http://theconversation.com/us-exit-from-paris-climate-accord-makes-discussing-how-and-whether-to-engineer-the-planet-even-harder-78574
*US exit from Paris climate accord makes discussing how and whether to
engineer the planet even harder*
June 8, 2017 3.35am BST
 David A. Dana
<http://theconversation.com/us-exit-from-paris-climate-accord-makes-discussing-how-and-whether-to-engineer-the-planet-even-harder-78574#>
The Paris Agreement could provide a forum for international cooperation on
risky, planet-scale engineering to cool the Earth.Tatiana
Grozetskaya/Shutterstcok.com
<https://www.shutterstock.com/image-photo/factory-pipe-polluting-air-against-sunset-201665387>

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The Trump administration’s decision to withdraw from the Paris Agreement
has invoked condemnation and consternation
<https://theconversation.com/why-trumps-decision-to-leave-paris-accord-hurts-the-us-and-the-world-78707>
from
many commentators, including many of the United States’ strongest allies
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-to-announce-us-will-exit-paris-climate-deal/2017/06/01/fbcb0196-46da-11e7-bcde-624ad94170ab_story.html?utm_term=.10c7004622f0>
.

While the withdrawal undoubtedly will impede efforts to reduce global
greenhouse gas emissions – and very regrettably so – it may have a negative
effect on another area of global climate negotiation: geoengineering.

Geoengineering, in the form of deflecting the sun’s energy
<https://www.nap.edu/read/12782/chapter/19>, has been discussed as a
technologically feasible, yet highly risky, near-term response to the rapid
warming of the planet. The only reasonable, and indeed sane, way for the
debate over the contentious question of geoengineering to proceed is in the
context of inclusive, transparent, reasoned international cooperation – the
same process that led to the Paris Agreement.

Yet the Trump withdrawal has weakened the very institution that could be
the most viable nexus for such international cooperation.
What’s inside Paris accord

Mitigating the effects of climate change by lowering greenhouse gas levels
is the primary focus of the Paris Agreement, which is built on voluntary
commitments by each member state to lower greenhouse gas emissions. The
Trump administration’s withdrawal – and more generally, its rejection of
the Obama-era efforts to cut emissions via the Clean Power Plan
<https://theconversation.com/trump-slams-brakes-on-obamas-climate-plan-but-theres-still-a-long-road-ahead-75252>
–
may lead other countries to back away from their commitments.

But climate change mitigation is only part of the needed global response to
climate change in the coming decades. There also is a need for global
cooperation with respect to both climate change adaptation and
geoengineering. The agreement could foster such cooperation, but again,
only if nations do not defect.
One of the most discussed and least expensive methods for cooling the Earth
is blocking the sun’s radiation by releasing microscopic particles into the
atmosphere. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center/flickr.com
<https://www.flickr.com/photos/gsfc/4542422892/in/photolist-7Vp755-rEmkuz-ro44H3-pBwyua-jCfMcP-gWrofJ-nkMJT8-dSzo2A-pa3e7R-d5UJiq-d5UJF5-egcv1D-d5UHiu-cgrLLN-egifLq-dywiFP-dm4a8s-oxuXZL-7KaLhV-9uMrNr-ffkwRW-oUoA7k-7KeF1y-paP1hE-7Gc6C3-bV3kj2-qxzuR4-cE8eYG-aqUi9F-awVaEv-dRthZW-fJUfWd-ehPSy6-kB8VM7-efbhex-p7Pc2U-f7HP3d-i2uFfw-oERpnX-c4kpAA-hEapCF-aJfUD2-eZpj4B-dT2UKb-rhRoCb-egifFd-4zirn1-foA3S8-dNWFvz-hTQbWT>
, CC BY <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/>

Like climate mitigation, the need to adapt to climate change is explicitly
built into the Paris Agreement. The accord calls for the transfer of
resources
<http://www.climatefocus.com/sites/default/files/GCF%20and%20Paris%20Brief%202016.new_.pdf>
from
wealthy countries to poor countries that will face the harshest effects
from changes to the climate which are already baked in and by now are
unavoidable. These funds are meant to strengthen the adaptive capacity of
poor countries.

Weak adaptive capacity increases the chances that climate effects, such as
epidemics, population displacements and political instability, will
ultimately reach the borders of even the wealthiest nations. If other
wealthy countries follow the Trump administration’s lead and back out of
financial commitments, then the needed money for adaptation may never
become available.

The need for global cooperation regarding climate change geoengineering is
less well-understood than the need for cooperation regarding either
mitigation and adaptation. But increasingly, experts are recognizing its
importance
<http://www.globalpolicyjournal.com/blog/07/03/2015/geoengineering-and-need-inclusive-institutions-%E2%80%93-global-governance-futures-2025-inte>
.
Wild West or international agreement?

Geoengineering refers to large-scale technological efforts to alter the
climate.

One such method, solar radiation management (SRM
<https://www.nap.edu/catalog/18988/climate-intervention-reflecting-sunlight-to-cool-earth>),
involves the redirection of solar radiation back toward the sun and away
from the Earth’s surface using sulfates or other microscopic particles
released into the atmosphere. Another SRM method is to set up giant space
mirrors
<https://www.bostonglobe.com/magazine/2013/10/19/geoengineering-schemes-from-cloud-brightening-space-mirrors/Dw9xmqdbtdV8cGv4K93cJN/story.html>
.

The goal of the Paris Agreement is to keep the planet from warming more
than 2 degrees Celsius (on average) over the preindustrial baseline, but
the agreement also aspires to keep warming to no more than 1.5°C
<http://unfccc.int/resource/docs/2015/cop21/eng/10a01.pdf>. These are
ambitious goals, especially the 1.5°C goal, given that temperatures rose 0.85°C
between 1880 and 2012
<https://www2.ucar.edu/climate/faq/how-much-has-global-temperature-risen-last-100-years>
.

Commentators question whether, even if all the major emitters in the world
aggressively pursue mitigation, global temperature increase can be held to
2°C or anything like it
<http://blogs.berkeley.edu/2015/12/14/does-the-paris-agreement-open-the-door-to-geoengineering/>.
If these commentators are right
<https://theconversation.com/to-meet-the-paris-climate-goals-do-we-need-to-engineer-the-climate-46664>,
some use of SRM arguably could be needed to, in effect, “buy time” for the
planet
<http://www.belfercenter.org/sites/default/files/legacy/files/160700_horton-keith-honegger_vp2.pdf>
during
the transition to a no-carbon economy.

A basic question, therefore, is: Will the debate about, research into and
(if it ever happens) deployment of SRM be a matter of the “Wild West”? That
is, will it be a matter of whatever a country or even non-state actor wants
to do, perhaps even partially in secret? Or will it rather be a matter of
considered, transparent, inclusive decision-making by the international
community as a whole?
Template for assessing riskWhether research into geoengineering should even
be done, as Harvard University has begun doing, is controversial, which is
why there should be ethical and scientific safeguards over how any research
is done. Roman Babakin/shutterstock.com
<https://www.shutterstock.com/image-photo/entrance-gate-east-facade-sever-hall-420552940?src=zzQ6Ds1FUrXmj9TF-xRVcg-1-5>

In my view, it is essential that the SRM debate take a cooperation-based
path because the risks from SRM are so substantial. SRM perhaps could be
effective in delaying warming effects at relatively modest out-of-pocket
costs, but it could have devastating environmental consequences,
including altering
the weather patterns of a large part of the world
<https://www2.ucar.edu/atmosnews/news/10531/geoengineering-climate-could-reduce-vital-rains>
.

Some potentially negative consequences cannot even be imagined at this
point. SRM in theory could be weaponized and used by one nation-state to
attack its enemies. Even the public discourse about SRM could be damaging.
Research conducted by Kaitlin Rami, Alex Maki, Michael Vandenbergh and me
suggests that overly optimistic depictions of SRM could cause public
support for mitigation to plummet
<http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/future_tense/2016/01/geoengineering_might_give_people_an_excuse_to_ignore_climate_change_s_causes.html>
.

Some research into SRM and other forms of geoengineering may be sensible,
but only if is done under the careful supervision of an international
institution or consortium that draws on science and ethics and includes all
voices in a deliberative manner.

The Paris Agreement does not explicitly address geoengineering, but it does
create a template to regularly evaluate global climate risks and host
ongoing negotiations and collaboration. Most notably, and for the first
time in the climate change context, the Paris Agreement includes virtually
all the nations of the world, including China and India.

Moreover, the agreement, while built on voluntary mitigation commitments at
this point, mandates transparency in the form of national reporting. The
agreement also explicitly calls for a consideration of issues of equity
<http://www.law.northwestern.edu/research-faculty/searlecenter/events/roundtable/documents/Burns_Paris_Geo_General_presentation_with_notes.pdf>
regarding
the impacts of and responses to climate change.

And so while details are relatively few in the agreement, it represents an
important first step toward governance not just for climate change
mitigation, but also adaptation and potentially geoengineering.

Its generality and flexibility are its strength; as President Obama remarked
<http://www.cnn.com/2017/05/09/politics/obama-climate-change-paris-agreement-italy/index.html>,
the Paris Agreement provides the “architecture” needed to address the
overarching challenge of climate change. This could include the challenge
of responsibly addressing the fraught question of geoengineering. Trump’s
withdrawal is a step backwards

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