Poster's note : seems to be getting quite a lot of exposure / discussion

http://grist.org/climate-energy/why-we-should-talk-about-geoengineering-even-if-we-never-do-it/?utm_source=syndication&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=feed

Why we should talk about geoengineering even if we never do it

By Suzanne Jacobs on 17 Mar 2015

Ben Kravitz has studied geoengineering for the past seven years and doesn’t
plan to stop anytime soon, despite ongoing controversy around the issue.
That’s because even if geoengineering never happens in the real world, the
concept alone is already playing an important role in the climate change
story.

“[Theoretical geoengineering] has allowed us to ask questions about how the
climate system works that we didn’t even know we wanted to ask,” says
Kravitz, a researcher at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. “It’s
actually in some ways changed the way I think about problems in climate
science.”

Kravitz’s interest in geoengineering began back in 2007, when he was a
graduate student at Rutgers University. He attended a seminar on
geoengineering by environmental scientist Alan Robock, and, immediately
recognizing the importance of the work, asked Robock to take him on as a
PhD student. Together, they started the Geoengineering Model
Intercomparison Project (GeoMIP), an international collaboration that runs
identical geoengineering simulations on some of the world’s most advanced
climate models. Kravitz and Robock came up with GeoMIP after realizing that
different models running different experiments were coming up with
conflicting predictions — a problem if those predictions were ever going to
inform real-world decisions.

Kravitz has also found that tinkering with a virtual planet can be useful
in other ways. For example, he can “turn down the sun” or increase CO2 or
do both in various combinations. By observing how these interventions
cancel each other out in some ways and not in others, he can learn a lot
about the underlying mechanisms driving the climate system. That’s why he’s
not worried about his job security. He’s even hosting a week-long summer
school later this year for early-career scientists interested in entering
the field.

But a lot of people don’t like even the concept of geoengineering, let
alone the prospect of actually doing it. They worry that people will
misconstrue it as a reasonable fallback plan and turn complacent when it
comes to limiting emissions, when, really, geoengineering isn’t a
reasonable fallback plan — it’s highly risky and raises lots of tricky
social, political, and ethical issues. What if it has serious and
unexpected side effects on the environment or certain communities? What if
powerful nations make unilateral decisions that disadvantage poorer
countries? What if we come to rely on geoengineering indefinitely?

Last month, the National Academy of Sciences issued a pair of reports
calling for more research into geoengineering. NAS President Ralph J.
Cicerone made clear that this was a just-in-case situation and that the
scientists behind the reports weren’t advocating for geoengineering: “If
the world cannot slow emissions, or if the effects of climate change are
more extreme or occur sooner than expected, there may be demands to pursue
additional climate-intervention technologies about which scientists need a
better understanding.”

Despite this cautionary tone, there was still plenty of pushback against
the reports. Here’s one skeptical headline from The Guardian: “Is
geoengineering a bad idea? Can technical fixes provide a viable solution to
climate change or are they a high-risk, irresponsible distraction from the
need to cut carbon emissions?”

Kravitz says he doesn’t know a single scientist working on geoengineering
who thinks it’s an appropriate replacement for reducing emissions, and he
doesn’t buy the argument that the very idea of geoengineering is a
dangerous distraction.

“My experience is that by talking about geoengineering, I get more people
interested in talking about climate change, which I think is a much bigger
issue.”

Turns out, Kravitz might be on to something.

Yale Law School’s Cultural Cognition Project studies how people’s cultural
values influence the way they process information and assess risk. In a
study published last month, researchers with the project looked at how the
discussion of geoengineering affected people’s perception of climate change
risk. They found that the very idea of geoengineering actually made
skeptics more open to the realities of climate change.

The study involved 3,000 participants — half from the U.S. and half from
the U.K. — split into three groups. All three read a scientific study
warning that previous estimates of carbon dissipation in the atmosphere
were too optimistic and that the world was in for serious and unavoidable
consequences (actually a combination of two studies published in Nature and
the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences).

Each group read one of three news articles before reading the study. They
read about scientists recommending stricter emissions limits, scientists
calling for more research into geoengineering, or traffic signals in
housing developments (that last one was a control). After the participants
finished reading both materials, they rated the validity of the study and
their perceived level of climate change risk.

The researchers found that participants who read the news article about
stricter emissions limits were more polarized in their responses to the
study. That is, people who already cared about climate change and those who
were skeptical both became more steadfast in their opinions. The
geoengineering article, however, had the opposite effect, making skeptics
more open to the reality of climate change and making the other group
slightly more ambivalent.

Dan Kahan, a professor of law and psychology at Yale, led the study. He
says that the influence of cultural values can explain the perhaps
surprising effect that geoengineering had on the participants. In a blog
post on the Cultural Cognition Project website, he explains that
participants fall into two cultural categories:

[E]galitarian communitarians, who are morally suspicious of commerce and
industry, find it congenial to believe those activities are dangerous and
thus worthy of regulation. Hierarchical individualists, in contrast, tend
to be dismissive of environmental risk claims, including climate change,
because they value commerce and industry and perceive (unconsciously) that
such claims will result in their being restricted.

So it makes sense that the article on limiting emissions would appeal to
the egalitarian communitarians, while the article on innovation-oriented
geoengineering would appeal to the hierarchical individualists.

It’s important to note, however, that the effects these articles had on
people’s opinions were actually quite small, Kahan says, so a massive
geoengineering marketing campaign wouldn’t suddenly make skeptics very
concerned about climate change. Still, he says, the results of the study
were significant because they were counterintuitive (at least in the
geoengineering case) and show how common ground and productive
communication are possible if cultural values are taken into account.

“Some people who are climate skeptics have dispositions that make them very
curious and excited about technology,” Kahan says, so brushing them off as
anti-science isn’t helpful or necessarily accurate.

And to those worried about people latching on to geoengineering instead of
focusing on mitigation, Kahan, like Kravitz, says the bigger problem is
just getting people to talk about climate change.

“I think it’s kind of weird that people think that the problem with
[geoengineering] is that it dissipates public support for doing mitigation,
when the problem is there is no public support for doing mitigation,” Kahan
says. “We’re trying to figure out what might actually create a climate, as
it were, of political discussion where people would think about that more
seriously.”

Plus, he says, shutting down the geoengineering conversation could actually
cause more problems than it solves because it would make “geoengineering
skeptics” seem hypocritical. If climate hawks want everyone to take
scientists seriously when they talk about the consensus around climate
change, he says, then they need to take scientists seriously when they talk
about the potential of geoengineering.

It’s reasonable to be afraid of geoengineering. We can’t know for sure what
will happen if we try it, and as many like to point out, tinkering with the
climate via large-scale, untested technologies sounds like the stuff of
science fiction. Sometimes, it is the stuff of science fiction — the 2014
movie Snowpiercer, based on a French graphic novel called Le
Transperceneige, takes place in a dystopian future where a failed
geoengineering ploy forces everyone to live forever on a giant, non-stop
train circling the globe.

But just like other sci-fi fodder — black holes, time travel, artificial
intelligence — geoengineering is the kind of concept that, by stoking
imaginations and raising questions of ethics, politics, and the limits of
human innovation, can influence society without ever having to become a
reality. It’s dangerous, and scientists get that, but neglecting or
hindering the broader climate change discussion is dangerous too.

.

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