https://www.seas.harvard.edu/news/2014/11/adjusting-earth-s-thermostat-with-caution

Adjusting Earth’s thermostat, with caution

HARVARD SCIENTISTS SAY ASPECTS OF SOLAR GEOENGINEERING CAN—AND SHOULD—BE
TESTED WITHOUT NEED FOR FULL-SCALE DEPLOYMENT

November 17, 2014

Cambridge, Mass. – November 17, 2014 – A vast majority of scientists
believe that the Earth is warming at an unprecedented rate and that human
activity is almost certainly the dominant cause. But on the topics of
response and mitigation, there is far less consensus.One of the most
controversial propositions for slowing the increase in temperatures here on
Earth is to manipulate the atmosphere above. Specifically, some scientists
believe it should be possible to offset the warming effect of greenhouses
gases by reflecting more of the sun’s energy back into space.

The potential risks—and benefits—of solar radiation management (SRM) are
substantial. So far, however, all of the serious testing has been confined
to laboratory chambers and theoretical models. While those approaches are
valuable, they do not capture the full range of interactions among
chemicals, the impact of sunlight on these reactions, or multiscale
variations in the atmosphere.

Now, a team of researchers from the Harvard School of Engineering and
Applied Sciences(SEAS) has outlined how a small-scale “stratospheric
perturbation experiment” could work. By proposing, in detail, a way to take
the science of geoengineering to the skies, they hope to stimulate serious
discussion of the practice by policymakers and scientists.Ultimately, they
say, informed decisions on climate policy will need to rely on the best
information available from controlled and cautious field experiments.

The paper is among several published today in a special issue of
the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A that examine the
nuances, the possible consequences, and the current state of scientific
understanding of climate engineering. David Keith, whose work features
prominently in the issue, is Gordon McKay Professor of Applied Physics at
Harvard SEAS and a professor of public policy at Harvard Kennedy School.
His coauthors on the topic of field experiments include James Anderson,
Philip S. Weld Professor of Applied Chemistry at Harvard SEAS and in
Harvard’s Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology; and other
colleagues at Harvard SEAS.

“The idea of conducting experiments to alter atmospheric processes is
justifiably controversial, and our experiment, SCoPEx, is just a proposal,”
Keith emphasizes. “It will continue to evolve until it is funded, and we
will only move ahead if the funding is substantially public, with a formal
approval process and independent risk assessment.”

With so much at stake, Keith believes transparency is essential. But the
science of climate engineering is also widely misunderstood.

“People often claim that you cannot test geoengineering except by doing it
at full scale,” says Keith. “This is nonsense. It is possible to do a
small-scale test, with quite low risks, that measures key aspects of the
risk of geoengineering—in this case the risk of ozone loss.

”Such controlled experiments, targeting key questions in atmospheric
chemistry, Keith says, would reduce the number of “unknown unknowns” and
help to inform science-based policy.

The experiment Keith and Anderson’s team is proposing would involve only a
tiny amount of material—a few hundred grams of sulfuric acid, an amount
Keith says is roughly equivalent to what a typical commercial aircraft
releases in a few minutes while flying in the stratosphere. It would
provide important insight into how much SRM would reduce radiative heating,
the concentration of water vapor in the stratosphere, and the processes
that determine water vapor transport—which affects the concentration of
ozone.

In addition to the experiment proposed in that publication, another paper
coauthored by Keith and collaborators at the California Institute of
Technology (CalTech) collects and reviews a number of other experimental
methods, to demonstrate the diversity of possible approaches.

“There is a wide range of experiments that could be done that would
significantly reduce our uncertainty about the risks and effectiveness of
solar geoengineering,” Keith says. “Many could be done with very small
local risks.”

A third paper explores how solar geoengineering might actually be
implemented, if an international consensus were reached, and suggests that
a gradual implementation that aims to limit the rate of climate change
would be a plausible strategy.

“Many people assume that solar geoengineering would be used to suddenly
restore the Earth’s climate to preindustrial temperatures,” says Keith,
“but it’s very unlikely that it would make any policy sense to try to do
so.”

Keith also points to another paper in the Royal Society’s special issue—one
by Andy Parker at the Belfer Center for Science and International
Affairs at Harvard Kennedy School. Parker’s paper furthers the discussion
of governance and good practices in geoengineering research in the absence
of both national legislation and international agreement, a topic raised
last year in Science by Keith and Edward Parson of UCLA.

“The scientific aspects of geoengineering research must, by necessity,
advance in tandem with a thorough discussion of the social science and
policy,” Keith warns. “Of course, these risks must also be weighed against
the risk of doing nothing.”

For further information, see:

“Stratospheric controlled perturbation experiment (SCoPEx): A small-scale
experiment to improve understanding of the risks of solar
geoengineering”By John Dykema, project scientist at Harvard SEAS; David
Keith, Gordon McKay Professor of Applied Physics at Harvard SEAS and
professor of public policy at Harvard Kennedy School;James Anderson, Philip
S. Weld Professor of Applied Chemistry at Harvard SEAS and in Harvard’s
Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology; and Debra Weisenstein,
research management specialist at Harvard SEAS.

“Field experiments on solar geoengineering: Report of a workshop exploring
a representative research portfolio”By David Keith; Riley Duren, chief
systems engineer at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory at CalTech;
and Douglas MacMartin, senior research associate and lecturer at CalTech.

“Solar geoengineering to limit the rate of temperature change”By Douglas
MacMartin; Ken Caldeira, senior scientist at the Carnegie Institute for
Science and professor of environmental Earth system sciences at Stanford
University; and David Keith.

“Governing solar geoengineering research as it leaves the
laboratory”By Andy Parker, associate of the Belfer Center at Harvard
Kennedy School.

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