http://theconversation.com/geoengineering-the-great-barrier-reef-needs-strong-rules-100674

Geoengineering the Great Barrier Reef needs strong rules
July 31, 2018 9.14pm BST
 Kerryn Brent, Brendan Gogarty, Jan McDonald, and Jeff McGee
The Great Barrier Reef has experienced extensive coral bleaching over the
past two years. Faced with this reality, scientists are proposing a range
of options to save the reef.

A recent conference showcased new possibilities for enhancing Reef
resilience, including boosting coral abundance and geoengineering
techniques that would manipulate local conditions to reduce ocean
temperatures.

Read more: Great Barrier Reef bleaching would be almost impossible without
climate change

These geoengineering approaches carry their own risks, and require careful
management, even at the research and field testing stages.

Technology is needed to buy the reef time
Climate change is affecting the reef through bleaching events, species
redistribution, and ocean acidification. Stabilising environmental
conditions “to protect current reef biodiversity” requires that global
temperatures stay below 1.2℃. Yet modelling of the global community’s
current commitments under the Paris Climate Agreement suggests that global
warming between 2.6-3.2℃ will occur by 2100. This would destroy the Great
Barrier Reef as we know it.


Artificial marine clouds already occur as a result of shipping exhaust.
Scientists propose simulating this to cool the Reef. Liam Gumley, Space
Science and Engineering Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison
It is not surprising, then, that scientists are looking to buy the reef
some time, while the international community works to stabilise and then
reduce global greenhouse gas emissions. The Commonwealth and Queensland
governments have announced funding for feasibility projects aimed at
manipulating surface water temperatures using three different techniques:

Creating a reflective surface film that would float on the surface of the
water. Made from calcium carbonate (the same mineral as coral), the film
would reflect sunlight, thereby lowering water temperatures and ultraviolet
radiation exposure.

Marine cloud brightening to also reflect more sunlight away from the reef.
The plan is to spray microscopic salt particles into clouds using
customised vessels or modified snow machines. This increases the
concentration of droplets in clouds and encourages smaller, more reflective
droplets to form.

Water-mixing units with large, slow moving fans that will draw cool water
from 10-30 metres deep and deliver it to surface areas to limit coral heat
stress. In 2017 this proposal received A$2.2 million in Commonwealth
funding, to test eight water-mixing units over a 1km square area of Moore
Reef, off the coast of Cairns.

Engineering the climate of Australia’s most iconic natural system carries
obvious risks. Indeed, Australia has a history of well-intended attempts to
manage nature that have backfired because the risks were not fully
understood.

Read more: Everyone agreed: cane toads would be a winner for Australia

We must be confident that such technological interventions will protect the
reef, not contribute to its destruction. This is a problem because
scientific trials are supposed to identify and assess risks, so we won’t
fully understand what impacts they have until such trials are undertaken.

Governance necessary for public confidence
Building public confidence that potential risks have been identified and
addressed is essential to the long-term success of reef geoengineering
proposals. Even feasibility studies can be derailed if they lack public
support.


We need to develop governance frameworks to ensure we have the best
possible chance of saving our most important natural wonder. Yanguang Lan,
Unsplash
The legitimacy and ultimate acceptability of reef geoengineering
technologies therefore demands robust and transparent processes for
funding, research, field testing and eventual deployment. Drawing on the
Oxford Principles for Geoengineering Governance, the minimum governance
standards should include:

criteria and clear processes for research funding decisions
public access to information about planned field testing
demonstrated compliance with Australia’s environmental laws.
Current environmental laws do not make special exemptions for scientific
research or testing in areas of national environmental significance, such
as the Great Barrier Reef. Any geoengineering trial that might have a
“significant impact” on those areas is illegal without a permit from the
Commonwealth Environment Minister. The Minister is guided by the
precautionary principle and World Heritage obligations in issuing such
permits.

The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Act imposes separate approval
requirements and makes protection of the reef the highest priority. This
would suggest that the standard for environmental assessment for any
proposal to run geoengineering trials on the Reef should be high.

It is unclear how the federal environment minister and the Great Barrier
Reef Marine Park Authority will evaluate whether the risks of field testing
are small enough to justify granting their approval. The position is made
more uncertain by the fact that the authority is directly involved in at
least one of the projects. This uncertainty risks poor environmental
outcomes and erosion of public confidence.

We need a strong framework for assessing and managing the risks of
geoengineering, to address legitimate public concerns.

As the stewards of the reef, the Marine Park Authority is ideally placed to
take the lead on developing this framework, to ensure we have the best
possible chance of saving our most important natural wonder.

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