Failure to deal with ethics will make climate engineering ‘unviable’

http://gu.com/p/4vd69

Failure to deal with ethics will make climate engineering ‘unviable’
Environmental philosopher warns major ethical, political, legal and social
issues around geoengineering must be addressed

Graham Readfearn in Sydney
22:00 CEST Thu 31 July 2014

Geoengineering, also known as climate modification, falls into two
categories - carbon dioxide removal or solar radiation management.
Photograph: ISS/NASA
Research into ways to engineer the Earth’s climate as a last-ditch response
to global warming will be rendered “unviable” if the associated ethical
issues are not tackled first, a leading environmental philosopher has
warned.

Prof Stephen Gardiner, of the University of Washington, Seattle, told the
Guardian that so-called geoengineering risked making problems worse for
future generations.

Gardiner was in Sydney for a two-day symposium that aimed to grapple with
the moral and ethical consequences of geoengineering, also known as climate
modification.

Later this year, the United States’ National Academy of Sciences is due to
publish a key report into the “technical feasibility” of a number of
proposed geoengineering methods, which fall into two categories.

Carbon dioxide removal (CDR) tries to cut the levels of the greenhouse gas
in the atmosphere and store it, for example, in trees, algae or underground.

A second category, known as solar radiation management tries to lower the
amount of energy entering the Earth’s atmosphere from the sun by, for
example, spraying sulphate particles into the stratosphere or whitening
clouds.

Gardiner said political inertia was one reason why the world had failed to
respond meaningfully to climate change and rising greenhouse gases.

“There’s a temptation for the current generation particularly in the rich
countries to take benefits now and pass the severe costs on to the future,”
he said.

“Arguably that’s one of the big reasons we have failed so far on climate
policy because we have succumbed to that temptation.

“But when it comes to geoengineering, one of my biggest worries is that we
might pick geoengineering as an intervention that replicates that pattern.

“We might try and adopt a quick technological fix but one that holds the
worst impacts for a few decades without much attention to what happens
after that. What does happen after that could be even worse than what would
unfold if we just allowed the negative climate impacts in the near term to
materialise.”

He said that it was time to engage with the ethical and moral questions now
that major scientific institutions and a growing group of researchers were
starting to consider geoengineering.

“We are still in the early stages and very few people have written and
talked about this. The good news is that the major scientific reports
generally do signal that they think there are major ethical, political,
legal and social issues that need investigating. The crucial thing is
whether we get beyond saying that as a throwaway line to actually dealing
with those implications.

“Unless you can deal with these social and political issues then any kind
of geoengineering would be unviable anyway – or at least any remotely
ethically defensible version would be unviable.”

In 2009, a Royal Society report called for more research into
geoengineering and concluded that CDR techniques “should be regarded as
preferable”.

A proposed experiment to test a way to deliver particles into the upper
atmosphere using a balloon and a one kilometre-long pipe was cancelled in
2012 after it was reported that two of the scientists involved had
submitted patent applications that were similar to the techniques being
proposed.

A study earlier this year in the journal Nature Communications comparing
five different proposed methods of climate engineering found all were
“relatively ineffective” while carrying “potentially severe side effects”
that would be difficult to stop.

Prof Jim Falk, of the Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute at the
University of Melbourne, told the symposium there were more than 40
distinct methods that could be described as geoengineering, including
planting large numbers of trees and painting roofs white.

He said: “There’s a huge array of ideas and they go from local scale to
intermediate scale to a global scale. The scale, the impacts and the risks
all go up together.”

• Graham Readfearn’s travel and accommodation was paid for by the symposium
organisers.

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