http://www.seas.harvard.edu/news/2015/02/climate-engineering-no-longer-on-fringe

Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences

Climate engineering, no longer on the fringe
DAVID KEITH RESPONDS TO NAS REPORTS ON GEOENGINEERING IN THIS Q&A

February 18, 2015
When the National Academy of Sciences released a pair of reports earlier
this month on geoengineering—deliberate intervention in the climate system
to counter global warming—it moved discussion of the controversial topic
into the mainstream science community. The NAS-convened experts concluded
that geoengineering is no silver bullet, but that further research is
needed.

David Keith, Gordon McKay Professor of Applied Physics at Harvard School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences and Professor of Public Policy at Harvard
Kennedy School, has been a leading voice for assessing the risks and
implications of large-scale deployment of geoengineering to help cool the
planet. Keith’s 2013 book, A Case for Climate Engineering, lays out how
geoengineering might fit into a larger program for managing climate change
(complementing steps to reduce carbon dioxide emissions and devise
adaptation strategies). He recently detailed a potential small-scale solar
radiation management experiment in which chemicals would be dispersed in
the high atmosphere to reflect sunlight away from the Earth’s surface. He
has also suggested a scenario for analyzing the risks and benefits of
geoengineering, and proposed frameworks for the governance of
geoengineering testing by nation states.

Keith spoke about what impact the new NAS reports may have on the policy
and science of geoengineering.
What is the significance of the National Academies taking up this topic?
KEITH: The Academy has dealt with geoengineering as a part of broader
energy and climate studies since the late 1970s, but this is the first
report devoted to the topic. It serves as a marker of the extent to which
solar geoengineering is becoming a more normal part of the science and
policy of climate change.

Do the NAS studies bring us closer to deployment of small-scale
geoengineering experiments?
KEITH: By endorsing research on solar geoengineering and explicitly
including a discussion of small-scale experiments along with a discussion
of their scientific merits and possible regulation, I believe the Academy
has made it easier for government agencies to fund such research. Many
program managers in U.S. government science agencies have been favorably
inclined to fund research on solar geoengineering but have been held back
by a sense that they needed a high-level political okay. My hope is that
this report will, de facto, give program managers the confidence to move
ahead with science funding even in the absence of an explicit new program.

You’ve made the point that governance of geoengineering is paramount. Do
you see a path for establishing international consensus on how to regulate
efforts in this area?
KEITH: Consensus, no. But little or nothing is done in the international
arena with full consensus. A more reasonable goal is alignment of a
coalition of countries that represent a reasonable cross-section of the
world, north and south, east and west. Such a coalition might support a
broad research program through various mechanisms from a simple memorandum
of understanding to information exchange which could be a useful first step
on the road to multilateral control.

Geoengineering opponents cite the moral hazard argument—that pursuing these
approaches will shift the focus away from efforts to reduce emissions of
the greenhouse gases that cause warming. Do the NAS reports address this?
KEITH: Not in a deep way, but that is a hard ask. The fundamental job of
the Academy is to provide assessment about the state of science, including
social science, and about the prospects for research.

To what extent are the obstacles to an informed policy on geoengineering
technical and to what extent are they social or political?
KEITH: I think the fundamental obstacles are social and political. There is
deep concern that any attention to geoengineering will inevitably weaken
the political force needed to cut emissions. This is a sensible concern,
but not an excuse for deliberate ignorance. If solar geoengineering can
provide a meaningful reduction in climate risks for the most vulnerable
people and ecosystems, we must take it seriously. It is plausible that the
combination of emissions reductions and geoengineering will provide a
substantially better environmental outcome than emission reductions alone,
and that this fact will make it easier to develop a sustained commitment to
reduce emissions.

Some climate engineering proponents argue that approaches like solar
radiation management have the potential to buy time to make real progress
on reducing carbon emissions. Is that the strongest argument for pursuing
SRM?
KEITH: Absolutely not. I think this is one of the weakest arguments. The
strong argument is that solar geoengineering provides the only known way to
substantially reduce climate risk over the next half century.

Prof. David Keith has been a leading voice for assessing the risks and
implications of large-scale deployment of geoengineering to help cool the
planet.

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