Poster's note : really good critique on a piece of research which has
been otherwise quite widely absorbed.

http://www.skepticalscience.com/kahan-geoeng-polar.html

Does providing information on geoengineering reduce climate polarization?

Posted on 4 March 2015 by Andy Skuce

Dan Kahan of Yale University and four colleagues have just published
an article in Annals of the AAPS titled: Geoengineering and Climate
Change Polarization Testing a Two-Channel Model of Science
Communication that investigates the effect on study participants'
attitudes to climate change after reading an article about
geoengineering. In their abstract, they write:

We found that cultural polarization over the validity of climate
change science is offset by making citizens aware of the potential
contribution of geoengineering as a supplement to restriction of CO2
emissions.

I will argue here that this experiment achieved no such result because
the premise was wrong. Specifically, the information on geoengineering
that was presented to the study participants (in the form of a
fictional newspaper article) bears no relation to mainstream
scientific opinion on geoengineering nor, even, to the opinions of
advocates of geoengineering. Geoengineering is portrayed in the
fictional newspaper article as a strategy with no uncertainty about
how well it might work and, it is claimed, will "spare consumers and
businesses from the heavy economic costs associated with the
regulations necessary to reduce atmospheric CO2 concentrations to 450
ppm or lower". This is hardly depicting geoengineering as a "potential
solution" or "a supplement" to the restriction of emissions, as is
claimed in the abstract of the paper.

In fact, what Kahan et al. have demonstrated is that presenting
misinformation dressed up as fact can affect people's opinions about
climate change. That may be interesting as a social science experiment
conducted on consenting adults, but it is not much use as a guide to
effective public science communication, constrained as it is to tell
the truth.

The Kahan et al 2015 paper is paywalled, but there is a 2012 version
of it (updated in 2015), with the same title, similar figures, but
different text, that is available online here. The study looked at two
representative samples of individuals from the USA and England of 1500
each. The two samples were further split into three groups that were
each asked to read one of three fictional newspaper articles. One
article, used as a control, had nothing to do with climate change. The
second was an article advocated tighter limits on atmospheric
concentrations of CO2 (although this article contained what surely
must be a typo, calling for CO2 concentrations of 175 ppm, which would
send us back to depths of the last ice age). The third piece called
for geoengineering on the grounds that "limiting emissions is a
wasteful and futile strategy". Articles two and three both quoted a
(fictional) Dr Williams of Harvard University, the spokesman of the
(fictional) "American Association of Geophysical Scientists". Both of
these articles contained a couple of pictures designed to appeal to or
to repel people at either end of the political spectrum.

All participants were then asked to read a piece from the (fictional)
journal Nature Science. The fake article was cobbled together from
various real scientific publications and was policy-neutral. The
participants were then asked to evaluate this article for its validity
and their own assessment of climate change risk.

You can read the articles for yourself on pages 30-33 here. I have
copied the geoengineering piece below:



This account of the costs and benefits of geoengineering echoes the
simplistic and widely debunked account of geoengineering in the book
SuperFreakonomics. It bears little resemblance to what mainstream
scientists—even the geoengineering enthusiasts among them—say. Note,
in particular, the claim that geoengineering would spare consumers the
costs and regulations of emissions reduction. The National Academy of
Sciences (NAS) in a recent report estimates that the cost of direct
air capture of CO2 of the kind shown in the left-hand picture would
cost $400-1000 per tonne of CO2, which is much higher than generally
accepted emissions mitigation costs. The albedo modification
technology shown in the right-hand picture (incorrectly referred to as
a "flying" rather than floating vessel in the text of the paper) would
require international regulation for it to be done responsibly, if
indeed it could ever be done safely at all.

What do actual climate scientists say about geoengineering?

It's probably worthwhile first to distinguish between the two main
types of geoengineering, which have very different cost, effectiveness
and risk profiles.

Solar radiation management or albedo modification is cheap and poses
regional and global risks. Harvard University scientist David Keith
estimates that an effective program could be achieved by spending of
the order of $1 billion per year, employing a fleet of twenty or so
modified business jets to spray sulphuric acid into the stratosphere.
To put that sum into perspective, if the Koch brothers invested $50
billion of their fortune in Treasury Bills, they could fund global
solar radiation management in perpetuity out of the interest alone.
Some of the shortcomings and perils of this kind of intervention are
detailed in Alan Robock's article 20 reasons why geoengineering may be
a bad idea. Most importantly, albedo modification does nothing to
avert ocean acidification.

Carbon dioxide removal is expensive and poses mainly local risks. It
comprises three main technologies:

carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) where CO2 is captured at source
from the exhausts of fossil-fuel power plants;
direct air capture and sequestration (DACS), in which CO2 is removed
from ambient air by a variety of so-far untested technologies and;
bio-energy CCS (BECCS) involving CO2 capture at bio-energy power
plants. CCS and BECCS are relied upon heavily in the socio-economic
model underlying the IPCC's only projection (RCP2.6) that avoids
exceeding 2 degrees Celsius of warming. See for example van Vuuren et
al. (2011).


Here is a handy summary table from the NAS report:



There is no consensus among scientists about what to do about
geoengineering. Near one end of the scale we have David Keith, a
Harvard scientist and a leading advocate for the serious consideration
of geoengineering, who has written in the preface to his recent book
(which I recommend): A Case for Climate Engineering:

I myself have concluded that it makes sense to move with deliberate
haste towards deployment of geoengineering. You may well reach a
different conclusion. My goal is simply to convince you that it’s a
hard choice.

However, this comment was introduced with the kind of caveats missing
from the fictitious newspaper article and the quotes from "Dr Alan
Williams" of Harvard University. Keith:

Solar geoengineering is a set of emerging technologies to manipulate
the climate. These technologies could partially counteract climate
change caused by the gradual accumulation of carbon dioxide.
Deliberately adding one pollutant to temporarily counter another is a
brutally ugly technical fix, yet that is the essence of the suggestion
that sulfur be injected into the stratosphere to limit the damage
caused by the carbon we’ve pumped into the air.

Solar geoengineering is an extraordinarily powerful tool. But it is
also dangerous. It entails novel environmental risks. And, like
climate change itself, its effects are unequal, so even if it makes
many farmers better off, others will be worse off. It is so cheap that
almost any nation could afford to alter the earth’s climate, a fact
that may accelerate the shifting balance of global power, raising
security concerns that could, in the worst case, lead to war. If
misused, geoengineering could drive extraordinarily rapid climate
change, imperiling global food supply. In the long run, stable control
of geoengineering may require new forms of global governance and may
prove as disruptive to the political order of the 21st century as
nuclear weapons were for the 20th.

Other climate scientists are less keen on geoengineering than David
Keith. In a recent Slate piece: Climate Hacking Is Barking Mad,
University of Chicago climate scientist Ray Pierrehumbert writes:

In other words, albedo modification addresses (albeit imperfectly) the
symptoms but not the root causes of CO2-induced global warming. As a
possible response to such criticisms, Oxford’s Steve Rayner has mused
that “Band-Aids are useful when you are healing.” However, Band-Aids
are not all that useful if you really needed penicillin instead, and
the wound festers until you die. Albedo modification is not like a
bandage that promotes healing, but more like taking painkillers when
you really need surgery for cancer.
...
Now, about those research recommendations: If albedo modification is
such a terrible idea, why do research on it at all? Indeed in his
book, Mike Hulme considers the technology ungovernable and argues that
if a technology is basically ungovernable at the level of deployment,
we shouldn’t be doing research that could bring it into being.

Ethicist Clive Hamilton has written a book about geoengineering
Earthmasters The Dawn of the Age of Climate Engineering, which I
recommend as a counterpoint to Keith's book. Hamilton takes a critical
look at the motives of those advocating geoengineering and describes
how climate modification was originally researched in weapons
laboratories in the USA.

Regardless or whether or not we chose to emphasize information on
geoengineering in climate communications, the issue is not likely to
go away, at least until the world has embarked on meaningful emission
mitigation measures. It's as if we are in the second act of a Chekhov
play, in which the gun that appeared in the first act is destined to
go off in the third. David Keith is probably right in his observation
that geoengineering will be as disruptive for global governance in
this century as nuclear weapons have been since 1945.

Polarization

The headline result, to recap, from the Kahan et al. study is that:

We found that cultural polarization over the validity of climate
change science is offset by making citizens aware of the potential
contribution of geoengineering as a supplement to restriction of CO2
emissions.

I hope that I have demonstrated that the subjects were actually fed
misinformation that instead portrayed geoengineering as a low cost,
risk-free substitute for the restriction of emissions.

Many people who are opposed to accepting climate change have
deep-seated concerns that mitigation solutions will require taxation,
loss of liberty and the handing over of control to a technocratic
elite with whom they do not share a cultural or even national
identity. In order for geoengineering to be safely deployed, even its
proponents stipulate that we will need:

• Carbon pricing, in some form to pay for carbon dioxide removal.
Ultimately, carbon removal and sequestration has to be funded by
fossil-fuel consumers or taxpayers. It won't be cheap.
• Global governance agreements to decide whose fingers get to control
the albedo modification thermostat, along with some kind of mechanism
to compensate the losers from climate intervention, since its regional
effects will be far from uniformly benign.
• A climate model that reliably predicts the regional changes that
will result from deliberate climate modification. This model would
have to be endorsed by a consensus of the planet's climate experts.
Current models don't come close to this level of precision or
reliability.

Kahan's subjects were not told any of this and my guess is that the
"Hierarchical Individualist" group (who are inclined to doubt
mainstream climate science) would have been less keen on it had they
been made fully aware of what geoengineering involves in terms of
taxation, world government, handing over of control to a global
scientific elite and reliance on a hugely complex climate model.

Here's the effect that Kahan et al. observed on cultural polarization:



The US and English participants showed slightly less polarization
after they had been exposed to geoengineering than the control group
did. The anti-pollution message increased polarization. The error bars
overlap considerably. But for me the most striking thing about this
graph is how much worse the polarization is in the USA compared to
England. It seems unlikely that this trans-Atlantic gap on cultural
polarization over climate could be caused by the information the
participants are hearing. The English are exposed to essentially the
same communications that Americans are (e.g., the IPCC, the Murdoch
press), yet they are far less polarized on this issue.

Britain's political leaders recently—and apparently happily—made a
joint declaration on climate policy.



Not only is political polarization on climate mainly an American
problem, but it's a relatively recent American problem. Famously, Newt
Gingrich and Nancy Pelosi shared a sofa on a rainy day in Washington
in 2008 and saw eye-to-eye on climate change. But things have changed
since then, with increased polarization on climate and on many other
policy issues. It is perhaps futile to look for a climate
communication solution to a problem that was not caused by climate
communications in the first place.

Goodbye blue sky

One consequence of undertaking solar radiation management is that it
will change the colour of clear skies from blue to a more milky shade.
And that change will endure for as long as we need to keep on cooling
the planet, essentially forever. Of all the reasons to be wary of
geoengineering, this is probably the least serious from a human
welfare standpoint, but it's possibly the one that will strike many
people the strongest. One of the problems of raising awareness about
carbon dioxide pollution is that it is invisible. In contrast, the
albedo modification "cure" for the pollution problem will be visible
to everyone.

We should not assume that geoengineering has some kind of automatic
appeal to people inclined to reject climate change. In fact, a poll
done by the Brookings Institute found the opposite.



People who take the position that global warming is not occurring are
overwhelmingly in agreement that adding materials to the atmosphere
will cause more harm than good. My own (anecdotal) observations of
climate change contrarian blogs are that, although their denizens are
typically eager to consider a wide range of unconventional scientific
ideas, there is generally little enthusiasm among them for
geoengineering.

A comment by one of the Brookings Institute poll's authors, Barry
Rabe, reported in Scientific American, was that peoples' minds are
generally made up, one way or the other, on geoengineering.

But what is interesting about the new results, Rabe said, is that few
respondents indicated they were neutral about geoengineering.

"One thing that surprised us a bit is the percentage of people who
responded with an opinion," he said. "In every case, we gave them the
option to say 'not sure.' I frankly expected more people to punt on
this one."

There seems to be a popular and deep-rooted fear among people of all
cultural persuasions with the idea of deliberately tinkering with the
climate. For every techno-optimist who imagines a bright shiny future
where the Earth's climate is successfully micromanaged, there is
probably a techno-pessimist who imagines the future under deliberate
climate modification to look something like the apocalyptic vision (of
the London Blitz) in the video of the Pink Floyd song titled, oddly
enough, Goodbye Blue Sky.

So, in conclusion, returning to the question posed in the title of
this piece: Does providing information on geoengineering reduce
climate polarization?

The answer is: we don't know, because the lab experiment that measures
the reactions of people exposed to realistic information on
geoengineering has not yet been done. But as the future unfolds in the
real world we will likely find out anyway: the question of whether we
should deliberately attempt to ameliorate the climate crisis with
technological interventions is not going to go away. Perhaps the best
we can hope for is that the prospect of the limited benefits,
uncertain outcomes and unpleasant side-effects of this drastic course
of treatment for the climate disease might indeed motivate everyone to
come together to focus on preventing the symptoms from becoming ever
worse.

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