*Why you need to get involved in the geoengineering debate – now* 

*October 19, 2017 by Rob Bellamy, The Conversation *

*https://phys.org/news/2017-10-involved-geoengineering-debate.html 
<https://phys.org/news/2017-10-involved-geoengineering-debate.html>*

 

The prospect of engineering the world's climate system to tackle global 
warming is becoming more and more likely. This may seem like a crazy idea 
but I, and over 250 other scientists, policy makers and stakeholders from 
around the globe recently descended on Berlin to debate the promises and 
perils of geoengineering. 

There are many touted methods of engineering the climate. Early, outlandish 
ideas included installing a 'space sunshade": a massive mirror orbiting the 
Earth to reflect sunlight. The ideas most in discussion now may not seem 
much more realistic – spraying particles into the stratosphere to reflect 
sunlight, or fertilising the oceans with iron to encourage algal growth and 
carbon 
dioxide <https://phys.org/tags/carbon+dioxide/> sequestration through 
photosynthesis.

But the prospect of geoengineering has become a lot more real since the 
Paris Agreement. The 2015 Paris Agreement set out near universal, legally 
binding commitments to keep the increase in global temperature to well 
below 2°C above pre-industrial levels and even to aim for limiting the rise 
to 1.5°C. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has 
concluded that meeting these targets is possible – but nearly all of their 
scenarios rely on the extensive deployment of some form of geoengineering 
by the end of the century.

 

*How to engineer the climate*

Geoengineering comes in two distinct flavours. The first is greenhouse gas 
removal: those ideas that would seek to remove and store carbon dioxide and 
other greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. The second is solar radiation 
management: the ideas that would seek to reflect a level of sunlight away 
from the Earth.

Solar radiation management is the more controversial of the two, doing 
nothing to address the root cause of climate change 
<https://phys.org/tags/climate+change/> – greenhouse gas emissions 
<https://phys.org/tags/greenhouse+gas+emissions/> – and raising a whole 
load of concerns about undesirable side effects, such as changes to 
regional weather patterns. 

And then there is the so-called "termination problem". If we ever stopped 
engineering the climate in this way then global temperature would abruptly 
bounce back to where it would have been without it. And if we had not been 
reducing or removing emissions at the same time, this could be a very sharp 
and sudden rise indeed.

Most climate models that see the ambitions of the Paris Agreement achieved 
assume the use of greenhouse gas removal, particularly bio-energy coupled 
with carbon capture and storage technology. But, as the recent conference 
<http://www.ce-conference.org/> revealed, although research in the field is 
steadily gaining ground, there is also a dangerous gap between its current 
state of the art and the achievability of the Paris Agreement on climate 
change.

The Paris Agreement – and its implicit dependence on greenhouse gas removal 
– has undoubtedly been one of the most significant developments to impact 
on the field of geoengineering since the last conference of its kind back 
in 2014. This shifted the emphasis of the conference away from the more 
controversial and attention-grabbing solar radiation management and towards 
the more mundane but policy relevant greenhouse gas removal.

 

*Controversial experiments*

But there were moments when sunlight reflecting methods still stole the 
show. A centrepiece of the conference was the solar radiation management 
experiments campfire, where David Keith and his colleagues from the Harvard 
University Solar Geoengineering Research Programme laid out their 
experimental plans. They aim to 
<https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/keutschgroup/scopex> lift an instrument 
package to a height of 20km using a high-altitude balloon and release a 
small amount of reflective particles into the atmosphere.

This would not be the first geoengineering experiment. Scientists, 
engineers and entrepreneurs have already begun experimenting with various 
ideas, several of which have attracted a great degree of public interest 
and controversy. A particularly notable case was one UK project 
<http://www.spice.ac.uk/>, in which plans to release a small amount of 
water into the atmosphere at a height of 1km using a pipe tethered to a 
balloon were cancelled in 2013 owing to concerns over intellectual property.

Such experiments will be essential if geoengineering ideas are to ever 
become technically viable contributors to achieving the goals of the Paris 
Agreement. But it is the governance of experiments, not their technical 
credentials, that has always been and still remains the most contentious 
area of the geoengineering debate. 

Critics warned that the Harvard experiment could be the first step on a 
"slippery slope" towards an undesirable deployment and therefore must be 
restrained. But advocates argued that the technology needs to be developed 
before we can know what it is that we are trying to govern. 

The challenge for governance is not to back either one of these extremes, 
but rather to navigate a responsible path between them.

 

*How to govern?*

The key to defining a responsible way to govern geoengineering experiments 
is accounting for public interests and concerns. Would-be geoengineering 
experimenters, including those at Harvard, routinely try to account for 
these concerns by appealing to their experiments being of a small scale and 
a limited extent. But, as I argued in the conference, in public discussions 
on the scale and extent of geoengineering experiments their meaning has 
been subjective and always qualified by other concerns.

My colleagues and I have found that the public have at least four principal 
concerns 
<http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959378016302230> about 
geoengineering experiments: their level of containment; uncertainty around 
what the outcomes would be; the reversibility of any impacts, and the 
intent behind them. A small scale experiment unfolding indoors might 
therefore be deemed unacceptable if it raised concerns about private 
interests, for example. On the other hand, a large scale experiment 
conducted outdoors could be deemed acceptable if it did not release 
materials into the open environment.

Under certain conditions the four dimensions could be aligned. The 
challenge for governance is to account for these – and likely other – 
dimensions of perceived controllability. This means that public involvement 
in the design of governance itself needs to be front and centre in the 
development of geoengineering experiments. 

A whole range of two-way dialogue methods are available – focus groups, 
citizens juries, deliberative workshops and many others. And to those 
outside of formal involvement in such processes – read about 
geoengineering, talk about geoengineering. We need to start a society-wide 
conversation on how to govern such controversial technologies.

Public interests and concerns need to be drawn out well in advance of an 
experiment and the results used to meaningfully shape how we govern it. 
This will not only make the the experiment more legitimate, but also make 
it substantively better.

Make no mistake, experiments will be needed if we are to learn the worth of 
geoengineering <https://phys.org/tags/geoengineering/> ideas. But they must 
be done with public values at their core. 

 

The prospect of engineering the world's climate system to tackle global 
warming is becoming more and more likely. This may seem like a crazy idea 
but I, and over 250 other scientists, policy makers and stakeholders from 
around the globe recently descended on Berlin to debate the promises and 
perils of geoengineering. 

There are many touted methods of engineering the climate. Early, outlandish 
ideas included installing a 'space sunshade": a massive mirror orbiting the 
Earth to reflect sunlight. The ideas most in discussion now may not seem 
much more realistic – spraying particles into the stratosphere to reflect 
sunlight, or fertilising the oceans with iron to encourage algal growth and 
carbon 
dioxide <https://phys.org/tags/carbon+dioxide/> sequestration through 
photosynthesis.

But the prospect of geoengineering has become a lot more real since the 
Paris Agreement. The 2015 Paris Agreement set out near universal, legally 
binding commitments to keep the increase in global temperature to well 
below 2°C above pre-industrial levels and even to aim for limiting the rise 
to 1.5°C. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has 
concluded that meeting these targets is possible – but nearly all of their 
scenarios rely on the extensive deployment of some form of geoengineering 
by the end of the century.

*How to engineer the climate*

Geoengineering comes in two distinct flavours. The first is greenhouse gas 
removal: those ideas that would seek to remove and store carbon dioxide and 
other greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. The second is solar radiation 
management: the ideas that would seek to reflect a level of sunlight away 
from the Earth.

Solar radiation management is the more controversial of the two, doing 
nothing to address the root cause of climate change 
<https://phys.org/tags/climate+change/> – greenhouse gas emissions 
<https://phys.org/tags/greenhouse+gas+emissions/> – and raising a whole 
load of concerns about undesirable side effects, such as changes to 
regional weather patterns. 

And then there is the so-called "termination problem". If we ever stopped 
engineering the climate in this way then global temperature would abruptly 
bounce back to where it would have been without it. And if we had not been 
reducing or removing emissions at the same time, this could be a very sharp 
and sudden rise indeed.

Most climate models that see the ambitions of the Paris Agreement achieved 
assume the use of greenhouse gas removal, particularly bio-energy coupled 
with carbon capture and storage technology. But, as the recent conference 
<http://www.ce-conference.org/> revealed, although research in the field is 
steadily gaining ground, there is also a dangerous gap between its current 
state of the art and the achievability of the Paris Agreement on climate 
change.

The Paris Agreement – and its implicit dependence on greenhouse gas removal 
– has undoubtedly been one of the most significant developments to impact 
on the field of geoengineering since the last conference of its kind back 
in 2014. This shifted the emphasis of the conference away from the more 
controversial and attention-grabbing solar radiation management and towards 
the more mundane but policy relevant greenhouse gas removal.

*Controversial experiments*

But there were moments when sunlight reflecting methods still stole the 
show. A centrepiece of the conference was the solar radiation management 
experiments campfire, where David Keith and his colleagues from the Harvard 
University Solar Geoengineering Research Programme laid out their 
experimental plans. They aim to 
<https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/keutschgroup/scopex> lift an instrument 
package to a height of 20km using a high-altitude balloon and release a 
small amount of reflective particles into the atmosphere.
[image: Why you need to get involved in the geoengineering debate – now] 
<https://3c1703fe8d.site.internapcdn.net/newman/gfx/news/2017/1-whyyouneedto.jpg>
 
Geoengineering measures. Credit: IASS 

This would not be the first geoengineering experiment. Scientists, 
engineers and entrepreneurs have already begun experimenting with various 
ideas, several of which have attracted a great degree of public interest 
and controversy. A particularly notable case was one UK project 
<http://www.spice.ac.uk/>, in which plans to release a small amount of 
water into the atmosphere at a height of 1km using a pipe tethered to a 
balloon were cancelled in 2013 owing to concerns over intellectual property.

Such experiments will be essential if geoengineering ideas are to ever 
become technically viable contributors to achieving the goals of the Paris 
Agreement. But it is the governance of experiments, not their technical 
credentials, that has always been and still remains the most contentious 
area of the geoengineering debate. 

Critics warned that the Harvard experiment could be the first step on a 
"slippery slope" towards an undesirable deployment and therefore must be 
restrained. But advocates argued that the technology needs to be developed 
before we can know what it is that we are trying to govern. 

The challenge for governance is not to back either one of these extremes, 
but rather to navigate a responsible path between them.

*How to govern?*

The key to defining a responsible way to govern geoengineering experiments 
is accounting for public interests and concerns. Would-be geoengineering 
experimenters, including those at Harvard, routinely try to account for 
these concerns by appealing to their experiments being of a small scale and 
a limited extent. But, as I argued in the conference, in public discussions 
on the scale and extent of geoengineering experiments their meaning has 
been subjective and always qualified by other concerns.

My colleagues and I have found that the public have at least four principal 
concerns 
<http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959378016302230> about 
geoengineering experiments: their level of containment; uncertainty around 
what the outcomes would be; the reversibility of any impacts, and the 
intent behind them. A small scale experiment unfolding indoors might 
therefore be deemed unacceptable if it raised concerns about private 
interests, for example. On the other hand, a large scale experiment 
conducted outdoors could be deemed acceptable if it did not release 
materials into the open environment.

Under certain conditions the four dimensions could be aligned. The 
challenge for governance is to account for these – and likely other – 
dimensions of perceived controllability. This means that public involvement 
in the design of governance itself needs to be front and centre in the 
development of geoengineering experiments. 

A whole range of two-way dialogue methods are available – focus groups, 
citizens juries, deliberative workshops and many others. And to those 
outside of formal involvement in such processes – read about 
geoengineering, talk about geoengineering. We need to start a society-wide 
conversation on how to govern such controversial technologies.

Public interests and concerns need to be drawn out well in advance of an 
experiment and the results used to meaningfully shape how we govern it. 
This will not only make the the experiment more legitimate, but also make 
it substantively better.

Make no mistake, experiments will be needed if we are to learn the worth of 
geoengineering <https://phys.org/tags/geoengineering/> ideas. But they must 
be done with public values at their core.


Read more at: 
https://phys.org/news/2017-10-involved-geoengineering-debate.html#jCp

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