http://mobile.theverge.com/2013/12/6/5181736/who-sets-the-planets-thermostat-the-politics-of-geoengineering

Weather wars: who should be allowed to engineer our climate?

By Russell Brandom 12.06.2013

“The big thing nuclear weapons did wasn't all the details,” says Harvard
climate scientist David Keith. “The really big thing is, they changed what
it means to be a nation-state.” It’s on his mind because as the next
century unfolds, Keith expects it to happen again.Scientists usually shy
away from Oppenheimer comparisons, but in the case of geoengineering,
they’re a given. Spend enough time at geoengineering conferences, and
you’re guaranteed to hear a reference to The Bomb. Keith, who has grown
into geoengineering’s leading advocate after his recent book on the topic,
says the technology would be “as disruptive to the political order of the
21st century as nuclear weapons were for the 20th." It’s an exciting,
dangerous idea — and it already has its opponents. In the years that he's
been researching geoengineering, Keith says he's received two death threats
serious enough to warrant calls to the police.

The last, best hope

Keith’s work is on solar radiation management, ostensibly a matter of pure
atmospheric chemistry — but the potential uses for the tech make it much
more dangerous than your average research project. In a world of
catastrophic global warming, solar radiation management might be our only
way to cool the planet and forestall the most damaging effects of climate
change. The theory is simple: a plane sprays sulfate aerosols into the
atmosphere, building a reflective layer that blocks a small portion of the
sun’s energy, thus cooling the globe. There’s plenty of support for the
theory, including a few sulfate-spewing volcanoes which have cooled the
globe in the past, but it’s still unclear how it would work in practice.
It’s generally accepted that the sulfates would disappear from the
atmosphere within a few years, but more complex effects remain unknown.

GOING ROGUE

Most geoengineers think the technology should be used for a kind of "soft
landing" as we phase out fossil fuels —but what if a country wanted to go
further? The process is cheap enough that an island country like the
Maldives, facing dire consequences from rising sea levels, might decide to
kick off aggressive geoengineering on their own, daring other countries to
stop them. The response would start with diplomacy, but it could escalate
to the US shooting down their sulfur-spewing planes.The next step is to
test the idea in the atmosphere with small drops over the course of a few
days, but that proposal is still extremely controversial. It’s easy to see
why critics are nervous. In the wrong hands, solar radiation management has
the potential to destroy the planet's ecosystem entirely. The danger of a
sulfate-triggered global drought or an accidental ice age is very real, and
the climate is too complex to predict on a global scale. More than that,
it’s still unclear exactly how governments would use this technology. Like
the nuclear bomb, geoengineering would require a kind of global governance
that simply doesn’t exist yet, and many climate activists see the
climate-engineering cure as worse than the disease.Keith's ideal plan is
simple enough: a slow ramp-up in sulfate drops over decades, giving the
human race more time to quit fossil fuels and the planet's ecosystem time
to adapt to higher temperatures. Once carbon emissions stopped around 2070,
the sulfate drops would phase out, ending completely by 2120. Warming would
still be a problem, of course, but geoengineering would let it come on
slowly, giving ecosystems time to evolve and avoiding the destructive
climate shocks that some studies predict. And by phasing out the action,
Keith would avoid the dangers of an open-ended program in which warming
worsens over centuries as geoengineering efforts face diminishing
returns.The century-long respite, in contrast, seems like a potentially
useful weapon in the fight against a warming climate. Still, it rests on
dozens of potentially dicey decisions. Will the world actually be ready to
quit fossil fuels by 2070? When the moment comes to start reducing the
sulfate drops, warming an already sweltering globe, will world leaders lose
their nerve? Will the new politics of weather force governments into rash
decisions such as drying out the climate after storms or nixing the project
entirely in response to a single dry season? Behind all of those questions
is an even bigger one: who will make the choice? When charting a course for
the entire planet, who can we trust to take the wheel?

"The desperation argument"

For many, the nuclear parallel is exactly the problem. The ETC Group, a
Montreal-based environmental organization, has led the charge against
geoengineering, arguing that modern governance simply isn’t ready for that
kind of power. "I fully appreciate scientists saying that governments
aren't doing anything, but giving them more power doesn't fix that," says
ETC executive director Pat Mooney. "And I don't know any situation in human
history where they've behaved well in a situation like that." As soon as
the technology is developed, Mooney anticipates, it will be handed off to
bureaucrats with little regard for the public good. "Governments just don't
respond with social responsibility on a global scale. They always look to
their own interest."

THE BATTLE OF THE MONSOONS

China's seasonal monsoon is crucial to the nation's economy and ecosystem,
but solar radiation management could leave it dangerously weak. Keith's A
Case for Climate Engineering envisions a scheme to strengthen the Chinese
monsoon through cloud seeding, which would in turn disrupt the equally
crucial Indian monsoon. India might respond with their own local radiative
methods, spurring a geoengineering arms race, or take direct military
action to stop China's program. Either way, the results could be dire.At
the same time, Keith’s process isn’t a perfect fix, and there are a number
of asymmetries that any would-be climate engineer will have to grapple
with. The new sulfate layer only works during daylight hours, while CO2
affects temperatures around the clock, so his geoengineered world would
have cooler days and warmer nights. Global warming means a warmer and
wetter world, but geoengineering the climate back to its pre-carbon
temperature might result in a dangerously dry planet. Keith prefers to hold
precipitation constant, resulting in a slight temperature increase, but
that's just one approach. Whoever handles the process will have to balance
global temperature, precipitation levels, and storm power with no clear
answers to guide them through.For the most part, geoengineering is a
question world leaders have yet to consider. Keith would like to do it
carefully and slowly, but he's the first to admit that there's always the
danger someone will do it the wrong way. And there are plenty of
candidates. Sulfate drops are exceedingly cheap on a global scale, costing
hundreds of millions of dollars rather than the tens of trillions it would
take to recapture atmospheric carbon. At that scale, a single country could
take on the project unilaterally. Russia has already advocated for the
technology, led by Putin adviser Yuri Izrael, even though the oil-rich
regime still doesn't blame carbon for warming. It's a small enough sum that
it could even fall to the private sector, led by environmentally minded
billionaires like Bill Gates, George Soros, and Ted Turner. (Gates is
already partially funding Keith's research.) Larger countries would see it
as a rogue action, but that doesn’t mean they’d stop it outright.More
likely, some experts anticipate, is a push from one of the small southern
nations hit hardest by climate change. In a recent piece titled "The
Desperation Argument for Geoengineering," ethicist Stephen Gardiner
envisions a unilateral break by a country like the Maldives, which could be
completely obliterated by stronger storms and rising sea levels. If the
Maldives decided to act early on geoengineering, maybe through
the Coalition of Small Island States, who would stop them? Would Western
leaders be willing to shoot down their sulfate-spewing planes in the name
of global governance? Gardiner calls the case "morally complex in ways
unappreciated by simple appeals to desperation," but the realpolitik of the
issue is even more fraught.

The problem of power

The most respected international body, and the favorite of skeptics like
Mooney, is the United Nations. The UN currently oversees environmentalism's
biggest international success story, the 1989 Montreal Protocol to protect
the ozone layer, which could make it a natural fit for striking the balance
on geoengineering. But reducing carbon emissions is much trickier than
reducing ozone gases, and the UN has had real problems bringing countries
in line. For many, that’s hobbled the organization’s credibility for
geoengineering. Keith in particular sees the General Assembly's
one-country-one-vote policy as essentially unworkable for managing the
global climate. "If Exxon had hired me and 20 of my friends to design a
system that looked like it was doing something, but would actually just
suck all the air out of climate action, it would be pretty close to the
framework-convention system," Keith says.

NORTH VS. SOUTH

The most likely path forward for geoengineering is a trilateral commission
between China, Russia, and the United States. One thing all those countries
have in common: they're comfortably north of the 20th parallel. Critics
like ETC's Pat Mooney worry geoengineering will set the stage for global
conflict between temperate and tropical countries as rich northern
countries set the world's temperature and poorer tropical zones are left to
sweat out the consequences.What's more likely is a series of uglier and
less democratic treaties. Experts expect any plausible deal would be based
on a trilateral framework, balancing the interests of Russia, China, and
the United States as the most important moving parts in a global consensus.
China will want to protect its monsoon, while Russia may hold out to
protect its oil reserves, but it's easy to imagine the three countries
ending up on the same page, especially if the global crisis predicted by
climatologists is raging in the background. In the end, all three countries
want a stable climate that's capable of producing enough food to feed its
inhabitants. If geoengineering can deliver it, the politics will follow
suit.But if that seems like a happy ending to climate fears, it's just what
environmentalists like Mooney are worried about. What's best for the US,
Russia, and China isn't what's best for the world, and Mooney sees
trilateralism as a way to put a happy face on a kind of globally engineered
oppression. What will the trilateral climate engineers think of droughts in
Africa, wildfires in Australia or increasingly deadly storms in the South
Pacific, when weighed against their own crop yields? Like most powerful
countries, the trilateral nations rest comfortably north of the 20th
parallel. What happens to those that sit below, struggling with more
powerful storms without the political clout to influence their own
climates? The result could be a global climate designed by and for the
wealthy northern countries. "The last global conflict was between east and
west," Mooney says. "This is between rich and poor, north and south."Still,
for the scientists of geoengineering, there’s no choice but to plow ahead.
"A lot of us working on this technology lose sleep over it," Keith says.
"But through a long line of technologies, from nuclear weapons to DDT and
on and on, humanity has managed to, if not find the best way, find some
reasonable way through." We don’t know if humanity will chart the same
course with geoengineering. Like most technology, there’s no telling how
the world will use it in a century’s time. But even if this new power could
become monstrous, can we turn away? On a warming planet, can we afford to
throw away the tools that might save us? "The ultimate use for these things
is unfathomable," Keith says. "If people could have sat around at a
conference and decided whether they wanted to invent agriculture or not,
what would they say?"

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