http://harvardpolitics.com/world/engineering-climate/

Europe | August 28, 2015 at 5:44 pm
Engineering The Climate
By Gal Koplewitz

In early July, in Germany’s historic Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences
and Humanities, academics and analysts from a wide range of disciplines
gathered to participate in a research symposium on climate engineering. The
fledgling field—only some of those present at the conference even consider
climate engineering to be their primary research interest—has steadily been
picking up momentum over the past decade. More commonly known as
“geoengineering,” it is generally taken to refer to “deliberate large-scale
manipulation of the planetary environment to counteract anthropogenic
climate change.”

However, even most supporters of geoengineering are wary of deployment at
this point in time, and the consensus among much of the research community
seems to be that the repercussions of such direct, intentional intervention
in the climate would be “irrational and irresponsible.” Correspondingly,
the majority of speakers at the Berlin conference were not engineers, and
questions of ethics and governance figured more prominently in the various
talks than breakthrough new technologies. But with current carbon emissions
showing no signs of slowing down fast enough to make a significant dent in
global warming over the coming decades, scientists are increasingly
searching for alternative ways to cool the planet. And one possible avenue
towards this goal—one which is slowly attaining a controversial
following—is the injection of small reflective particles into the
stratosphere; a risky but potentially highly effective way to counteract
warming by reflecting sunlight back into space.

Too Little Too Late

With Pope Francis devoting an encyclical to environmental issues in June,
and the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP21) due to take place
in Paris this coming December, it may seem like the tide on climate action
is turning. Indeed, the ambitious stated goal of the conference, in which
representatives from almost 200 countries will gather, is to reach a
binding, universal agreement limiting greenhouse gas emissions in “all the
nations of the world.” But the idea that any agreed-upon curb in emissions
can limit the global temperature increase to 2 °C above pre-industrial
levels is being increasingly questioned.

That’s because even if the conference is a runaway success—even in the
unlikely scenario that the participating nations not only agree upon but
actually manage to reach their target emissions cuts—warming is still
expected to be an undeniable reality. Even if in a feat of unprecedented
global coordination, emissions peaked by 2020, the carbon already emitted
would remain in the atmosphere and continue to gather until we hit zero
emissions, driving a rise in global temperature. Predictions vary, but if
we were to stop the rise in carbon emissions today, freezing them at 10
billion tons per year, scientists expect that warming over the 21st century
would still be somewhat above the 2 °C mark (though there are admittedly
many uncertainties involved in this estimate). At this point, no matter how
well the global community handles future emissions, the rise in
temperatures is an almost inevitable reality and will have significant
social and environmental consequences.

This growing realization is what has prompted some to begin looking into
more active ways of dealing with global warming. “Carbon casts a long
shadow into the future,” writes David Keith, who holds a joint appointment
at Harvard University as a professor of public policy and applied physics.
“A thousand years after we stop pumping carbon into the air the warming
will still be about half as large as it was on the day we stopped—assuming,
of course, that we do nothing to engineer the climate.”

Enter Geoengineering

In June 1991 Mount Pinatubo, an active volcano in the northern provinces of
the Philippines, erupted, releasing about 17 megatons of sulfur into the
atmosphere. The released particles formed a layer of sulfate aerosols that
spread around the earth, reducing the amount of radiation hitting its
surface and leading to an estimated decrease in global temperatures of
about 0.5 degrees Celsius.

This monumental climate event has been one of the driving forces behind
Solar Radiation Management (SRM), which, alongside Carbon Dioxide Removal
(CDR), is one of the two umbrella categories of approaches for
geoengineering the climate. SRM proposals generally seek to reflect a
fraction of the sun’s light back into space. This can be attempted in a
variety of ways—from painting roofs white to launching reflective
satellites—but the most commonly discussed method is the deliberate
injection of aerosols into the atmosphere. Like the eruption of Mt.
Pinatubo, particle injection would be expected to reduce the levels of
radiation hitting the earth, thus creating a cooling effect and potentially
lowering the earth’s temperature back to pre-industrial levels. CDR
researchers, on the other hand, propose developing technologies to directly
remove CO2 from the air. Some, for example, suggest injecting minerals into
marine ecosystems, which would increase the pull of carbon from the
atmosphere into the oceans (“ocean fertilization”). Others advocate simply
planting forests.

The risks involved with most CDR approaches are generally considered to be
limited, in that they deal directly with the problem (carbon emissions)—and
are not so different in effect from simply curbing fossil fuels. Thus, some
methods of carbon sequestration have gathered tentative support from
environmental groups and funding from government bodies. SRM approaches, on
the other hand, deal in a sense only with the symptoms—the rise in global
temperatures—and so are more likely to trigger undesired side effects.
Still, the tradeoffs of the low risk associated with CDR methods are their
high costs and the long expected timescale—likely decades—before they bring
about meaningful change in the current climate trajectory. Injecting
particles into the atmosphere, while more risky, is expected to trigger
cooling almost immediately after deployment and to be cheaper and more
technologically feasible.

According to Ken Caldeira, a climate scientist at the Carnegie Institution
for Science’s Department of Global Ecology, there is agreement among most
climate scientists that sulfur-based SRM would be effective in lowering the
earth’s temperatures. “Broadly, the climate modeling results are consistent
with volcanic observations,” he explained in an interview with the HPR.
“[The earth] would probably start cooling within a year after a solar
geoengineering system were deployed.”

A diagram from the SPICE project illustrates how stratospheric particle
injection could mitigate climate change.
A diagram from the SPICE project illustrates how stratospheric particle
injection could mitigate climate change.

Particles could theoretically be pumped into the air using a wide range of
delivery systems, from modified jets and airships to guns and rockets. The
SPICE Project, a collaborative investigation of the effectiveness of SRM
that took place in Britain, looked at the possibility of disbursing
particles from a pipe tethered to a large balloon. The different methods
vary in cost and effectiveness, with the cheaper technologies likely
requiring more development time. But as even the pricier options are
estimated at a few billion dollars per year, costs are generally considered
to be affordable across the board—especially when compared with the
enormous economic consequences of cutting back on cheap fossil fuels.
Caldeira quotes one of David Keith’s catchphrases describing sulfate SRM
technologies: “fast, cheap, and imperfect.”

“Delusional in the Extreme”

The idea of shading our planet with an enormous cloud of sulfur, while
giving hope to some, has generally invoked feelings that range from mild
discomfort to strong, vocal opposition. Former Vice-President and
environmental activist Al Gore said of geoengineering that “the hubris
involved in thinking we can come up with a second planet-wide experiment
that would exactly counteract the first experiment is delusional in the
extreme” and has referred to the idea of using sulfur dioxide to reflect
sunlight as “insane” and “utterly mad.”

One frequently sounded concern is that the availability of an easy
technological fix for global warming will lead nations to shirk from their
commitments to lower greenhouse gas emissions. Moreover, cooling the planet
by reducing CO2 is not the same as cooling the planet by reducing sunlight;
temperature rise is just one of the many implications of increased carbon
concentration in the atmosphere. Oceans, for example, would continue to
acidify as they absorb larger and larger amounts of carbon from the air,
endangering many underwater ecosystems. Less sunlight would also affect the
hydrological cycle, with expected changes in rainfall and evaporation,
according to Caldeira.

Another idea that has many worried is the “termination shock.” While the
current trajectory of warming will influence the planet in ways we can’t
quite predict, the relatively gradual process ensures that ecosystems will
be able to at least partially adapt. “An awful lot of the impact [of global
warming] is linked to how fast temperatures rise,” Edward Parson,
co-director of the Emmett Center on Climate Change and the Environment at
UCLA, told the HPR. “So even if you [just] slow down temperature rise, you
can still avoid a lot of the consequences.” If an SRM program were suddenly
halted—which could happen for a host of technological and political
reasons—and temperatures rapidly accelerated, however, the consequences
could potentially be far more dangerous. The earth, rather than having
decades to adapt to gradual change, would have just a few short years.

Then there are political considerations. Provided the technology exists,
regulation and governance still pose a significant challenge. “It will be a
big job to develop the kind of institutional capacity required to manage
this sort of stuff,” said Parson, adding that technical and operational
capability that large-scale deployment would require is “substantially
greater than anything that current international bodies have.”

Would international bodies like the UN be able to overcome the political
obstacles to SRM deployment?
Would international bodies like the UN be able to overcome the political
obstacles to SRM deployment?

But even if potential deployment is overseen by an agreed upon
international authority, that body would still, according to many, have
unhealthy leverage over the climate, which could easily be misused. Add
that to the fact that climate change will not affect all nations
evenly—while some stand to suffer significant economic and environmental
losses, others might actually benefit (through increased rainfall, for
example)—and agreed upon, global governance begins to seem even more
difficult. Keith has likened this potential mess to “frat boys arguing over
the thermostat.” The low estimated cost of SRM presents yet another
complication: there’s not much to stop a few small Pacific island states,
which are particularly threatened by rising sea levels, to group together
and jointly spend the several billion dollars required to develop and
deploy some form of SRM—regardless of the consequences that might have for
the rest of the world.

Indeed, Ken Caldeira points out that it while it may take over half a
century to see benefits from changed climate policy, deploying sulfur
aerosols is something that decision makers could do to affect weather in a
“politically relevant timeframe”—so the pressure to do so, especially
considering the low costs, could at some point become intense.

Finally, there are the “unknown unknowns”—consequences that are wholly
unexpected by current research but are sure to surprise us once the
technology is tested. Indeed, some scientists have doubted how technically
feasible SRM really is. “David Keith gives the impression that the
engineering technologies needed for delivery of particles to the
stratosphere [are] ‘straightforward,’ ‘cheap’ and ‘ready to go,’” writes
Dr. Hugh Hunt, a senior lecturer in the Engineering Department at Cambridge
University who led the investigation of delivery methods in the SPICE
project. “No technology exists for delivery of [10 million] Tonnes per year
of ‘stuff’ to 20 [kilometers]. If we try to do it we will find difficulties
that were unforeseen.” However, Hunt concludes—as do Keith, Caldeira and
Parson—that this is a case for, not against, further research into SRM. “It
may turn out to be impossible, [but] the sooner we find this out, the
better.”

A Bad Idea Whose Time has Come?

Indeed, Hunt is somewhat frustrated by the high ratio of social sciences
publications to engineering ones in the field of geoengineering. If we’re
going to talk about this, he feels, we should at least have something
tangible to talk about. Others, Keith among them, feel that the debate is
healthy, in that “it suggests that we have learned something from past
instances of over-eager technological optimism and subsequent failures.”
But both agree on the importance of public support for further research.

A few years ago, the SPICE project cancelled a small-scale experiment with
a balloon due to perceived public discomfort, despite planned testing only
of basic aerodynamics (no sun-blocking particles were involved). Keith,
too, has been holding back from further research due to lack of government
funding. He has maintained that “it’s important in a democracy that these
experiments go through a proper external risk assessment with substantial
public funding.”

But public opinion may slowly be warming to the idea of climate
engineering. A 2011 poll that was conducted in the United States, Canada,
and the United Kingdom showed that 72 percent of respondents either
“support” or “somewhat support” the study of SRM. A few months ago, the
Natural Resources Defense Council released a statement expressing tentative
support for research, saying that while “there’s absolutely no substitute
for slashing fossil fuel emissions,” it would be “prudent to do research
into geoengineering.”

SRM may not yet be, as journalist Eli Kintisch put it, “a bad idea whose
time has come,” as the international community is probably far from ready
to make use of such drastic means to fight climate change. Nevertheless, it
is becoming increasingly difficult to argue against research into
technology that might be the only fast enough method to reverse global
warming—especially considering the pressure future governments may face to
act swiftly. The time to deploy SRM technology to cool the earth may never
come, but if it does, that decision should be made with full knowledge of
the risks and consequences.

Tags: aerosols, carbon dioxide removal, carbon sequestration, climate,
Climate Change, David Keith, Featured, Global Warming, governance, Hugh
Hunt, particle injection, solar radiation management, SPICE Project,
sunlight

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