http://www.futureearth.info/blog/2014-aug-18/assessing-geoengineering-technical-fix-too-far-0

Assessing geoengineering: a technical fix too far?

AUG2014
Jon Turney

Geoengineering is raising more issues for the social sciences than the
physical sciences.

Is it getting too hot in here? OK, turn up the air-conditioning. Is it too
hot on this planet? We have a technical fix for that, too.

At least, we have a bundle of ideas that could be tried - from various
types of planetary sunshade to schemes for removing carbon dioxide faster
than it is being dumped into the atmosphere.

If any of them actually turned out to work, debates about future climate
change - and perhaps even future climate - would be transformed. And while
describing this as a “technical fix” is enough to rule out the idea for
some, technical fixes can be unequivocally good. That nerve-numbing
injection before the dentist fires up their drill is a technical fix.

The collection of putative climate fixes that sit under the banner of
geoengineering are very unusual ones, though. None of them exist yet,
however detailed the scenarios may be. They are being studied and debated
extensively, but the debate is more about principles and procedures than
any specific proposal. And while there are technical issues, the whole area
of geoengineering is raising more issues for the social sciences than the
physical sciences. That is reflected in the programme of the
majorconference on climate engineering being held in Berlin this week, and
was also apparent in the questions raised at a discussion at theEuropean
Geosciences Union meeting in May.

As Phil Macnaghten and Bronislaw Szerszynski pointed out last year in a
paper in Global Environmental Change, this is partly because
geo-engineering schemes do not exactly involve cutting edge technology.
That seems true whether they are about carbon dioxide capture or solar
radiation management. Both, they write, “typically involve mundane
technologies such as mirrors, iron dust, sulphate particles or crumbled
rock”, just deployed on extremely large scales.

But mundane or not, they stretch the capabilities of established ideas
about trying to weigh the consequences of scientific and technological
projects, from technology assessment to the currently fashionable (in the
EU at any rate) idea of instituting “Responsible Research and Innovation”.
That is partly because their importance has been recognised at an unusually
early stage in development given that geoengineering remains a largely
imaginary set of technologies - or at least ones whose feasibility is in
question. But there are other reasons. As Macnaghten and Szerszynski also
point out, they have a different relation with uncertainty from most
technologies. Usually, it is the side effects that are difficult to predict
or to attribute. With solar radiation management, especially, even the
intended effects are probabilistic, and spatially distributed as far is it
is possible to be.

That means, as they also say, that if there is genuine geoengineering,
international agreements “will be involved in constituting the very
technology from the outset.” It is, in other words, a quintessential
technology of Earth system governance. It may even itself be inherently a
form of governance, as Jack Stilgoe of University College London proposes
in a forthcoming book on the subject. As the goal is planetary, we can only
get hints about feasibility on a less than planetary scale. Lacking a spare
planet, we cannot test geo-engineering on Earth without doing it.

These uncertainties around large scale deployment make almost everyone
wary. If one seeks unequivocal advocates of geoengineering, they are hard
to find. Rather, there are those who insist we should not rule it out, and
that it is sensible to do more research,and small scale trials. David Keith
of Harvard, for example, resists being typed as a gung-ho techno-optimist,
even though he is the author of a small book from MIT Press titled A Case
for Geo-engineering. He suggests that the possibility of geoengineering
providing a way to reduce climate risk at low cost could be hard to resist,
but it is not something to rush into.

The main arguments are about solar radiation management - a term originally
coined with ironic intent but now widely adopted. It is widely agreed that
while it might achieve planetary scale goals there would be losers as well
as winners. For example, modelling indicates that it would probably affect
tropical rainfall and the monsoon season. There are fears about crop yields
in regions where solar radiation is attenuated, disturbance of other
weather patterns and, inevitably, “unknown unknowns”.

The disquiet that this evokes has led to an assumption by some that
objections to geoengineering would be overcome only in the face of dire
emergency. Ken Caldeira suggested at the EGU debate that, “if there were
massive famines with hundreds of millions of people dying and the global
political system was too screwed up to deal with it through more reasonable
ways of doing it. If, by emulating a volcano, we could save hundreds of
millions of lives, I think I could be in favor of it at that time”.
Futurist Jamais Cascio, author of one of the first books on climate
engineering agrees, suggesting that ultimately “Global delays in reducing
carbon emissions will likely force the human race to embark upon a set of
geoengineering-based responses, not as the complete solution, but simply as
a disaster-avoidance measure”.

And at the higher levels of global discussion, the IPCC appears to endorse
the deployment-after-disasters scenario, with the latest Working Group III
report this year referring to geoengineering as a “possible emergency
response”.

However, a recent commentary in Nature Climate Change casts doubt on the
possibility of an emergency response and on the suggestion that
geoengineering could be a stop-gap while other measures to mitigate climate
change are put in place. And in line with the idea that current arguments
about geoengineering are mostly sociological, the reasons given by the
authors - led by Scott Barrett of Columbia University - are mainly social,
political or economic. For example, they suggest that the main reason
current climate negotiations are unproductive is the “free-rider” problem,
that any party can benefit from a communal good without contributing to its
maintenance, and gain advantage over those that do. There is no reason to
think this difficulty would go away just because geo-engineering had been
implemented to buy time, they say.

At the same time, they judge that proposed geoengineering schemes would not
work fast enough to be effective in emergency. If geoengineering
technologies are restricted to last-ditch deployment by political
contraints, as seems likely, Barrett et al. suggest that they are caught in
a double bind: “Our main conclusion is that, when the use of geoengineering
is politically feasible, the intervention may not be effective; and that,
when the use of geoengineering might be effective, its deployment may not
be politically feasible”.

The arguments will continue, and it is important for social scientists to
get involved in research and debate. As that happens they may need to be
mindful of a warning from Oxford University’s Clare Heyward and Steve
Rayner that social sciences’ responses to geoengineering proposals so far
have had a singular asymmetry. In a working paper for the Climate
Geoengineering Governance Project last year they suggested that social
scientists tend to accept proposals for climate change mitigation
relatively uncritically, and work toward implementing them. When it comes
to geoengineering on the other hand, they see some social scientists who
regard the technology as incompatible with democracy, even though “Many of
the concerns about authoritarianism and social engineering directed at
[stratospheric aerosols] apply equally well to conventional climate policy
interventions”. That is, global climate mitigation strategies require
global governance, whatever means they adopt to realise their goals.

They suggest that the social scientists who they think are inconsistent in
this regard, (among whom they mention Macnaghten and Szersynski), proceed
from a world view characterised - in a version of cultural theory that
derives from the work of the celebrated anthropologist Mary Douglas - as
“egalitarian”. Specifically, they say this gives rise to a definition of
democracy as residing in small, autonomous communities in which citizens
are active participants, governed by consent. It may be hard to reconcile
that vision with a technology that requires global decisions from which
no-one can opt out. The same objection could apply to other proposals for
climate mitigation, but they generally prescribe less, rather than more
intervention in natural systems, which is also in line with the egalitarian
world view, in this classification.

That interpretation looks more plausible when we find opponents of
geoengineering such as Clive Hamilton invoking Heidegger to suggest that
grand technical fixes for climate are an example of the philosopher’s view
that ‘The will to mastery becomes all the more urgent the more technology
threatens to slip from human control.’ But also striking is that we already
have one bunch of social scientists applying a particular social theory to
account for another group of sociologists’ approach to geoengineering. That
is the kind of intra-disciplinary commentary which is always going to go on
in a case like this. But perhaps the social sciences, working with other
disciplines, can also find some new ways of helping us understand what is
novel about geoengineering as a possible human project, and how to think
about it?

Further reading

Phil Macnaghten, Bronislaw Szerszynski,Living the global social experiment:
An analysis of public discourse on solar radiation management and its
implications for governance Global Environmental Change, 23 (2013) 465-474
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2012.12.008

Scott Barrett et al, Climate engineering reconsidered, 4, 2014, 527

Clare Heyward and Steve Rayner, A Curious Asymmetry: Social Science
Expertise and Geoengineering, Climate Geoengineering Governance Working
Paper Series: 007

Clive Hamilton, What would Heidegger Say About Geoengineering? September
2013

-- 
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