http://ensia.com/voices/why-geoengineering-can-be-only-part-of-the-climate-solution/


WHY GEOENGINEERING CAN BE ONLY PART OF THE CLIMATE SOLUTION

Climate change is not a technological problem, so a technological fix is
not enough.

Braden Allenby
Professor, Arizona State University

March 2, 2015

The failure of the Kyoto Protocol and the underlying process of the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) has led to
substantial interest in geoengineering technologies, under the usual (and
not entirely irrational) view that if policy can’t work, perhaps technology
might. And indeed, Wally Broecker in his article in Elementa about CO2 air
capture technologies did his usual excellent job of summarizing both the
concerns raised by global climate change, and the possibility that
technologies, such as air capture of CO2, might be able to respond, at
least if events reach a crisis point. From a technologist’s perspective,
however, the overall geoengineering discussion is unsatisfactory for
several reasons, some of them quite fundamental to rational and ethical
responses to the challenges of the Anthropocene.

To begin with, it is important to remember that geoengineering technologies
are very narrowly defined as, in the words of The Royal Society’s 2009
report, those that enable “deliberate large-scale intervention in the
Earth’s climate system, in order to moderate global warming.” The domain is
divided into two categories, the first being “carbon dioxide removal” (CDR)
systems, such as the air capture system that Broecker discusses. This
category includes, among other things, biological technologies, such as
forest plantations, algae carbon capture and fuel production systems, and
ocean fertilization schemes. Non-biological CDR technologies include
systems that capture CO2 from the ambient atmosphere and enable it to be
subsequently used to regenerate fuels or sequestered into geologic storage.

The second general category of geoengineering technologies act by
reflecting some of the incoming energy from the sun back into space before
it reaches the Earth, thereby reducing energy input into the
Earth/atmosphere system. Proposed “solar radiation management” (SRM)
technologies include placing space-based reflectors such as balloons or
nebulous nets in space or the upper atmosphere, or generating reflective
clouds by various means such as emitting sulfate particles or spitting sea
salt particles into the atmosphere, where they nucleate moisture droplets,
thereby creating clouds. (Details on these and other techniques can be
found in the Royal Society report.)

Simple systems when disturbed may return to equilibrium points, but we are
dealing with complex adaptive systems. Whatever path they take, it will not
involve a return to previous conditions.

Each technology has its own potential advantages and risks, which are
poorly categorized at present, in part because research and research
funding has been significantly impeded by significant opposition to the
concept, especially in the environmental and climate change communities.
Moreover, the categories themselves have different cost/benefit profiles.
CDR technologies, for example, would also help manage ocean acidification,
which is rising because CO2 when absorbed in the ocean creates more acid
conditions, threatening animals such as clams and corals. SRM technologies,
which only impact insolation, would not prevent continuing acidification.
Moreover, both CDR and SRM proponents sometimes imply that implementing
these technologies would facilitate a return to previous atmospheric and
climactic states. This is a category mistake. Simple systems when disturbed
may return to equilibrium points, but we are dealing with complex adaptive
systems. Whatever path they take, it will not involve a return to previous
conditions. Thomas Wolfe was right: you can’t go home again. More
importantly, it means that whatever we do about climate — implement the
Kyoto Protocol, deploy CDR or SRM technology systems, or do nothing — we
are engineering the system. There is no stable base to return to, or rely
on. The sleigh ride is already in progress. The only real question is
whether we will accept the responsibility, and try to behave rationally,
given that reality (Allenby, 2011).

This suggests that successfully implementing any geoengineering technology,
or any policy for that matter, will require reframing the way in which we
are defining the challenge, and the tasks it implies. To begin with, the
idea that anthropogenic (human generated) climate change is a “problem” is
inadequate. It is, rather, a condition; it is not the disease itself, but a
symptom of an underlying reality. And that reality is that this planet and
its systems are increasingly a product of the cumulative activities, myths,
desires, institutional quirks and behaviors, social norms, and general
rambunctiousness of a single species, of seven billion people seeking a
better life for themselves and their families. That means that reductionist
frameworks that pull climate change out of the complex network of systems
within which it resides, and try to address it as if it were separable, are
over-simplistic and will lead to policy and technology failure. Consider
biofuels. Leaving aside all the issues that have been raised about the
overall impact on emissions, land use, agriculture and food prices, and so
forth, biofuels at scale are essentially an effort to manage climate change
by accelerating the flow of carbon through biological entities. But, of
course, we can’t accelerate the flow of carbon without also accelerating
the flows of all the other materials that biological systems contain, such
as nitrogen, phosphorous, sulfur and a myriad of other elements. And those
cycles, especially phosphorous and nitrogen, are already fairly perturbed
by human activity. So what we’re essentially doing is trying to fix the
carbon cycle by further destabilizing the nitrogen, phosphorous and other
cycles, a policy that only makes sense because we have seriously mis-framed
the climate change dialog to begin with.

Think of any reasonably powerful technology, from steam, to steel, to
electrification, to railroads, to automobiles, to the Internet, all of
which have changed the evolution of human history, and the physical world
in ways that would have been impossible to predict a priori.

The pernicious effects of this conceptual failure are apparent in the way
geoengineering is usually approached. A “problem” once isolated can often
be “fixed” by application of technology, which is what geoengineering is
trying to do with climate change. But if climate change is an emergent
condition of a complex underlying reality, then reliance on a technological
solution is dangerous, especially when the technological solutions are
intentionally very potent, and look a lot like the proverbial “silver
bullet.” To begin with, technology alone is not likely to be a viable and
stable solution, because the condition probably displays “wicked
complexity” — that is, it involves social, psychological, cultural and
institutional domains that preclude any optimal, simple solution. It is
also the case that any technology system that by definition and intent has
the power to change fundamental systems such as the climate will impact far
more than just climate. Think of any reasonably powerful technology, from
steam, to steel, to electrification, to railroads, to automobiles, to the
Internet, all of which have changed the evolution of human history, and the
physical world in ways that would have been impossible to predict a priori.
It is thus a dangerous signal of a naïve, dysfunctional and overly
simplistic perspective on technology to consider any geoengineering option
based only on its potential implications for climate change. Consider,
again, biofuels. There is nothing wrong with technologies that produce
ethanol from corn: they have been used with great success for many years in
the mountains of Virginia, Carolina and Tennessee. But when we scaled it up
to be, in essence, a geoengineering technology, we generated ripple effects
as farmers changed their planting patterns, and food prices accordingly
changed, and those in turn filtered through the political system to produce
riots and governmental instability. It is not just that the technology
produces non-linear effects; it is that those effects manifest in
unexpected and unpredicted domains. Indeed, it is probably that at least
some geoengineering technologies might, for example, shift weather patterns
in ways that significantly affect agriculture, or cause famines, or change
geopolitical power balances, or substantially affect energy production and
consumption. Indeed, economic historians have developed the concept of long
waves of economic development, or Kondratiev waves, to capture the way that
powerful technologies co-evolve with entire suites of related financial,
social, institutional and cultural patterns (Freeman and Louca, 2001).

This does not mean that we shouldn’t be doing research on geoengineering
technologies — indeed, we should be, and Wally Broecker and others are
absolutely right in calling for such work. It is critical to our ability to
adapt to an unpredictable future — a future that would be equally
unpredictable at this point if we were to embrace the Kyoto Protocol or any
other proposed “solution” to climate change. But the history of technology
systems, and the complexity of the Anthropocene, argue that the
geoengineering discourse needs to be expanded based on two additional
general principles. First, any technological response to climate change
should reflect a portfolio approach. What we are facing is a requirement to
manage a condition involving a major, highly complex, unpredictable and
adaptive Earth system. Under these circumstances it is highly unlikely that
any particular technology can be relied on as a sole, or even major,
response because the associated costs and risks are likely to be far too
high. Additionally, relying on a single solution creates a fragile
situation, because if anything does go wrong — say, the unanticipated costs
become too high, or we find we are seriously destabilizing another critical
system — we have not left ourselves any alternatives. This is basically
what we have done on the policy side with the UNFCCC approach. A portfolio
of geoengineering options, however, is more flexible, both because we can
substitute technologies at the margin if unanticipated costs (or benefits)
emerge, and because we can balance not just the technologies themselves,
but the costs and benefits across interests groups, regions of the world,
different socio-economic groups and so forth.

As in the case of corn-based ethanol, these are not “bad” technologies per
se, but if implemented rapidly at large scale given the current paucity of
data, they are highly risky.

Second, it is critical to expand the scope of what is considered a
geoengineering technology. If anthropogenic climate change is an emergent
behavior of a system composed of seven billion people and all their
systems, trying to respond with the very limited technology portfolio
implied by the current definition of geoengineering is inadequate. At the
least, technology trajectories and time scales need to be an important part
of geoengineering discussions (e.g., “bridge technologies”). For example,
as fracking may be dramatically shifting demand from coal to natural gas in
electricity production, it should be part of a more sophisticated
geoengineering discussion. In doing so, costs and benefits should be
realistically identified and integrated into portfolio models: for example,
the cost of stopping fracking in the real world is a shift towards coal.
Moreover, ideological simplification should not interfere with serious
analysis of the issues raised by a particular technology. Again using
fracking as an example, it is more important to consider how to manage
natural gas systems to reduce leakage of the powerful greenhouse gas
methane than it is to only focus on water quality issues (the latter
require management, of course, but are not of the same environmental
magnitude as increased leakage of methane might be). Moreover, given the
time frames involved, it is critical to include technologies that are still
nascent but that might have significant impacts in future (unlike fracking,
which has been developing and diffusing for many years). An example of such
a technology might be “cultured meat,” or the process of growing meat from
stem cells in industrial facilities. While there are obvious difficulties
in quantifying climate change impacts of such a shift, not least because no
one knows at this point what the technology might look like at scale, some
estimates indicate that significant reductions in emissions are possible;
cows, for example, are estimated to emit roughly 50 kilograms of methane
annually. Secondary impacts, such as freeing up significant acreage for
biofuel production, and managing the nitrogen, phosphorous, and other
cycles associated with meat production more efficiently, could be equally
or more important to managing food systems on an anthropogenic planet
(Mattick and Allenby, 2013).

Meanwhile, it would be foolish to reject “traditional” CDR and SRM
geoengineering technologies out of hand. As in the case of corn-based
ethanol, these are not “bad” technologies per se, but if implemented
rapidly at large scale given the current paucity of data, they are highly
risky. Continuing research in two general areas should be a priority.
First, of course, is research that helps identify potential costs and
benefits and, equally important, the regions, people or systems that bear
them. Second, it is critical to try to determine the scale and speed of
implementation at which the impacts of the technologies become seriously
non-linear, and to identify regimes within which there can be some
confidence that costs and implications are manageable. Granted that there
will be large uncertainties around these technologies even with good
research, it is still possible to gain greater understanding of how a
portfolio might be designed and managed, and what sorts of specific
concerns each option might raise.

In sum, we are now deep into the process of terraforming this planet.
Although we might not like such a state, it is far too late, and the human
species far too large and active, to pretend otherwise. It is not hubris,
or technological fantasy, that drives this realization: it is looking out
the window at the world as it is. The response of falling back on
ideological certainties, romantic visions, and over-simplistic worldviews
at some point becomes simply a form of irresponsible denial, because the
complexity of the systems within which we are embedded mean that there is
no home base, no golden age to return to — and our network of systems
continues to evolve, and to reflect the growing dominance of human
influence. And it will do so regardless of what stories we tell ourselves
to try to avoid our responsibilities. What we can do is, to the best of our
ability, rationally and ethically respond to the challenges we face.
Geoengineering technologies are a part of the technology response that must
be developed, but they are only a part, and as we explore them and their
implications we need to be far more sophisticated in how we think about
them as technologies, and manage them as part of an increasingly engineered
planet.  View Ensia homepage

This article was originally published at Elementa. Read the original
article.

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