http://klimazwiebel.blogspot.co.at/2015/07/the-antinomies-of-climate-engineering.html?m=1

Extract

Climate engineering (CE) is still a somewhat obscure and elite discourse,
mainly conducted in the Western world. As one presentation illustrated, the
concept has been discussed for over two decades in the scientific community
and in science policy circles, leading to the publication of several
hundred papers and documents. The public discourse on the topic pales in
comparison. The Lexis-Nexis newspaper database lists just 134 newspaper
articles containing the term ‘climate engineering’ from 1995 until today in
the English-speaking world.

The DFG symposium was interesting in that scholars from a range of
disciplines and countries presented their ideas, exposing the different
epistemic cultures. There was no attempt made by the organizers to prove a
meta-narrative, or even to contextualize the various different
contributions. Several contributions from the physical sciences did not
even attempt to summarize their main points to an audience which is at some
distance to the technical jargon.

The CE experts gathered at the symposium seems to follow the broader
scientific climate change discourse in that a lot of energy is spent on
modeling efforts. This is of course the stomping ground of atmospheric
scientists and economists, with psychologists adding quantitative studies
about personal perceptions and behavior. But there were also philosophers
and legal experts present, even qualitative social science and STS
perspectives.

The sequence of talks followed the script familiar to us from climate
change discourse: first come the physical sciences, then the social,
political and moral questions. Listening to the modeling results from
atmospheric scientists my impression was that the physical effects of
various CE techniques are far beyond our understanding and control.

A common thread in the modeling contributions is a reductionism and
determinism (that is conceded, even at times happily acknowledged by the
authors). Often a tight causal relationships is assumed, such as the link
between research into CE and its actual deployment. Depending on where you
stand, you are either in favour of ‘doing’ CE, or in opposition. In
economists’ parlance, it is not clear if CE is (or leads to) a ‘public
good’ or to a ‘public bad’. There were no passionate calls for stopping CE
research in its tracks.

Most presentations used the concepts of CE and Solar Radiation Management
(SRM) interchangeably. SRM is only one of many CE applications and the
problems associated with each are different. SRM is an emerging technology
that aims at injecting particles into the stratosphere. This would mimic
the effect of large volcano eruptions which are known to have cooled the
Earth in the past. If another CE technique were available at scale without
negative side effects, such as carbon dioxide removal, we would probably
have a very different kind of debate.

While CE is interdisciplinary the main core of research happens in the
physical sciences, as Jack Stilgoe nicely illustrated, making use of a
scientometric network analysis. Some social sciences are visible as well,
mainly from economics, law, psychology and international relations.
Surprisingly, engineering is absent from this research field called Climate
Engineering. Jack made a distinction between CE as a noun and as gerund,
showing potentially new insights if we take climate engineering as a
process and activity.

The problem of uncertainty was raised by several speakers across the
disciplines, from atmospheric science to philosophy. As Johannes Lenhard
pointed out scientists tend to equate uncertainty with variations of
empirical estimates (as in error bars of measurements or model projections)
whereas some social scientists make a distinction between cases where we
know the probabilities of something to happen and cases where we do not.
Only the latter is a case of real uncertainty, according to the economist
Frank Knight. Lenhard argued that scientists and economists often make
uncertainty disappear by taking take mean values from different studies,
excluding the full range of possibilities. They transform uncertainty into
risk, which is a fallacy.

It was refreshing to see some heterodox approaches, too. Talking about
uncertainties, someone stated that we do not seem to understand the climate
system very well, as evidenced by the failure of climate models to account
for the recent temperature record (he would have been lambasted in a more
conventional climate change meeting). If anything, CE will exacerbate
uncertainty. Another presenter mentioned that several countries would
prefer a temperature rise of more than 1.5°C compared to 2006 as this would
benefit their agriculture (pure heresy for the mainstream). One
presentation advocated the use of cultural cognition for the analysis of
people’s reactions to information about CE, another the use of human rights
as a legal instrument to govern CE applications. The argument is that one
form of harm (past CO2 emissions) cannot be corrected by another form of
harm (CE).

Ethical issues were raised throughout, such as the problem of
intergenerational justice. But CE is a problem of intra-generational
justice as well, as the only speaker present from an African country
remarked. This is intertwined with the causal models mentioned above: who
will benefit from CE’s applications? Which side effects will it have? What
legitimation exists for its deployment? As one speaker rightly said, CE
applications would need a social license to operate. How could this
legitimation be provided on a global scale? It seems as if the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change does not provide an obvious
or robust basis in international law (Art 2 talks about ‘stabilization of
greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would
prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system’--not
about the reduction of solar irradiation). If UN frameworks do not exist
this may lead to problems of unilateral or mini-lateral initiatives of CE,
which again, will be seen by some as good and by others as bad.

Other ethical issues were mentioned, such as the slippery slope argument or
moral hazard. The moral hazard problem arises if CE solutions become
scalable, safe, and cheap as there would be little reason to invest in
mitigation policies. But this would be analogous to many classical
pollution problems where the solution to the problem was to use an end of
pipe device without radically altering the polluting technology. We seem to
be well equipped in the logic of this kind of moral hazard that it does not
pose a fundamental problem.

However, no one mentioned an obvious challenge to international climate
policy and ethics. If CE becomes scalable, safe and cheap, what would be
the target temperature of the global thermostat? And if we could agree on a
number, what would be the legitimate way to arrive at binding decisions
about it?

In sum, CE is still in the pre-problem stage of public attention. It is an
issue that could make its transition into the stage of alarmed discovery.
For this to happen several problems need solving simultaneously which are
currently entangled within the CE expert communities: the question if CE
would be effective and controllable, beneficial to all stakeholders, safe,
and ethical to use with regard to future generations.

The bullet holes on the pillars in the Academy pose the question to us
contemporaries if the violence could have prevented and what we make of the
war, looking back at history. No matter which lesson we take from it, it
seems a complicated story, with technology, ethics and politics interacting.

One lesson that has been drawn is to build strong international
institutions to prevent an escalation of conflicts. Europe drew the lesson
of unification after the Second World War, a project that was characterized
by good intentions but executed in a technocratic manner. The good
intentions eventually led to unintended consequences that plague the union
today. Democratic participation has been a problem although the ‘social
license’ to operate was not called into question on a broader basis until
recently. Even in the current crisis the EU’s ‘natural’ modus operandi is
technocratic and elitist.

Governance structures have been proposed for CE, too. There is disagreement
where they should start; should CE research be controlled and restricted,
or should we wait with regulations until specific projects are ready to be
deployed? The answer to that question will depend very much on the nature
and trajectory of the CE community. If it envisages a technocratic path,
which will lead to CE applications by a club of countries (‘coalition of
the willing’) then a semi secret environment, much like military
applications would be logical. If, on the other hand, public debates unfold
about the problems of climate policy, including options for CE, the
legitimation of specific avenues of scientific and technical applications
would be challenged from the start. My sympathies are clearly with the
latter approach. A precondition for this would be that CE debates extend
beyond expert communities to become visible in public discourse.

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