http://m.pnas.org/content/early/2017/08/14/1713456114

Opinion: Climate policymakers and assessments must get serious about
climate engineering
 Authors

Climate engineering (CE)—the intentional, global-scale modification of the
environment to help offset the effects of elevated greenhouse gases—appears
able to reduce climate-change risks beyond what’s possible with mitigation
and adaptation alone. Furthermore, the large-scale use of CE is probably
essential for achieving prudent climate-change limits, including the Paris
target of limiting the average global temperature rise to 1.5–2.0 °C. This
conclusion appears unavoidable based on the current level of global
greenhouse-gas emissions and the long time-constants of the climate system
and the human energy system (e.g., the long atmospheric lifetime of carbon
dioxide and the time required for large-scale deployment of new
technologies). CE may also enable integrated climate-response strategies
that reduce risks in ways not otherwise achievable.

Due to the complex implications of climate engineering, its use demands
immediate, serious, critical investigation at the highest levels. Image
courtesy of Shutterstock/idiz.

At the same time, such strategies cannot replace mitigation or adaptation,
which remain essential responses to the severe risks that climate change
poses. And the various forms of CE, both carbon removal and
sunlight-scattering solar geoengineering, pose novel, significant, and
uncertain risks (1⇓⇓⇓–5).

In view of CE’s high stakes and complex implications, which offer the
prospect of great benefit or harm, its use urgently needs serious, critical
investigation. This has not happened. The treatment of CE thus far in
climate research, assessment, scenarios, and policy debates has been at
best selective and insufficient; at worst, the subject has been
misrepresented or ignored.

Serious examination of CE would challenge many comforting presumptions of
climate policy debates and assessment processes, but this challenge must be
met. There are at least three major reasons that policy and assessment
bodies must take better account of CE. First, as stated, CE might prove
crucial in managing climate risks. Second, …

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