Poster's note: overlooked at the time the time. IDK if it got published

https://www.newsecuritybeat.org/2018/06/engineering-climate-or-deploying-disaster-applying-war-theory-geoengineering/

Engineering the Climate—or Deploying Disaster? Applying Just War Theory to
Geoengineering

   - Elizabeth L. Chalecki

[image: Space_lens]

As the national security ramifications
<https://www.newsecuritybeat.org/2017/07/security-links-emerging-congressional-common-ground-climate-change/>
of
climate change grow more pronounced, climate manipulation technologies,
known as geoengineering,
<https://ceassessment.org/what-is-climate-engineering/> will become more
attractive as a method of staving off climate-related security
emergencies.  However, geoengineering technologies could disrupt the global
ecological status quo, and could pose a potentially coercive (and very
serious) threat to peace. Is it possible to obtain the potential benefits
of these game-changing technologies, while avoiding spurring violence and
conflict?  In a recent article in *Strategic Studies Quarterly*
<http://www.airuniversity.af.mil/Portals/10/SSQ/documents/Volume-12_Issue-2/Chalecki_Ferrari.pdf>,
we argue that just war theory
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/in-theory/wp/2015/11/30/just-war-theory-a-primer/?utm_term=.4b7c2f9386e9>—which
defines the concepts of “right” and “wrong” in warfare—could provide
ethical standards for security decision-makers as they consider whether or
how geoengineering should be used to address the climate challenge.
*Geoengineering in the Global Commons*

Geoengineering technologies fall into two distinct types, carbon dioxide
removal
<https://www.nap.edu/catalog/18805/climate-intervention-carbon-dioxide-removal-and-reliable-sequestration>
 and solar radiation management
<https://www.nap.edu/catalog/18988/climate-intervention-reflecting-sunlight-to-cool-earth>.
Carbon dioxide removal includes any method of removing CO2 or other
heat-trapping gases from the ambient air with the intention of reducing the
greenhouse effect and allowing more heat to escape the atmosphere.  Solar
radiation management seeks to bounce sunlight away from the earth before it
has the chance to be absorbed and re-radiated from the surface as infrared
heat, becoming trapped in the atmosphere and contributing to the greenhouse
effect.

Most methods can be deployed from land, and so would be subject to the
national laws and norms of governance in the country where they are
deployed.  However, three current methods—ocean iron fertilization, sulfur
aerosol dispersal, and marine-based cloud brightening—can be deployed from
the high seas or the atmosphere, which are a part of the shared global
commons, not national territory.  Because the environmental cause and
effect are separated in space and time, a sovereign state acting in these
arenas could unilaterally affect the entire planet’s ecology.

Collateral damage to the environment
<https://www.newsecuritybeat.org/2017/11/toxic-legacy-remediating-pollution-iraq/>
during
combat is one of the most significant costs of war.  UN Environment
<https://www.unenvironment.org/explore-topics/disasters-conflicts>’s
post-conflict environmental assessments in Afghanistan
<https://www.unenvironment.org/explore-topics/disasters-conflicts/where-we-work/afghanistan>
, Iraq
<https://www.unenvironment.org/explore-topics/disasters-conflicts/where-we-work/iraq>
, Gaza
<https://www.unenvironment.org/resources/report/environmental-assessment-areas-disengaged-israel-gaza-strip>,
and Sudan
<https://www.unenvironment.org/explore-topics/disasters-conflicts/where-we-work/sudan>show
that destruction of the environment or disruption of ecosystem services
<https://www.newsecuritybeat.org/2017/10/middle-eastern-wars-protect-civilians-protect-environmental-infrastructure/>
hinders
the recovery of the civilian population.  Any geoengineering technology on
a scale large enough to shift the global climate has the potential to
inflict damage of the same magnitude.

Depending upon the type of technology used, geoengineering could incur the
same level of cross-border environmental destruction and loss of functional
sovereignty as a war.  But war is waged with intent to harm; and
geoengineering might be deployed without that intent. However, that is a
distinction without a difference, if it causes involuntary environmental
change that affects the security and material well-being of states, just
like the use of violent force.

[image: SPICE]
*Towards a “Just Geoengineering” Theory*

The centuries-long intellectual and legal history
<https://www.iep.utm.edu/justwar/> of just war theory provides ethical
guidance for decision-making about the destructive forces of war.  Three of
its principles apply to geoengineering: competent authority,
proportionality, and discrimination.

   - *Competent authority*: Only the legitimate government of a sovereign
   state—in conjunction with scientists, inter-governmental organizations, and
   other stakeholders—can justly decide to use geoengineering. Any rogue
   actors
   
<https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/iron-dumping-ocean-experiment-sparks-controversy/>
are
   not legitimate.
   - *Proportionality:* Any hoped-for ecological and economic benefits
   gained by deployment of geoengineering must outweigh the ecological and
   economic risks. In other words, geoengineering must make the problem
   better, not worse.
   - *Discrimination:* The government cannot benefit its own people at the
   environmental expense of others, and collateral damage must be minimized.

Drawing on these three principles, we can formulate a Just Geoengineering
Theory with two sets of guidelines: (1) on the decision to deploy—“jus ad
climate”—following the model of *jus ad bellum*, law governing the decision
to resort to force; and (2) on how the method should be deployed–“jus in
climate”—following the model of *jus in bello*, law governing the conduct
of war.
*Jus ad climate:*

   - The state must be facing a major climate change-related security
   emergency in order to justify deploying geoengineering technologies from
   the global commons. The competent authority must determine a threshold—such
   as lost lives or economic productivity—that determines whether the
   emergency is “major” enough to justify the use of geoengineering.
   - The decision must be made first at the national level, and then
   subject to international consent. States do not normally submit their
   national security decisions to the approval of other states, but
   geoengineering technologies are not like other weapons due to their unique
   combination of global reach, potential for nonlinear effect, and
   implications for the fundamental livability of our planet.
   - The selected technology should have a reasonable chance of success,
   according to the best available scientific expertise. If this cannot be
   determined, then its use is not just, and the precautionary principle
   <http://sehn.org/precautionary-principle/>—avoid harm to environment or
   human health—must be applied.
   - Any geoengineering attempt must meet the double-effect criteria: only
   the good result is intended; the bad is not a means to the good, and the
   deploying state is not engaging in harm for harm’s sake.

*Jus in climate:*

   - The chosen method must be designed to inflict only the minimum
   ecological disruption necessary to offset the climate emergency. According
   to the just war principle of proportionality, states may use only the
   amount of force necessary to achieve their goal.  When applied to
   geoengineering, determining this minimum requires input from scientists and
   stakeholders.
   - The geoengineering method must yield greater good than harm globally
   (not just to the country deploying it); and do so starting with the first
   year of deployment. If not, it must be discontinued as ineffective or
   unjust.  A short time threshold to prove the technology is critical,
   because unjust or unworkable strategies can cause significant environmental
   and economic damage, on top of the climate change effects they are trying
   to mitigate.

*There’s No Planet B*

Right now, climate change-related security threats are increasing, while
mitigation and adaptation efforts are not keeping pace.  Eventually,
geoengineering will start to look like viable climate manipulation
measures, cloaked in national security; already the U.S. Congress is
considering expanding such research
<https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/4586?r=1402> in
the name of national security.  However, law and custom require states to keep
environmental harm from negatively affecting other states
<https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2486421>, and
geoengineering deployed from the global commons offers no possibility of
limiting the effects to one country or region.

So why don’t the countries of the world negotiate a new geoengineering
regime?  Ultimately, we must do just that, but the growing strain of
nationalism in the world is pointing toward fewer treaties and less
cooperation on global issues, and signals a retreat from the liberal
international order needed to develop and implement a geoengineering
convention.  In the absence of explicit international law, just
geoengineering theory can help to create a set of norms and customs to
guide decision-making by states and the international community.



*Elizabeth L. Chalecki is an Assistant Professor of International Relations
at the University of Nebraska–Omaha and a Non-Resident Research Fellow in
Environmental Security at the Stimson Center.  Her expertise lies in the
areas of climate change and security, global environmental politics, and
the intersection of science & technology and international relations. *

*Lisa Ferrari is Associate Professor  of Politics and Government at  the
University of Puget Sound, where she teaches in the areas of international
relations, international ethics, and U.S.-Canadian relations. *

*Sources: Forum for Climate Engineering Assessment, Internet Encyclopedia
of Philosophy, Scientific American, Science & Environmental Health Network,
SSRN, Strategic Studies Quarterly, The National Academies of Sciences
Engineering Medicine, The Washington Post, UN Environment, and U.S.
Congress *

*Photo Credits: Principle of a space lens, April 2008
<https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Space_lens.png>, courtesy
of Mikael Häggström; The SPICE Project, September 2011
<https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:SPICE_SRM_overview.jpg>, courtesy
of user Hughhunt. *

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