http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/wcc.333/abstract

Dual high-stake emerging technologies: a review of the climate engineering
research literature

Björn-Ola Linnér and Victoria Wibeck
Article first published online: 21 JAN 2015
DOI: 10.1002/wcc.333

Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change

The literature on climate engineering, or geoengineering, covers a wide
range of potential methods for solar radiation management or carbon dioxide
removal that vary in technical aspects, temporal and spatial scales,
potential environmental impacts, and legal, ethical, and governance
challenges. This paper presents a comprehensive review of social and
natural science papers on this topic since 2006 and listed in SCOPUS and
Web of Science. It adds to previous literature reviews by combining
analyses of bibliometric patterns and of trends in how the technologies are
framed in terms of content, motivations, stakes, and recommendations. Most
peer-reviewed climate engineering literature does not weigh the risks and
new, additional, benefits of the various technologies, but emphasizes
either the potential dangers of climate engineering or the climate change
consequences of refraining from considering the research, development,
demonstration, and/or deployment of climate engineering technologies. To
analyse this polarity, not prevalent in the literature on earlier emerging
technologies, we explore the concept of dual high-stake technologies. As
appeals to fear have proven ineffective in spurring public engagement in
climate change, we may not expect significant public support for climate
engineering technologies whose rationale is not to achieve benefits in
addition to avoiding the high stakes of climate change. Furthermore, in
designing public engagement exercises, researchers must be careful not to
steer discussions by emphasizing one type of stake framing over another. A
dual high-stake, rather than risk–benefit, framing should also be
considered in analysing some emerging technologies with similar
characteristics, for example, nanotechnology for pollution control.

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