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Exploring the Politics of Climate Engineering: Discourses For and Against
Climate Engineering in the International.
Publish Antony Waters

Slide 1
Exploring the Politics of Climate EngineeringExploring the Politics of
Climate Engineering: Discourses For and Against Climate Engineering in the
International Mass Media JONAS ANSHELM & ANDERS HANSSON ([email protected]]
UNIT OF TECHNOLOGY AND SOCIAL CHANGE LINKÖPING UNIVERSITY CLIMATE
ENGINEERING PROGRAMME (LUCE), LINKÖPING UNIVERSITY, SWEDEN
Slide 2
Introduction  Anshelm J. & Hansson A. The last chance to save the planet?
An analysis of geoengineering's advocates discourse in the public debate.
(under review)  Anshelm J. & Hansson A. (2014) Battling Promethean dreams
and Trojan horses: Revealing the critical discourses of geoengineering.
Energy Research and Social Science. 2:135-144.  Aim: Identify the central
claims, controversial subjects, and what worldviews, values, and
problematizations that are shared by the two discourses (the advocacy and
critical discourse) in the public debate Why study geoengineering in mass
media?  Specific portrayals may change the course of national and
international policies, governance and public opinion  Endorse a sound and
reflexive debate
Slide 3
Introduction - methodology  About 1500 newspaper articles from all over
the world, published between 2005 and 2013 in English, German, Swedish,
Danish, and Norwegian  More than 75% of the articles were in English and
published in either the USA or the UK.  A total of about 10% critical of
geoengineering  We define geoengineering advocacy as recommending more
geoengineering research or deployment  Only deeply sceptical or opposed
storylines are included in the discourse critical of geoengineering 
Geoengineering: Grand global project and an idea of humanity’s ultimate
control of the planet’s climate
Slide 4
Advocacy discourse Storyline: The scientists’ double fear  Climate
researchers now have re-evaluated the climate crisis and have started to
advocate research into geoengineering, even though it entails major risks.
Either to inactively wait for the catastrophe or to explore the final
option: geoengineering.  Fear of the consequences of climate change is an
asset or a powerful rhetorical resource (see also Rayner, 2014). 
Geoengineering is, unlike other large-scale technologies, not connected to
promises of a better world – negative expectations
Slide 5
Advocacy discourse The failure of politics and cynical industrial fatalism
 Politics has failed and can no longer reverse the situation –
geoengineering is the price to be paid for political failure.  This
viewpoint sees politics as impeding efficient climate change management. 
The resignation in this storyline rests on fatalism
Slide 6
Advocacy discourse Pure technology: a bridge to a sustainable future  The
development of geoengineering is referred to as “plan B”; it constitutes a
“last-ditch” alternative, “parachute”, “airbag”, and “last resort”.  It is
possible to test, study, and identify the environmental consequences of
geoengineering in advance, but also admitted that such assumptions are
highly problematic.
Slide 7
Advocacy discourse Just mimicking nature  The most promising
geoengineering technologies obtained their “proof of concept from nature”,
it is just about “mimicking nature”.  Has gradually gained influence over
the last two or three years, and more or less replaced the storyline of the
scientist’s double fear.  De-politizising influence?
Slide 8
The discourse critical of geoengineering The technological gamble with the
planet  Geoengineering schemes are treated as more dangerous than any
previous technological enterprise, and are understood as “megalomania” e.g.
“a dangerous game with unclear rules”, “the biggest technological gamble of
all”, “rolling the dice”, “gaming with the earth”, “completely nutty”. 
Global geoengineering is inherently untestable.
Slide 9
The discourse critical of geoengineering The inability to handle structural
dysfunction  The ultimate sign of contemporary industrial society's
inability or unwillingness to confront fundamental structural
dysfunctionality: “the ultimate expression of a desire to avoid doing the
hard work of reducing emissions”  Geoengineering proponents are understood
as defending the belief that it is unnecessary to revise the goals of
economic growth/increasing consumption
Slide 10
The discourse critical of geoengineering The geoclique and the Trojan horse
 An extreme and grand-scale form of industrial “greenwashing”  The main
actors are a “geoclique” with personal economic interests  Venture
capitalists and conservative think tanks together with the military form a
powerful lobby for geoengineering.  Intense lobbying is supporting the
geoclique and trying to admit the “Trojan horse” (i.e. geoengineering
research)
Slide 11
The discourse critical of geoengineering The democratic deficit and the
need for public engagement  The really important questions concerning the
incredible risks are neglected or forgotten by the proponents  Primarily a
moral and political concern, and not an issue to be left to scientists and
engineers  Also creates new governance problems: It could be attempted
unilaterally, or even be militarized
Slide 12
Discussion  Contrary to what is claimed in the critical discourse, the
advocacy discourse anticipated the main problems of geoengineering and
presented many central risks and moral concerns openly  As most other
environmental innovations geoengineering is not framed as a typical
ecological modern technology by its proponents – even negative
expectations. And few pure advocates  The debate seems to open up (see
also Scholte, 2012), but is this seemingly shared view of the climate
crisis, acknowledgment of major risks and problems a good basis for a
mutual understanding of geoengineering?
Slide 13
Discussion: Tentative explanations of diverging standpoints 1. Field
experiments will never provide the answers needed 2. Geoengineering as a
method for buying time in order to make way for renewables and a low-
carbon society is completely discounted in the critical discourse. 3.
Third, the most horrifying risks of geoengineering are, according to the
discourse critical of geoengineering, not directly related to its
deployment, but to its reinforcement of unsustainable social and economic
structures. 4. Geoengineering is depicted as an act of piracy, a form of
neo-colonialism. 5. Leading proponents of geoengineering are not primarily
devoted to long-term sustainability worldwide, but rather to promoting
their own profits (e.g., from patent rights), advancing personal careers,
or serving the interests of think tanks or the fossil fuel industry. 6. The
discourse critical of geoengineering insists that international political
action is both possible and necessary (i.e. no “failure of politics”).
Slide 14
Concluding remarks  The advocacy discourse is more reflexive and critical
than what is claimed in the critical discourse  The fundamental dissensus
between the two discourses is related mainly to the views on social change,
knowledge limits, and humanity's ability/right to control nature (see also
e.g. Hamilton, 2013).  Promises of progress and objective truth are no
longer the legitimation grounds for research into and deployment of the
technology – fear and uncertainty are assets.  However, by the end of the
studied period, considerable efforts are being made to enact geoengineering
as less uncertain, by emphasizing the mimicking nature storyline
(de-politzising influence?), while the ‘scientists double fear’ storyline
and emergency framings are declining.

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