs of our peer
group, our existing ideological frames, and our concept of values. Or, to
mangle a complex scientific hypothesis and put it into lay terms:
Conservatives are skeptical of climate change because they think Al Gore is
a fat doofus, while progressives are skeptical of unfettered gun ownership
because they think Rush Limbaugh is a fat doofus. No matter how rational we
think we are, each of us perceives the world through the veil of our own
biases.Kahan et. al. wanted to test how individuals’ opinions about the
risk of climate change are influenced by (among other things) whether they
have heard of geoengineering. The researchers found that when given
information about geoengineering, conservatives were more likely to accept
information about climate change as real; at the same time, learning about
geoengineering made liberals less likely to accept information about
climate change. The science journalist Chris Mooney – who has made a career
out of parsing the cultural cognition thesis – has a smart take here about
the liberal side of the equation. I’m more interested in the conservative
viewpoint because, as I said, I think geoengineering promotion is going to
be the next stage of conservative talking points after climate fatalism.
I’m pretty sure that someday soon we will witness conservatives clamoring
for geoengineering as a preferred alternative to making our economies less
carbon-intensive. The line will go something like this: “There’s nothing we
can do to slash greenhouse gas emissions, so we might as well hack the
sky.”(At least one prominent conservative think tank, the American
Enterprise Institute, is already working on this argument. AEI fellow Sam
Thernstrom has written opinion pieces for The Washington Postand The Los
Angeles Times promoting geoengineering as a possible “solution” for global
warming.)Recent research has revealed that there are real differences
between the brains of self-described liberals and self-described
conservatives. Liberals are, in general, more open-minded and interested in
new ideas. Conservatives place higher value on orderliness and hierarchy.
Liberals are more communitarian while conservatives are more
individualistic. These predispositions help explain why conservatives would
be more willing to accept climate change science if they have first learned
about geoengineering. Here’s how Kahan and his colleagues explain it: “The
geoengineering news story … linked climate-change science to cultural
meanings – of human ingenuity and of overcoming natural limits on commerce
and industry – that at least partially offset the threat that crediting
such information would normally pose to the identity of Hierarchical
Individualists [conservatives].” Or, in simpler terms: the technological
quick-fix promised by geoengineering conforms to conservatives’ belief in
humanity’s dominion over nature. At the very least, it’s preferable to
making sweeping changes in our society and economy – changes that would
likely have to be driven by some kind of government action. Geoengineering
is attractive to conservatives because it offers the promise of being able
to continue business as usual.I’ve been tracking the geoengineering
debate for years, and it scares the bejeebers out of me. The science of
planetary manipulation might be air-tight, but everything else about it is
half-baked. The geopolitics of the thing are messy: Who, for example, would
control the global thermostat if, say, Russia wanted it warmer and India
wanted it cooler? The ethics are also squishy: What if some people benefit
from planetary manipulation while others suffer? Most worrisome is the
long-term bind into which it would put all of humanity. Once we start
manipulating the atmosphere, we won’t be able to stop, because then
temperatures would spike back up.As I wrote in an Earth Island
Journal cover story some time ago: “As geo-engineering proponents
acknowledge, schemes like sulfur aerosol address only the symptoms, not the
source, of global climate change. That fact betrays our society’s bias for
the techno-fix, the seemingly easy way out. Seemingly – because
geo-engineering is the most complicated strategy we could pursue. It takes
a problem, simplifies its cause, and then exaggerates its solution. It’s
like a Rube Goldberg machine, employing eight or nine steps when one or two
would do. Instead of pursuing the elegant solutions – trading in our cars
for buses, turning off the coal and turning on the wind – we are going to
build a contraption to make the clouds shinier.”In the course of reporting
that story, AEI’s Thernstrom told me that one of the virtues of
geoengineering is its centralized control. While unilateral emissions
reductions are pointless, unilateral geo-engineering could work. Any
industrial power could likely do it on its own.OK. But I have to wonder: If
conservatives don’t trust the federal government to manage our health care
system, why would they trust the federal government to manage the entire
sky?

Jason Mark, Editor, Earth Island Journal

Jason Mark is a writer-farmer with a deep background in environmental
politics.  In addition to his work in the Earth Island Journal, his
writings have appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle, The Nation, The
Progressive, Utne Reader, Orion, Gastronomica, Grist.org, Alternet.org, E
magazine, and Yes!  He is a co-author of Building the Green Economy:
Success Stories from the Grassroots and also co-author with Kevin Danaher
of Insurrection: Citizen Challenges to Corporate Power. When not writing
and editing, he co-manages Alemany Farm, San Francisco’s largest food
production site.

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