http://www.brownpoliticalreview.org/2016/05/the-new-cold-war-the-political-problem-of-geoengineering/

The New Cold War: The Political Problem of Geoengineering

By Caroline Jones MAY 2, 2016

For a long time, weather control was merely the stuff of Greek myths, super
powers, or science fiction novels. But experimentation with altering
weather and climate in the academic realm has been explored for nearly two
hundred years,, with increasingly — and some might say frighteningly —
reactive results. Beyond scholarly curiosity about the human ability to
manipulate our immediate environment, climate control has more recently
been considered as a possible strategy to combat the effects of global
climate change. The methods of large-scale manipulation of natural climate
processes, more commonly known as geoengineering, are seen by some as a
catch-all solution for what now seems to be an irreversible progression
towards potentially catastrophic changes in the global climate. While a
technological fix is tempting, the political complexities and potential
ramifications, political and environmental, behind implementing such an
unpredictable global strategy complicate, if not completely eliminate, the
possibility of employing geoengineering technologies.

The 1960’s saw the introduction of climate control into military and
political decision making in the United States, with the Science Advisory
Committee to President Johnson raising the issue of “deliberately bringing
about countervailing climatic changes,” such as “raising the albedo, or
reflectivity, of the Earth.” Only a few years later, the United States
participated in the first known example of weather manipulation as part of
military strategy when the U.S. Air Force carried out a cloud-seeding
mission (adding particles to clouds to increase or instigate precipitation)
over Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia in order to hinder the progress of North
Vietnamese troops. This action prompted the United Nations to approve
the Environmental Modification Convention, banning the manipulation of
weather patterns for hostile or military purposes. In decades since, as
public and scientific knowledge about the near-inevitability of climate
change has expanded, proposals for large-scale action have come from Nobel
Laureates and Pentagon officials alike. Potential strategies include
the injection of nearly 1 million tons of sulfate aerosols into the
atmosphere in order to dull the rays of the sun, ‘fertilizing’ the
ocean with carbon-absorbing algal blooms, and establishing a massive field
of reflective mirrorsin orbit around earth to reflect the sun’s light away
from the planet’s surface. Today, some scientists see geoengineering as our
only way out of a now-irreversible movement towards potentially dangerous
after-effects of global climate change. Those in this school of
thought also tend to support more minor and locally controlled methods,
such as using cloud seeding to mitigate drought in a certain area (though
such experiments in the past have had limited success).

The movement towards geoengineering, unfortunately, suffers
from techno-centric tunnel vision with regards to its political challenges,
and this will ultimately be its downfall.

The movement towards geoengineering, unfortunately, suffers
from techno-centric tunnel vision with regards to its political challenges,
and this will ultimately be its downfall. Geo-technologies are specifically
designed to target one aspect of climate change (reducing earth’s
temperature) but neglect to account for the interconnectedness of the
global environment. The environmental ripple effect of implementing these
strategies is unpredictable; even small-scale ecosystems are far too
complex to be accurately modeled, let alone the entire global climate. If
the impracticality and potential environmental hazards posed by
geoengineering weren’t enough to dissuade us, we must take another step
backward and question the legislative process that goes into implementing
strategies that, by definition, impact the entire world: which country’s
hand gets to rest on the global thermostat?

One of many complicating factors in the struggle to regulate and combat the
effects of global climate change is the fact that some countries actually
stand to benefit from the shifting temperatures. Many countries far north
of the equator are beginning to see previously desolate, frozen territories
slowly thaw into arable land with the potential for mineral and oil
extraction.Russia, which has expectantly laid claim to Arctic territories
in the event that they melt (thus increasing access to underwater oil
reserves),has also articulated the ways in which their agricultural society
could benefit from climate change. Though still unlikely, attempts by the
United States to turn the global temperature back down have the potential
to re-ignite conflict between the United States and Russia, bringing a
brand new meaning to the idea of a “cold” war.

This disconnect about which countries benefit from climate
change naturally ties into the debate about who stands to directly benefit
from climate control strategies. The vast majority of the scientific
community working on Geoengineering technologies consists of researchers
from Western Europe and North America. The homogeneity of
this “geoclique”, while not intentionally discriminatory, perpetuates the
disenfranchisement of many international communities in the ongoing
conversation about climate management. Not only is a majority of the
world’s population not representatively engaged in the debate about an
issue that unquestionably concerns the entire world, but also the structure
of that debate perpetuates existing international tensions about mitigating
and addressing the issues presented by climate change. In addition to
having different economic and political priorities, communities around the
world have a wide variety of ethical and moral values, some of which
directly conflict with the idea of climate manipulation as a
whole. Neglecting to include these absent voices from the beginning,
particularly the voices of indigenous communities and less politically
powerful nations in the global south, perpetuates environmental/climate
racism (the marginalization or direct endangerment of minority communities
with regards to environmental hazards/issues) on a global scale.

There’s no denying that geoengineering is an exciting frontier in climate
science – humanity’s exercise of ultimate control over the power of nature
via space mirrors or aerosol artillery is an enticing taste of the
futuristic possibilities ahead. It also provides a comforting prospect to
believe in, especially when bombarded with the catastrophic imagery of
intensifying natural disasters, heat waves, and sea level rise. But the
sweeping solutions that geoengineering promises are unpredictable and
ungovernable; their development and implementation are politically
dangerous and their rippling aftereffects could cause more environmental
upheaval than the climate change they were designed to mitigate. Our
international political community is not nearly united enough to make such
a universal step towards techno-centrism, nor is it sufficiently
representative of the global population that will inevitably be
effected. Geoengineering is not our climate change safety net — we are far
more likely to get tangled in the webbing than we are to be saved.

CLIMATE CHANGE, Geoengineering, International Relations, Science,
Technology,



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