Ethics, Policy & Environment
Volume 17, Issue 2, 2014

Response to Svoboda and Irvine

Full access
DOI:10.1080/21550085.2014.926080 Jesse Reynolds
Published online: 08 Aug 2014

In this issue, Svoboda and Irvine (Svoboda & Irvine, 20146. Svoboda,
T., & Irvine, P. (2014). Ethical and technical challenges in
compensating for harm due to solar radiation management
geoengineering. Ethics, Policy and Environment, 17(2), 157–174.
[Taylor & Francis Online]
View all references) offer the most in-depth consideration thus far of
possible compensation for harm from solar radiation management (SRM)
geoengineering. This topic is indeed treacherous terrain, pulling
together multiple complex debates, ethical and otherwise. Their
description of the technical challenges to determining damages and
causation in particular are illuminating. The reader cannot help,
though, but be left with the sense that both SRM and compensation are
futile efforts, bound to do more harm than good.
Before proceeding, throughout any consideration of geoengineering, one
must always bear in mind that it is under consideration as a possible
complementary response (along with greenhouse gas emissions
reductions—or ‘mitigation’—and adaptation) to climate change. Climate
change poses risks to the environment and humans, among whom the
world's poor are the most vulnerable. The Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change recently concluded that ‘Models consistently suggest
that SRM would generally reduce climate differences compared to a
world with elevated greenhouse gas concentrations and no SRM …’
(Boucher et al., 20133. Boucher, O., Randall, D., Artaxo, D.,
Bretherton, C., Feingold, G., Forster, P., … Zhang, X. Y. (2013).
Clouds and aerosols. In T. F.Stocker, D.Qin, G. -K.Plattner, M.Tignor,
S. K.Allen, J.Boschung… P. M. Midgley (Eds.), Climate change 2013: The
physical science basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Fifth
Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(pp. 571–657). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

View all references, p. 575). Therefore, SRM has the potential to
reduce harm to the environment and humans, particularly to already
disadvantaged groups. However, SRM is imperfect.
The primary problem with S&I's analysis is that they treat the
shortcomings of SRM and of compensation for its potential negative
secondary effects as if they were sui generis. In fact, these cited
shortcomings are found among three existing policy domains, which
happen to intersect at the proposed compensation for SRM's harms. The
first such policy domain is socially organized responses to other
complex problems, and the provision of public goods in particular. In
a key passage, S&I write that ‘The potential for SRM deployment to
result in an unequal distribution of harm and benefit among persons
raises a serious ethical challenge. It seems deeply unfair to adopt a
climate change strategy that benefits some at the expense of harming
others. This is especially the case if those harmed bear little or no
responsibility for the problem of anthropogenic climate change’ (pp.
160–161). One could replace the phrases ‘SRM deployment’ and ‘a
climate change strategy’ (and skip the final specific sentence, for
now) with references to almost any socially organized response to a
complex problem, and the statement would remain valid. Indeed, the
primary function of government is arguably to levy taxes in order to
provide public goods, which are unlikely to be otherwise adequately
provided. These public goods include (but are not limited to) defense
from external threats, police protection to reduce crime, construction
of infrastructure, regulation for safety and environmental protection,
generation of knowledge through research, and standards setting. In
each of these cases, some people benefit more than others, and some
pay more than others. Some may be net losers. Policies in which no one
is a net loser (i.e., Pareto improving) are sometimes possible, but
most often are not or are not pursued. Instead, policies that generate
positive total net benefits are adopted. To compensate net losers,
side payments can be made and/or other issues can be linked. While
these arrangements could be called ethically problematic, they
constitute the very core of public policy. In fact, several of S&I's
ethical concerns—including raising revenue from those opposed to
and/or harmed by a policy, arbitrary rules, and the non-identity
problem—could be posed regarding these public goods’ provision. SRM
might be especially complex, in large part because of its global
nature, but that does not make it entirely novel. Other global public
goods are promoted through various international mechanisms (Barrett,
20071. Barrett, S. (2007). Why cooperate? The incentive to supply
global public goods. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

View all references).
The second policy domain posing similar ethical problems is
compensation, particularly in complex situations. Even in a case as
simple as accident liability with a single injurer and a single
victim, compensation for non-economic and irreparable damages is
unclear, and compensation clearly does not grant license for an
injurer to harm the victim. In a more complex example, such as the
requested compensation by those born with birth defects due to their
mothers’ use of thalidomide during pregnancy, is it very uncertain who
should pay and how much compensation should be provided.
The third existing policy domain is climate change. In the key passage
cited above, ‘SRM deployment’ could be replaced with ‘mitigation,’
‘adaptation,’ and/or ‘compensation for climate change damages’ and the
statement would remain valid. Any climate policy will ‘result in an
unequal distribution of harm and benefit among persons,’ and under all
feasible policies, those who ‘bear little or no responsibility for the
problem of anthropogenic climate change’ will experience some harm.
Specifically, aggressive mitigation would be expensive and, though it
offers some co-benefits, it would hinder economic development,
including in poor countries.1
1 Developing countries account for the majority of current greenhouse
gases emissions and the large majority of projected future emissions.
Fossil fuel combustion remains essential to economic development.
Aggressive mitigation would reduce fossil fuel combustion, hindering
economic development in poor countries.View all notes
The cause of the ‘ethical uncertainty’ is not SRM but climate change
and greenhouse gas emissions, whose ethics is discussed thoroughly in
the literature. Because of this, no responses to climate change will
be impervious to accusations of being unjust. However, S&I's implicit
ethical divorce of SRM from climate change has the effect of laying
the ethical challenges from climate change at the feet of SRM.
An additional problematic aspect of S&I is that, to some degree, they
stack the deck against SRM. Regarding its benefits, they fail to
emphasize that SRM appears to hold the potential to greatly reduce
climate change risks to the environment and people, particularly to
the world's poor. Regarding SRM's costs, they cite four ways in which
some might be harmed, each of which is likely to be less severe than
they imply. First, SRM would compensate for temperate and
precipitation changes unevenly. Yet almost all modeling of SRM's
probable effects are not optimized but instead use a determined SRM
intensity or one that would return global average temperature to a
preindustrial value. Citing them as indicating certain likely harms
would require that significantly suboptimal SRM policies be adopted.
The one model that does balance temperature and precipitation across
regions of the globe found that population-weighted Pareto optimal,
globally uniform SRM could compensate for 93% of temperature changes
and 56% of precipitation changes (Moreno-Cruz, Ricke, & Keith, 20124.
Moreno-Cruz, J. B., Ricke, K. L., & Keith, D. W. (2012). A simple
model to account for regional inequalities in the effectiveness of
solar radiation management. Climatic Change, 110(3), 649–668.
[CrossRef], [Web of Science ®]
View all references, p. 660). Second, S&I point to ocean
acidification, but this is not caused by SRM but instead by elevated
atmospheric carbon dioxide. It is simply unaddressed by SRM. Third,
they note possible damage to stratospheric ozone. However, this would
be caused by only one proposed SRM technique (stratospheric aerosol
injection) using one proposed material (sulfate aerosols); other
methods and materials are possible. Furthermore, recent research
indicates that this impact would be small and the harmful consequences
(increased ultraviolet radiation) would be almost entirely offset by
the screening of incoming light by the aerosols (Pitari et al., 20145.
Pitari, G., Aquila, V., Kravitz, B., Robock, A., Watanabe, S., Cionni,
I., … Tilmes, S. (2014). Stratospheric ozone response to sulfate
geoengineering: Results from the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison
Project (GeoMIP). Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres,
119(5), 2629–2653.
[CrossRef], [Web of Science ®]
View all references). Fourth, if SRM were to suddenly stop, then the
subsequent rapid climate change would be very harmful. But it is not
only SRM which poses risks if not implemented properly. For example,
society could intend optimal mitigation and adaptation yet fail to
implement them, resulting in dangerous climate change. In fact,
contemporary society maintains numerous complex operations whose
cessation would result in harm. For example, the well being of almost
all people relies upon continued global trade powered by fossil fuels,
yet we generally do not worry about a sudden cessation of trade and
fossil fuel extraction. Lastly, even if SRM were to stop, the benefits
might still outweigh the costs (Bickel & Agrawal, 20132. Bickel, J.
E., & Agrawal, S. (2013). Reexamining the economics of aerosol
geoengineering. Climatic Change, 119(3–4), 993–1006.
[CrossRef], [Web of Science ®]
View all references). Nevertheless, the authors emphasize that SRM
‘could result in substantial harm’ (p. 160). This is true in that SRM
would pose risks, but S&I emphasize only the misses while downplaying
the hits.
Both SRM and the compensation for its negative secondary effects are
ethically complex. Yet such ‘ethical uncertainty’ generally neither
raises questions of ethical permissibility and nor induces paralysis
among policy makers in other domains such as the provision of public
goods, compensation, and mitigation and adaptation in response to
climate change. SRM is indeed complex and challenging but S&I fail to
indicate why its case should be fundamentally different from these
others. A more pragmatic approach, which asks what policies and
avenues of research would be most likely to offer the greatest
benefits, as opposed to one which seeks only what is problematic, may
be more productive.

Notes

1 Developing countries account for the majority of current greenhouse
gases emissions and the large majority of projected future emissions.
Fossil fuel combustion remains essential to economic development.
Aggressive mitigation would reduce fossil fuel combustion, hindering
economic development in poor countries.

References

1. Barrett, S. (2007). Why cooperate? The incentive to supply global
public goods. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
2. Bickel, J. E., & Agrawal, S. (2013). Reexamining the economics of
aerosol geoengineering. Climatic Change, 119(3–4), 993–1006.
[CrossRef], [Web of Science ®]
3. Boucher, O., Randall, D., Artaxo, D., Bretherton, C., Feingold, G.,
Forster, P., … Zhang, X. Y. (2013). Clouds and aerosols. In T.
F.Stocker, D.Qin, G. -K.Plattner, M.Tignor, S. K.Allen, J.Boschung… P.
M. Midgley (Eds.), Climate change 2013: The physical science basis.
Contribution of Working Group I to the Fifth Assessment Report of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (pp. 571–657). Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
4. Moreno-Cruz, J. B., Ricke, K. L., & Keith, D. W. (2012). A simple
model to account for regional inequalities in the effectiveness of
solar radiation management. Climatic Change, 110(3), 649–668.
[CrossRef], [Web of Science ®]
5. Pitari, G., Aquila, V., Kravitz, B., Robock, A., Watanabe, S.,
Cionni, I., … Tilmes, S. (2014). Stratospheric ozone response to
sulfate geoengineering: Results from the Geoengineering Model
Intercomparison Project (GeoMIP). Journal of Geophysical Research:
Atmospheres, 119(5), 2629–2653. [CrossRef], [Web of Science ®]
6. Svoboda, T., & Irvine, P. (2014). Ethical and technical challenges
in compensating for harm due to solar radiation management
geoengineering. Ethics, Policy and Environment, 17(2), 157–174.
[Taylor & Francis Online]

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