http://breakingenergy.com/2015/01/12/climate-geoengineering-as-contingency-plan-perhaps-the-sharpest-tool-in-the-worlds-climate-tool-box/

‘Climate Geoengineering’: As Contingency Plan Perhaps the Sharpest
Tool in the World’s Climate Tool Box By Roman Kilisek on January 12,
2015 at 12:00 PM

The debate about the development and deployment of geoengineering
technologies is slowly creeping into the mainstream media, as both
analysts and commentators seem to increasingly doubt the international
community’s ability to agree on a comprehensive and effective
international agreement at UNFCCC COP 21 in Paris. With many countries
facing political and/or economic obstacles to pursuing necessary
aggressive domestic GHG mitigation strategies, mankind is currently
not on pace to limit global warming to an increase of below 2 degrees
Celsius relative to pre-industrial levels by 2100, according to the
2014 IPCC Fifth Assessment Synthesis Report.

A recent Scientific American article calls for small tests of
geoengineering technologies “in a contained, rigorous, transparent
manner” in order to better comprehend their risks. Moreover,
“environmentalist skittishness that thwarts these small tests of
climate manipulation” is denounced. “Civilization may depend on such
geoengineering methods as the planet keeps warming. We need tests to
get them right – and stop people from doing them wrong,” the editors
warn. Ideally, the expectation is to remove a billion metric tons of
GHG gases per year from the atmosphere and so, at least, slow the
warming of the planet.

This editorial piece comes on the heels of David Biello’s thoughtful
examination of whether indeed geoengineering can solve global warming.
He outlines in his article that irrespective of methods used
“geoengineering will [eventually] prove insufficient for solving
climate change” if mankind continues with the unabated burning of
fossil fuels. He goes on to dismiss the viability of such a
contingency plan – i.e. a last resort – to avert the catastrophic
global impacts of climate change by explaining:

“There is no technological fix for global warming other than the hard
work of transforming a global energy system that relies on burning
fossil fuels into one that relies on energy sources – the sun, Earth’s
heat, fission or, maybe some decade, fusion – that do not use the
atmosphere as a dump. The fact that geoengineering cannot suffice is
good news because it means that a viable form of climate engineering
cannot undercut the urgency of making that switch. No form of climate
engineering can solve global warming at present. To think so is
science fiction.”

Another article asks a similar question – “Should we tamper with our
climate?” – and answers in the negative. The two academics, Erik van
Sebille and Katelijn Van Hende, reason that even though geoengineering
– what they call “climate hacking” or “deliberately tampering with our
climate to stave off the damaging effects of global warming” – might
buy time to prevent a warming above 2 degrees Celsius over the
pre-industrial average, the methods are not well-understood and
literally equivalent to Pandora’s Box “because this climate solution
[geoengineering] is likely to create new problems of its own.”
Additionally, they argue that the root cause of climate change – the
continued accumulation of carbon dioxide in the planet’s atmosphere –
is not adequately addressed by ‘treating’ a single so-called “symptom”
of climate change, which is global warming. “Policies and regulations
should be designed to have an intended and purposeful effect, which
geoengineering at the moment cannot deliver,” they emphasize.

All the above illustrates nicely the status quo of much of the current
geoengineering technology discussion. So, what is geoengineering
about?

A highly informative Congressional Research Service (CRS) report on
geoengineering from November 2013, which serves as a good primer on
the policy issues, science, and governance of geoengineering
technologies, looks at an array of methods as alternatives to
traditional measures to mitigate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
According to the authors Kelsi Bracmort and Richard K. Lattanzio,
“[i]f deployed, these new technologies could modify the Earth’s
climate on a large scale.” The commonly used definition of
‘geoengineering’ seems to be relatively broad in scope when
referencing “large-scale and deliberate modifications of the Earth’s
energy balance, to reduce temperatures and counteract anthropogenic
climate change.”

This allows for a full spectrum of possible geoengineering activities.
Conventional wisdom distinguishes between two general geoengineering
technologies – carbon dioxide removal (CDR) methods and solar
radiation management (SRM) methods. The former CDR methods – such as
carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) – “address the warming effects
of greenhouse gases by removing carbon dioxide (CO2) from the
atmosphere.” Conversely, SRM methods – examples are stratospheric
aerosol injection or space-based reflectors – “address climate change
by increasing the reflectivity of the Earth’s atmosphere or surface,
thus reducing or diverting incoming solar radiation.”

The major difference is that the latter SRM methods do not remove GHG
emissions from the atmosphere. Note, the ETC Group, which opposes all
testing and deployment of geoengineering techniques, as well as, for
example, “genetically-engineered ‘climate-ready’ crops” – often the
only means of ensuring food security in many impoverished regions of
the world already impacted by climate change – creates a separate
third category ‘weather modification’ as it pertains to climate
geoengineering techniques.

Interestingly, as for geoengineering activities in the US, the CRS
report talks about, “to date, (…) limited federal involvement in, or
oversight of, geoengineering (…) [with nevertheless] some federal
agencies, notably the Environmental Protection Agency, Department of
Energy, Department of Agriculture, and the Department of Defense,
[having] taken actions related to geoengineering research or
projects.” While the US administration’s view on geoengineering
research is not stated publicly in the form of a government policy,
the situation in the UK is quite different as the following statement
by the UK government in a respective policy paper indicates:

“Based on the evidence currently available, it is premature to
consider geo-engineering as a viable option for addressing climate
change. The priority is, and must be, to tackle the root cause by
reducing emissions of greenhouse gases from human activities and
adapting to those impacts that are unavoidable. Mitigation of climate
change, by reducing emissions and protecting natural carbon sinks,
remains the surest way of increasing our chances of avoiding dangerous
climate change in the future. Some, including scientists, have
suggested that in the future geo-engineering may have a role to play
in supplementing our efforts to mitigate climate change. However, for
most techniques, current understanding of the costs, feasibility,
environmental and societal impacts is limited.”

Prima facie, this statement seems to suggest a supplemental future
role for geoengineering in climate mitigation efforts, which, in turn,
suggests that testing is already well under way in order to understand
the underlying risks better. It is relatively safe to assume that
federal agencies in the US do not just follow suit but lead comparable
efforts – often shielded from the public.

The latest 2014 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
synthesis report also addressed the current status of geoengineering
research and its potential impacts as follows:

“Limited evidence precludes a comprehensive assessment of feasibility,
cost, side-effects and environmental impacts of either CDR or SRM. (…)
Several CDR techniques could potentially reduce atmospheric GHG
levels. However, there are biogeochemical, technical and societal
limitations that, to varying degrees, make it difficult to provide
quantitative estimates of the potential for CDR. (…) SRM is untested,
and is not included in any of the mitigation scenarios, but, if
realisable, could to some degree offset global temperature rise and
some of its effects. It could possibly provide rapid cooling in
comparison to CO2 mitigation. (…) Even if SRM would reduce human-made
global temperature increase, it would imply spatial and temporal
redistributions of risks. (…) In spite of the estimated low potential
costs of some SRM deployment technologies, they will not necessarily
pass a benefit–cost test that takes account of the range of risks and
side effects. The governance implications of SRM are particularly
challenging, especially as unilateral action might lead to significant
effects and costs for others.” (Box 3.3)

In sum, ‘climate geoengineering’ appears to have the potential to
serve as the world’s contingency plan if the above concerns (see also
CRS report for risk factors) are smoothed out. Geoengineering should
not be reduced to an ethical moral question and should also not
distract from the primary task of reducing carbon emissions in the
atmosphere. Nor should a perception in the public prevail that this
technology is not already well under way in many parts of the world as
the map aptly shows. Thus, in order to properly inform future policy
as well as decision-making at both the national and international
levels, the conduct of applied research in this emerging field of
scientific innovation has to be encouraged, which per se falls short
of implying a ‘carte blanche’ to deploy geoengineering in the end.

Uncertainties and proof of concept in terms of the effectiveness at
reducing global temperatures can only be resolved via further
scientific and technical examination along with transparency.
Remember, given that most of the research is still model-based does
not remove uncertainty with respect to the question of how quickly the
global average temperature would respond to any reduction in CO2
concentrations in the atmosphere. Also note, global warming itself is
in a sense ‘unintentional’ geoengineering and CCS – if based on the
reduction of carbon dioxide emissions released into the atmosphere –
can also be considered a geoengineering solution. The latter seems to
enjoy public and political backing while its scalability is hampered
by a lack of a carbon pricing.

Additionally, due to the fact that geoengineering may cause
significant transboundary effects with serious ramifications on
agriculture in individual countries, which then could have security
implications, a regulatory framework based on actual research testing
in terms of feasibility, public safety and/or general time horizons is
advisable (In this context, consult the instructive table in the CRS
report, which identifies and explains the scientific underpinnings for
many of the current views on geoengineering). Mankind has crossed the
threshold of geoengineering for some time now, which also explains why
the planet’s atmosphere is not pristine anymore and we may need a
feasible contingency plan in the world’s climate tool box down the
road in case of future climate emergencies.

Topics: Carbon Dioxide Emissions, Climate Action Tools, Climate
Change, Climate Change Mitigation, Climate Change Technology,
Geoengineering, GHG Emissions Reduction, Global Warming

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