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Could geoengineering cause a climate war?
If country leaders manipulate the weather to do their bidding, could they
create political tensions, or even all-out war?
4 weeks ago
By Clive Hamilton
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Update 17/06/19: This article has been updated to include the alternative
view by Peter Irvine, which originally appeared in the April 2018 issue of
BBC Focus Magazine.

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Climate change is a problem in desperate need of a solution. According to
the authoritative Carbon Action Tracker, even if all nations honour their
pledges to cut their greenhouse gas emissions, the globe will still warm by
around 3.2°C by 2100 – with catastrophic consequences for humanity and the
animal kingdom.

If cutting greenhouse gas emissions isn’t enough, is it time for a plan B?
Recent times have seen a surge of interest in geoengineering: China has
recently embarked on a substantial research plan, while in the US, Prof
David Keith of Harvard University is planning to launch a high-altitude
balloon this year to test the feasibility of spraying reflective particles
into the stratosphere. Meanwhile, other researchers are looking at the
possibility of increasing the brightness of marine clouds to reflect more
sunlight back into space.

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But there are a number of risks, and not just because we’re unsure about
how effective these interventions would be. There are fears that one
country’s efforts to solve its climate problem could inadvertently mess up
the weather elsewhere, creating a new source of political tension. And
ultimately, this leads to a worrying question: could we be looking at the
dawn of a new kind of war – one fuelled by a battle for dominance over our
planet’s climate system?

The problem with geoengineering
Geoengineering is defined as a deliberate, large-scale intervention in the
climate system, and schemes come in two varieties. The first type aims to
remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. This can be done by capturing it
from the air using natural or artificial means; making biochar (a type of
charcoal) from vegetation waste; or adding lime to the oceans to reduce
their acidity and therefore maintain their ability to absorb carbon dioxide
from the atmosphere. The greatest hurdle for these schemes lies in finding
somewhere to permanently store the huge quantities of carbon. The deep
ocean offers one possible solution, but we’re still a long way from a
feasible method of doing this.

The second kind of geoengineering scheme is known as solar radiation
management or albedo modification. These techniques look to reflect a small
amount of sunlight away from the planet to reduce warming. Some of these
proposals are relatively benign, but also pretty ineffective. The
technology receiving most attention – and the one most likely to be
deployed because it’s cheap and feasible – is known as sulphate aerosol
spraying.

Large volcanic eruptions can cool the planet by preventing a little solar
radiation from reaching us. Some geoengineering schemes work in a similar
way © Getty Images
Large volcanic eruptions can cool the planet by preventing a little solar
radiation from reaching us. Some geoengineering schemes work in a similar
way © Getty Images
The idea is to spray sulphur dioxide or sulphuric acid into the
stratosphere or upper atmosphere to form tiny particles that reflect an
extra 1 to 3 per cent of incoming solar radiation back into space, thereby
cooling the planet in the way that large volcanic eruptions are known to do.

In effect, humans would be installing a radiative shield between the Earth
and the Sun: one that could be adjusted by those who control it to regulate
the temperature of the planet. The models indicate that if we reduced the
amount of sunlight reaching the planet, the Earth would cool fairly
quickly, although with less effect at the poles, which are warming more
rapidly.

A 2010 study published in Nature Geoscience found that, under a solar
geoengineering regime, there would be different responses across large
regions, making consensus about how much to reduce incoming solar radiation
difficult, if not impossible.

Some atmospheric scientists, like Dr Alan Robock at Rutgers University,
argue that the complexity of the climate system means that it’s difficult
to draw firm conclusions about the consequences of such a radical
intervention. They point out that the chemistry of the upper atmosphere –
including the ozone layer – is complicated and poorly understood. Reducing
the amount of sunlight reaching the Earth in a computer model may give
little clue as to what would happen in the actual climate system if a layer
of sulphate aerosols were injected into it.

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One worry is that, combined with increased water vapour as a result of
global warming, adding sulphates to the upper atmosphere could be a lethal
cocktail for ozone loss, speeding up chemical reactions that destroy this
crucial gas. Other studies indicate that, depending on the kind of aerosol
spraying programme, the South Asian and East Asian monsoons could be
disrupted. Tropical rainfall depends on differences between temperatures on
land and sea, and some models show that by changing the temperature ratio
between land and sea, solar geoengineering could suppress monsoon rains,
affecting food supplies for millions of people.

However, global warming itself is changing precipitation patterns around
the world (broadly speaking, dry regions are becoming drier and wet ones
wetter) so a solar shield may improve rainfall in some regions that are
drying out. It’s here we get to some of the most difficult issues
associated with geoengineering.

Unknown unknowns
If the most sophisticated models cannot provide a firm answer regarding how
solar geoengineering would affect the actual global climate, nor can
experiments. Only full-scale implementation would provide a clear idea of
its impacts.

Even then, we’d need at least 10 years of global climate data before we had
enough information to separate out the effects of sulphate aerosol spraying
from natural climate variability and, indeed, from the effects of
human-induced climate change. To compound the risks, if after 10 years we
had accumulated enough data to decide that our intervention was not a good
idea, it may be impossible to terminate the solar shield. Why should this
be so?

Cloud- seeding substances, which provide nuclei around which clouds can
precipitate, being blasted from a plane © WEBB CHAPPELL, FLPA
Cloud- seeding substances, which provide nuclei around which clouds can
precipitate, being blasted from a plane © Webb Chappell, FLPA
For some time, ecologists have known that the rate at which the globe warms
is a greater threat to ecosystems than the amount of warming, because a
slower rate of warming gives plants and animals more time to adapt. If the
solar shield causes some nasty unintended effects (including conflict
between nations), removing it suddenly would cause the suppressed warming
‘rebound’. It’s been estimated that if warming occurs at a rate of 0.3°C
per decade (well within the estimated rebound range) then only 30 per cent
of ecosystems could adapt and survive.

So we may find that, once deployed, removing the shield becomes too risky;
we’d be stuck with it. The danger would be multiplied if we failed to take
the opportunity to cut greenhouse gas emissions sharply while the shield
was in place. This is perhaps the greatest hazard of going down this path.

Politics, politics
Some technologies are inherently political in the sense that they increase
the power of those who control it and reduce the power of those excluded
from it. Imagine if the US government decided to install a solar shield
that allowed it to regulate the climate. The government would wield great
power over all those US industries that depend on the weather, while also
being able to influence the climate in other parts of the world, creating
immediate strategic tension.

Paradoxically, solar geoengineering can also be seen as a means of
preserving social and political structures that are threatened by measures
to cut carbon emissions. Instead of taxing fossil fuels, banning coal
mining and restricting air transport, those profiting from these activities
might welcome a technofix like sulphate aerosol spraying.

Emissions from the steel industry contribute towards air pollution. Average
global temperatures have risen by more than 1°C since before the Industrial
Revolution © Getty Images
Emissions from the steel industry contribute towards air pollution. Average
global temperatures have risen by more than 1°C since before the Industrial
Revolution © Getty Images
Indeed, in the US, conservative think tanks that have been at the forefront
of climate science denial have shown an interest in solar geoengineering.
It’s cheap and protects any vested interests. Geoengineering promises to
turn a drastic failure of the free enterprise system into a triumph of
human ingenuity. And they are more inclined to agree with Prof David Keith
that an artificial Earth shaped by humans is not intrinsically inferior to
a natural one.

At a deeper level, the implicitly autocratic nature of global climate
regulation has an appeal to those on the political right just as it
frightens those on the democratic left. It’s hard to imagine a government
in charge of a solar geoengineering project holding a referendum on whether
the Earth’s temperature should be reduced by one degree or two.

The control of the Earth’s weather could become the responsibility of a
kind of ‘Climate Regulation Agency’, staffed by a technocratic elite whose
task would be to continuously collect a vast array of weather information,
feed it into data systems, separate out the effects of the solar shield
from other factors, and advise the relevant department as to how many
planes loaded with sulphur dioxide should be sent up next week and where
they should dump their loads.

Climate wars
Military planners recognise climate change as a ‘threat multiplier’. US
defence chiefs, among others, have incorporated a changing climate into
their military planning and equipment supply. Climate change is expected to
create political instability; indeed, some experts believe that climate
change-induced drought, high food prices and migration to cities nudged
Syria into civil war.

If that’s true – and we can only guess at how much conflict there might be
in a world 3°C warmer – mitigating warming by geoengineering ought to
create a more peaceful world. But it’s not so straightforward.

When hit by a devastating flood, drought or storm, a community will tend to
see it as an act of God – a natural event that it just has to cope with.
But what if we believed that the death and destruction were caused not by
nature but by someone manipulating the weather? If another nation were
engineering the climate, its politicians’ denials would fall on deaf ears,
and not just because humans naturally look for someone to blame. If a
nation had embarked on a system-altering form of climate engineering like
sulphur dioxide spraying, it would be virtually impossible to work out
whether an extreme weather event somewhere in the world was due to natural
variability, human-induced climate change or climate manipulation. And
climate manipulation would quite likely get the blame.

A farmer squats in a dried-up pool in Huangpi District of Wuhan, Hubei
Province, China © Shutterstock
A farmer squats in a dried-up pool in Huangpi District of Wuhan, Hubei
Province, China © Shutterstock
The government of China, faced with a catastrophic drought in the north of
the country, might decide its survival demanded rapid global cooling. But
sending up planes to spray sulphur dioxide might deprive India and Pakistan
of their monsoon rains, bringing on famine. Three nuclear-armed nations
would then be in conflict over weather patterns that affect the survival of
millions of their citizens.

It’s hard to know who might first be tempted to regulate the global
climate. Given the severe environmental and geopolitical risks, and the
deep ethical divide over whether humans should ‘play God’, governments in
democratic countries may be hamstrung. Authoritarian leaders who do not
need public approval to act may have a freer hand. Do we want Vladimir
Putin or Xi Jinping controlling our weather?

Listen to the Science Focus Podcast:

How can we save our planet? – Sir David Attenborough
What’s going on with the weather? – Dann Mitchell
A dictator with his hand on the global thermostat is a scary prospect. But
imagine if several poorer nations (let’s say Bangladesh, Tuvalu, the
Maldives and Ethiopia) clubbed together and declared: “The rich countries
that caused global warming promised to cut their emissions, but they have
not done so. Our people are dying, so we must take unilateral action. We
are sending up a fleet of planes to spray sulphur dioxide.”

Now the moral calculus leaves us uncertain what to think. Don’t they have
the right to save themselves from an existential threat, even if by risky
means? What would it mean for floods and storms in other countries? Would
the United States or China be entitled to shoot down their planes?

Reaching a consensus to regulate the Earth’s climate would, in the words of
a 2013 study, “pose immense challenges to liberal democratic politics”. But
then, liberal democratic politics does not have a great record responding
to climate change, either. The elected president of the US, Donald Trump,
has announced that his country will be pulling out of the Paris Agreement,
an action that will slow emissions reductions and expose millions of
people, especially poorer individuals, to the devastating effects of a
warming world.

In the circumstances, the only acceptable answer is a global agreement to
regulate research into geoengineering. If it ever comes to deployment,
conflict could be avoided only if an inclusive international institution
makes the decision. Without it, one nation would control the climate of
others, and those others will be tempted to engage in their own
‘counter-geoengineering’. And then we really are in trouble.

An alternative view
Peter Irvine is a climate scientist at Harvard University who researches
solar geoengineering. He argues that the benefits of the technology could
outweigh the risks

I’ve been working since 2009 to understand the potential and limits of
geoengineering, and Clive Hamilton paints a picture of this technology that
I simply do not recognise. To address climate change, carbon dioxide
emissions will have to be driven to zero, but however fast emissions are
cut, the climate will still warm considerably over the 21st Century. It’s
here that stratospheric aerosol geoengineering could prove an extremely
useful tool.

Higher temperatures mean more intense heatwaves; they mean air carries more
moisture, causing more intense floods; and they mean more melting of the
glaciers, driving up sea levels. Reducing temperatures will reduce these
risks, and our work has shown that it doesn’t make much difference whether
this is done by lowering emissions or by cooling from solar geoengineering.
This doesn’t mean geoengineering should be a replacement for emissions cuts
– indeed, it may introduce some new risks of its own – but it would help to
offset some of climate change’s worst impacts.

Clive points to the potential dangers of geoengineering reducing monsoon
rainfall, but his picture is incomplete. Water availability depends not
only on how much rain falls but also on how quickly it evaporates in the
heat of the day. The same climate models that show that geoengineering
would reduce rainfall also show that it would reduce evaporation,
potentially leading to more, not less, water availability for people, crops
and ecosystems.

Clive also claims that, because climate control would require detailed
technical knowledge to manage, it would somehow lead to the technocrats
taking over. Yet our lives depend on the technocrats who manage our
electricity grids, our water supply, our transport systems and our
internet, and still our societies remain robustly democratic.

Clive portrays geoengineering as an idea born of Cold War hubris and pushed
by right-wing climate deniers. Instead, I see a well-intentioned proposal
that is being critically evaluated by hundreds of researchers around the
world, from disciplines as diverse as engineering, economics and
international law. Rather than coming from shadowy right-wing think tanks
of fossil-fuel interests, funding for geoengineering research comes mostly
from governments (which reflects a societal demand for this knowledge) and
environmentally minded philanthropists.

Outside of academia, there are also exciting developments. The Solar
Radiation Management Governance Initiative is an international NGO that’s
working to empower scientists and policy makers in developing countries to
engage with geoengineering, while in New York, the Carnegie Climate
Geoengineering Governance Initiative (led by Janos Pasztor, the former
climate science adviser to Ban Ki-moon) aims to bring this topic to the
attention of international policy makers at the UN and beyond.

The ratification of the Paris Agreement and the stunning developments in
solar and wind power in recent years show that the world has the will and
is developing the tools to tackle climate change. Even so, international
cooperation in this area remains a notoriously difficult process: the
benefits of cutting emissions are global and will be felt in the long run,
whereas the costs are felt here and now. So even though all countries agree
that they want to limit the impacts of climate change, each country
benefits the most by doing the least.

For geoengineering, the picture is completely different. The costs of
geoengineering are low, its effects will be felt quickly, and they’ll be
global in scope. This means that governments will have a real incentive to
work together to realise the potential benefits of geoengineering.

So the reality of this technology is rather different from the worst-case
scenario pictured by Clive Hamilton. We now need a concerted international
and interdisciplinary research effort into geoengineering, and we shouldn’t
let pessimistic fears get in the way of exploring an idea that might really
help in the fight against climate change.

This article was first published in April 2018

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