http://dcgeoconsortium.org/2014/07/29/schrodingers-srm/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=schrodingers-srm

“Schrödinger’s SRM”- Guest Post- Duncan McLaren -University of Lancaster

In an ideal world, the only people prepared to give stratospheric sulphate
aerosol injection a second glance are those climate deniers who have
exhausted every other argument they have against mitigation.

We are largely familiar with ideas of cutting emissions (mitigation) and
adapting to the impacts of climate change (by, for instance, building
better flood defences). We also know that states, businesses and
individuals face a whole range of incentives to keep emitting and
underperform on mitigation, with the result that the world is badly off
course for meeting the political goal of restricting warming to 2oC, rather
being set for warming of 4oC or more by 2100.

In such circumstances anything that further discourages commitment to
mitigation is clearly a ‘bad thing’, right? And what if that thing were to
also generate new risks by creating the possibility of a massive
acceleration in global warming over a 5-10 year period at some unspecified
future date (the so-called ‘termination effect’), changing regional
climates in unexpected and unpredictable ways, while prolonging the hole in
the ozone layer by 30 years, marginally increasing levels of acid
precipitation and reducing the effectiveness of solar power?

One might reasonably consider such a technology unethical, and even perhaps
evil. And indeed stratospheric sulphate aerosol injection (a form of “solar
radiation management” geoengineering, or ‘SRM’) might appear so. In an
ideal world the only people prepared to give the technique a second glance
are those climate deniers who have exhausted every other argument they have
against mitigation: slowly and sequentially retreating from denying the
existence of climate change to admitting it, but only as a natural process;
then acknowledging human causation, yet claiming it would be good for us;
and subsequently – like Bjorn Lomborg – accepting it would be bad, but that
there are many other more important things to spend political and financial
capital on. From there, the only option left to resist mitigation is
geoengineering, and the stratospheric sulphate variety of solar radiation
management (SRM) is the apparently cheap and cheerful choice.

Not only are such advocates supportive of SRM for the reason of resisting
mitigation (and the perceived costs of regulation or carbon taxation), but
political leaders are receptive to their arguments. It’s not just tea-party
Republicans in the United States, and their doppelgangers like Tony Abbott
in Australia and Stephen Harper in Canada, but politicians across the
spectrum bruised and battered by political battles over climate change,
that would welcome a coherent case for easing off on mitigation in favour
of something politically and financially cheaper. The idea that, faced with
the chance to take action on climate change without doing the political and
practical dirty work to cut emissions, decision makers might ease off on
mitigation in favour of researching and developing a geoengineering short
cut, is commonly called ‘moral hazard’. Few researchers reject the
existence of such a pressure, although they use various terms to describe
it.

Yet support for SRM – at least for research – comes from other quarters
too. Climate scientists and activists, recognising the physical inertia in
the climate system, and the political inertia in the world’s largest
economies are increasingly worried that climate change may soon, if not
already, be beyond control by mitigation and adaptation, putting billions
at risk from food insecurity, water stress, rising sea levels and other
climate impacts – with the worst effects arising for the already worst-off
and most vulnerable. They rightly ask: at what point do we accept that the
world will need something more than better mitigation; at what point do we
prepare for the worst, and research SRM in the detail needed to be able to
minimise its undesirable side effects and risks.

Yet support for SRM – at least for research – comes from other quarters too.

>From this perspective developing SRM might not only be ethical, it might be
the only genuinely ethical option. Yet the moment we accept these
arguments, we make it immensely more likely that SRM will need to be used,
as we empower the deniers and the ‘easy-option’ politicians, and the
businesses keen to wring every last drop of profit from fossil fuels to
resist and reduce mitigation. Some researchers also introduce limited
economic arguments that suggest it is rational to reduce mitigation effort
in the presence of SRM (even though it is only in a world with SRM, that we
face the risk of the termination effect).

So the space between ethical SRM and its evil twin is infinitesimal –
thinner than a sheet of paper. Until such point as it is essential, the
ethical position appears to be to resist any plausible development of SRM –
as campaign groups such as ETC have done. But once that point is past, any
resistance becomes ethically untenable.

The problem is that unless stakeholders and decision makers can somehow
discuss SRM sensibly and safely, without triggering the effects of moral
hazard it is impossible that we will ever know if its deployment genuinely
could be safe, practical and ethical.

A possible answer is Schrodinger’s SRM: just as in Schrodinger’s thought
experiment the infamous cat existed in a state of quantum indeterminacy,
both and neither alive and dead; we should see SRM as in a state of
indeterminacy – both and neither ethical and evil. This could give
researchers a safe house or ‘grey zone’ where, with careful attention to
the design of research projects we could properly investigate the many
scientific, political and cultural uncertainties and unknowns, and seek
ways to acknowledge, limit and mitigate the unknowables that are likely to
remain without exacerbating moral hazard. How that ‘grey zone’ is designed
in practice is a question for another day, but without it we may open the
box in 2035 or 2055, and find not ethical SRM, but its evil twin waiting
for us.



Duncan McLaren is a part time PhD student at Lancaster, UK. Alongside his
PhD studies, on the justice implications of geoengineering, he consults and
advises in a range of sustainable development, energy and climate change
issues. Amongst other roles he served on the UK Research Councils’
stage-gate panel for the Stratospheric Particle Injection for Climate
Engineering (SPICE) project review and is a member of the Integrated
Assessment of Geoengineering Potential (IAGP) project advisory group.
 Duncan’s blog can be found here.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to