https://www.wired.com/2016/10/help-cool-climate-add-aerosol/

Slashing Sulfur Dioxide pollution in the United States and Europe over the
past decades counts as one of the biggest environmental success stories.
Airpollution kills. The US Clean Air Act will add more than a year of life
to the average American. But decreasing this pollution also comes with an
important, unintended, and unexpected consequence: a warming planet.

Aerosols, the fine particles in air pollution, reflect a small portion of
sunlight back into space and, thus, actually help keep global warming in
check. That’s true despite the carbon dioxide emissions coming from the
same smokestacks that warm the planet.

(David Keith is a professor of applied physics and public policy at
Harvard. Gernot Wagner is a research associate at Harvard and co-author of
the book Climate Shock.)

Global warming doubters now like to point to fears of global cooling in the
1970s as proof that climate scientists can’t get their story straight. That
assertion is entirely wrong. Concerns in the 1970s—and predictions around
global cooling—were correctly based on the cooling power of aerosol
pollution. The US National Academy of Sciencesreleased a report in 1975
that got this point exactly right, noting that the warming power of
long-lived carbon dioxide would eventually overwhelm the short-lived
cooling power of aerosol pollution. Predictions around global cooling
proved incorrect because the US and Europe managed to slash sulfur dioxide
pollution and, at the same time, accelerate the massive increase in carbon
dioxide.

Since the 1970s, Europe has managed to cut sulfur dioxide pollution by 75
percent. This has brought huge benefits, but it has also likely increased
temperaturesin the Arctic by half a degree Celsius since 1980. A conundrum:
Society ought to cut air pollution much further, but it doesn’t want the
additional warming, faster sea-level rise, and more intense hurricanes that
come with it.

What then if the world were to reduce aerosol pollution in the lower
atmosphere while deliberately injecting sufficient aerosol into the upper
atmosphere to keep global temperatures in check? The former would very
clearly save lives.

The latter is called solar geoengineering. Early research suggests it is
quite promising, and it might require only one-fiftieth of the amount of
aerosols now polluting the lower atmosphere to achieve the same cooling.
It, too, could save many lives. Aerosols in the upper atmosphere appear to
have much smaller health impacts for the same amount of cooling, while
decreased global warming comes with many direct positive climate and health
benefits.

Much more research is needed on solar geoengineering—both on its efficacy
and on potential risks. TheUS National Academy of Sciencesand environmental
groups like theEnvironmental Defense Fund and the Natural Resources Defense
Council support careful research. The Chinese government has a small
research program.

To date, there is no US government program, likely because of fears that
mere talk of solar geoengineering lets polluters off the hook. Of course,
solar geoengineering alone cannot stabilize the climate. The world must cut
carbon dioxide emissions. But solar geoengineering is unique because it can
help address already committed climate change—future climate change locked
in due to past emissions. Cutting carbon emissions alone will not have
immediate effects, given the length of time that carbon already in the
atmosphere stays there.

The tradeoff between aerosols in the lower atmosphere (the troposphere) and
deliberate aerosol injection at high altitudes (the stratosphere) adds
another important moral dimension. In the ideal world, society would have
cut both tropospheric aerosols and carbon dioxide pollution a long time
ago. It has not.

Given where we are, would it be morally justified to argue for a slight
increase in stratospheric pollution to offset the global warming caused by
the decrease in tropospheric aerosol pollution?

We think so. Why accelerate global warming as the world cleans up regular
(tropospheric) air pollution? This tradeoff provides a clear moral case for
researching solar geoengineering, even thoughwe do not think it is the only
one. Much like the world should cut tropospheric aerosol pollution
regardless—to save lives now—we believe the world must take solar
geoengineering’s potential seriously, quite independently of the tradeoff
between tropospheric and stratospheric aerosols.

The ratio of societal benefits of solar geoengineering to direct costs is
so large—somewhere in the order of a thousand to one—that it puts solar
geoengineering in the same league as some vaccinations. Unlike
vaccinations, there is some real potential for risks imposed on those not
wanting any solar geoengineering. That is why standard benefit-cost
arguments are, in fact, not the right decision criteria.

The decision ought to be focused onrisk-risk tradeoffs: risks of unchecked
climate change compared to risks of doing solar geoengineering. Add to that
the real costs of tropospheric aerosols, and the ideal policy sequence
becomes clear: Cut both greenhouse gases that warm and tropospheric
aerosols that cool the planet. In addition, explore solar geoengineering as
a safer way to keep the total aerosol cooling effect constant as a bridge
to a cleaner future.

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