https://rowman.com/ISBN/9780739175408

Engineering the Climate The Ethics of Solar Radiation Management

Pages: 274

 Albert Borgmann; Holly Jean Buck; Wylie Carr; Forrest Clingerman; Maialen
Galarraga; Benjamin Hale; Marion Hourdequin; Ashley Mercer; Konrad Ott;
Clare Palmer; Ronald Sandler; Dane Scott; Patrick Taylor Smith; Bronislaw
Szerszynski and Kyle Powys Whyte Philosophy | Ethics & Moral Philosophy,
Lexington Books

Engineering the Climate: The Ethics of Solar Radiation

Management discusses the ethical issues associated with deliberately
engineering a cooler climate to combat global warming. Climate engineering
(also known as geoengineering) has recently experienced a surge of interest
given the growing likelihood that the global community will fail to limit
the temperature increases associated with greenhouse gases to safe levels.
Deliberate manipulation of solar radiation to combat climate change is an
exciting and hopeful technical prospect, promising great benefits to those
who are in line to suffer most through climate change. At the same time,
the prospect of geoengineering creates huge controversy. Taking intentional
control of earth’s climate would be an unprecedented step in environmental
management, raising a number of difficult ethical questions. One particular
form of geoengineering, solar radiation management (SRM), is known to be
relatively cheap and capable of bringing down global temperatures very
rapidly. However, the complexity of the climate system creates considerable
uncertainty about the precise nature of SRM’s effects in different regions.
The ethical issues raised by the prospect of SRM are both complex and
thorny. They include:
1) the uncertainty of SRM’s effects on precipitation patterns,
2) the challenge of proper global participation in decision-making,
3) the legitimacy of intentionally manipulating the global climate system
in the first place,
4) the potential to sidestep the issue of dealing with greenhouse gas
emissions, and,
5) the lasting effects on future generations.

It has been widely acknowledged that a sustained and scholarly treatment of
the ethics of SRM is necessary before it will be possible to make fair and
just decisions about whether (or how) to proceed. This book, including
essays by 13 experts in the field of ethics of geoengineering, is intended
to go some distance towards providing that treatment.

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