https://www.globalgroundmedia.com/2019/06/25/radical-new-approach-to-fighting-global-warming/

IS IT TIME FOR A RADICAL NEW APPROACH TO FIGHTING GLOBAL WARMING?
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One may call it a crazy idea. Someone else may say it’s an expression of
desperation about the lack of action on climate change. Despite the
regretful tone, however, these comments are from researchers who advocate
further study into whether climate engineering could be part of the answer
to alleviate global warming.

Climate engineering, or geoengineering, is a broad term that can cover a
range of potentially large-scale interventions in the Earth’s climate, in a
bid to reduce or reverse the warming trend. In one concept that has been
contemplated by researchers, aircrafts would spray reflective aerosol
particles into the stratosphere to reflect some sunlight back out to space.
This would aim to replicate the cooling effect of sulphate particles
churned out by volcanic eruptions. Such an effort would likely be an
ongoing operation, and have to be globally coordinated, to be effective.



This may sound like a dramatic or risky approach, but advocates for further
research say the only reason it’s being contemplated is that the world’s
political leaders have failed to cut greenhouse gas emissions deeply enough
to avoid the most severe impacts of a hotter climate.

“I always describe the idea of doing geoengineering to be insane – and it
is,” says Professor John Moore, who leads a geoengineering research program
at Beijing Normal University.

“No sane society would choose to do geoengineering. The fact that we are
having to look at it is because the correct course of action requires more
courage than the political leadership around the world has. So, that’s why
we’re in this position.”

Andy Parker, an honorary research fellow at the University of Bristol, says
in a Skype call with Global Ground Media that the 2015 Paris Agreement to
cut global emissions was “an absolutely crucial necessary step forward for
climate policy.” However, he warns that, even if nations cut their
emissions by the promised amounts, the world would remain on track to get
warmer by more than 3 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

Under the Paris Agreement, countries committed to keeping the global
temperature increase this century to “well below” 2 degrees Celsius while
aiming to try and contain it to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

However, each country that signed the agreement was given the freedom to
set its own emission reduction targets, and the United States under
President Donald Trump has since walked away from the deal. According to an
analysis by the Climate Action Tracker, the policies presently in place
around the world are projected to “result in about 3.3 degrees Celsius
warming above pre-industrial levels.”

On-screen, Parker sits in front of a collection of bones of the
long-extinct saber-toothed tiger in the University of Bristol’s Department
of Earth Sciences. He now contemplates the risk to humanity from climate
change, underlining the scale of the emergency: “I think the fact that
people are studying SRM [Solar Radiation Management], seriously considering
sun-blocking, is an expression of desperation about the state of climate
risk.”

He continues: “The fact that we’ve known about climate change for decades
and yet people have not been acting nearly fast enough, cutting emissions
far enough, fast enough, to avoid what looks like a pretty high level of
climate risk…that’s what’s caused people to start looking at these
alternative approaches.”

Parker is also Project Director of the SRM Governance Initiative, which
aims to foster debates about how such proposals would be managed if
implemented – a daunting task given the competing interests of countries
around the world. The initiative is an international project based at The
World Academy of Sciences in Trieste, Italy, and the Environmental Defense
Fund in San Francisco, USA. The initiative recently awarded grants to eight
research teams to assess the impacts of such interventions on developing
countries and emerging economies, on the basis that these voices must be
part of the global climate conversation.

“Simply put, solar geoengineering matters more to developing countries,”
Parker says as he explains the rationale of the latest research focus.

“Typically, developing countries are on the frontline of climate change,
and therefore if SRM works really well, they stand to gain the most. If it
goes wrong and there are horrible side effects and so on, then developing
countries stand to lose the most, and that’s because they are typically
less resilient to environmental change than the world’s richest countries.
And so, developing countries should play a central role in the research,
discussion and evaluation of geoengineering, but to date, most of the
research has taken place in the world’s rich countries.”

The eight modelling projects will share a total of US$430,000 in grants
provided by the Developing Country Impacts Modelling Analysis for SRM
(DECIMALS) fund by the SRM Governance Initiative, which received support
from the Open Philanthropy Project. The projects were selected from among
75 proposals from 30 countries.



Each project has a different focus on working out what the pros and cons of
geoengineering would be in their country or region. Researchers emphasise
that they are not conducting outdoor experiments, but instead using
computer-based modelling to quantify the potential impacts.

In Indonesia, for example, a research team will assess how climate
engineering could alter the incidence of floods and droughts in the
country. The team, which is based at the Sepuluh Nopember Institute of
Technology in Surabaya, East Java, will also examine the possible impact on
the heat stress index, a measure that takes into account not only
temperature but also humidity. When the index is high, people can be
vulnerable to heat stress, a potentially dangerous condition that can lead
to dehydration and even death.

“Because of climate change, floods happen more frequently in many places in
Indonesia during the wet season due to heavy precipitation [rainfall],”
explains the Principal Investigator of the project, Heri Kuswanto, who is
also Coordinator of the Climate Change Group at the Sepuluh Nopember
Institute of Technology’s Centre for Earth, Disaster and Climate Change.

“Meanwhile, drought duration and magnitude in some parts of Indonesia are
higher and higher over time.”

Kuswanto says that research is essential to Indonesia, as it is one of the
most vulnerable countries to the impacts of climate change. “Shifting the
seasonal period, prolonged drought, higher intensity of extreme rainfall
are some [examples of] evidence of climate change impact, among others,” he
says. “All of these events are happening now. Indonesia is also getting
warmer and warmer over time. If we do not do anything to stop the
increasing temperature, what will happen in the next 50, 70 years? What
will happen with our kids? What will happen with other animals?”

Kuswanto cautions, however, that the research is not intended to support
the deployment of climate engineering. Instead, the researchers “stand in
the middle” and aim to indicate whether such interventions would have a
positive or negative impact on extreme temperature and precipitation
change. “If it is good, then it will provide a scientific justification to
continue SRM. If not, then another strategy might need to be explored,” he
says.

Climate engineering is likely to present decision-makers with a series of
difficult trade-offs – a point perhaps exemplified by the health impacts
that will be considered by another DECIMALS-funded research project in
Bangladesh.

Achieving a reduction in heat waves and flooding may reduce the incidence
of cholera in Bangladesh, but excessive cooling may also increase the
prevalence of malaria. The research team, based at the International Centre
for Diarrhoeal Disease Research in Dhaka, will look at various scenarios
for temperature and rainfall levels and analyse what that would mean for
health outcomes.

Researcher Mohammed Mofizur Rahman, who is a co-principal investigator on
the project, says he has seen meta-analysis suggesting that the temperature
tolerance window for the malaria vector (carrier) is changing. The research
team will examine what this means for malaria transmission if SRM is
implemented. “So, we want to test it in computer simulations.”

Like the other researchers, Rahman says he is neither in favour nor against
climate engineering; he wants to help ensure an informed debate.

Bangladesh, one of the most climate-vulnerable countries, needs to develop
its own research base to ensure it can make decisions that take into
account local impacts, he adds.

“The people who are really affected – their voice is not heard,” Rahman
says.

Parker describes the Bangladesh project as “a nice little microcosm for the
analysis of all of SRM itself in that they’re going to be carefully working
through the complex potential benefits and risks, and they’re not going to
find it’s all benefit, and they’re not going to find it’s all risk.”

Instead, Parker concedes, “it’s likely to be a messy mixed picture. Working
out who it might benefit or harm and where and when is a good first step to
being able to make an informed evaluation of it.”

Moore, of Beijing Normal University, will serve as a research collaborator
on the DECIMALS projects, helping the teams to understand how to use the
existing climate engineering models and apply them to their own research
questions.

“I think that the conversation that’s been had to date,” Moore says, “has
been far too much from the Western-centric viewpoint, and I think that the
voices of the people who are being very strongly impacted by climate change
already absolutely need to be heard on this far stronger than they have
been.”

‘Masking’ the problem
While research continues, climate engineering has no shortage of critics.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has previously
described SRM as “untested” and suggested it “would entail numerous
uncertainties, side effects, risks and shortcomings and has particular
governance and ethical implications.”

“In spite of the estimated low potential costs of some SRM deployment
technologies, they will not necessarily pass a benefit-cost test that takes
account of the range of risks and side effects,” the IPCC said in its Fifth
Assessment Report in 2014.

More recently, a paper published by the Climate Analytics think-tank
similarly argued the risks would be too high. It noted that SRM is not a
comprehensive solution to climate change, as it would merely “mask warming
temporarily” and would not save coral reefs from severe damage, for example.

“Solar radiation management does not halt, reverse or address in any other
way the profound and dangerous problem of ocean acidification, which
threatens coral reefs and marine life, as it does not reduce CO2 emissions
and hence influence atmospheric CO2 concentration,” said the authors of the
paper, which was published in December 2018.

“SRM does not counter other effects of increased CO2 concentration
adversely affecting the terrestrial and marine biosphere.”

The authors also argued that SRM might undermine the potential of solar
energy projects and affect food production efforts because it would reduce
the amount of solar radiation reaching the Earth’s surface.

Among the environmental movement, some fear the latest research effort
could take attention away from the critical task of rapidly shifting from
fossil fuels to clean energy.

“Experimenting with risky technologies such as Solar Radiation Management
and other geoengineering techniques is not the answer to the current
climate crisis, but a dangerous distraction from the task of tackling
emissions at [the] source,” says Sara Shaw, the Climate Justice and Energy
International Programme Co-coordinator at Friends of the Earth
International.

“Chasing wild geoengineering fantasies will only let fossil fuel companies
off the hook and delay the much-needed energy revolution.”

Shaw adds that interference in complex climate and ocean systems “is likely
to have severe and irreversible impacts on ecosystems and people.”

Parker, on the other hand, believes the risks of geoengineering need to be
weighed against the risks of global warming continuing to dangerous levels.

“Chemotherapy is horrible, it’s dangerous, it’s unpleasant, it’s got very
nasty physical side effects and so on, but whether or not one should
undertake a course of chemotherapy is based on [the] perception of the
risks of cancer,” Parker says.

“And so it goes with solar geoengineering: no one in their right mind would
just want to do this, but it’s a response to a potentially even bigger
threat. And as with anyone trying to make their mind up about a risky
course of action, it’s about balancing risks.”

Just as the risks of chemotherapy could only be understood by also looking
at the risks of cancer, “the risks of doing solar geoengineering can only
be understood by looking at the risks of not doing solar geoengineering and
seeing the temperatures continue to rise,” he adds.

Moore, too, points to the impacts of climate change as a reason to
investigate geoengineering options. Referring to some of the
business-as-usual scenarios for greenhouse gas emissions, he says, “there’s
ample evidence that those will be utterly disastrous from every perspective
– sea level, agricultural, you name it.”

Meanwhile, Masahiro Sugiyama, an Associate Professor at the Institute for
Future Initiatives at the University of Tokyo (previously the Policy
Alternatives Research Institute), characterises climate engineering as “an
insurance policy” that is worthy of further research.

Sugiyama has been part of several projects to gauge public reaction to the
idea of geoengineering in Japan. He notes that the general public is not
overly familiar with geoengineering – a fact confirmed when Global Ground
Media approached people on the street in Tokyo in late March to ask them if
they had heard of it.



Sugiyama and other researchers conducted focus groups with Japanese
citizens in 2015 on the concept of geoengineering in general, and field
trials of stratospheric aerosol injection in particular, which required
explanation.

“Awareness is very low, first, and people are rightfully scared of the
possibility of geoengineering, and I think they were worried about the
potential side effects of geoengineering,” he says. “I think one
interviewee said we should test this by spraying the aerosols onto the
scientist who is advocating this technology.”

Sugiyama says people are hesitant because they see the climate system as
complex and interconnected. They know, for example, that a train accident
in one part of Japan can have flow-on disruptions across the entire rail
network. “People, out of their experience, they know it has to be complex,”
he explains. “So, whenever we tweak one aspect of the climate, what kind of
impacts would it have on the other parts of the climate? They’re naturally
concerned about these sorts of environmental side effects.”

However, Sugiyama says focus group interviewees did not immediately exclude
geoengineering, and were open to more research being done, so long as
adequate controls were put in place.

Researchers working on the DECIMALS projects are due to present their
findings by the end of 2020, but, in the meantime, they plan to stimulate
discussion about the issues at stake in their countries by hosting
workshops with experts, policymakers, non-governmental organisations and
the general public.

Parker maintains that a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions must remain
the primary policy goal for governments around the world – an effort that
must “massively increase.” SRM, he contends, should be seen as a potential
way of reducing the risks posed by the greenhouse gases that countries have
already emitted. The Earth has already warmed by about 1 degree Celsius
above pre-industrial levels, and climate scientists have noted that even if
emissions from burning fossil fuels ended today, there would still be a
further amount of “committed warming” due to the lag time in
air-temperature increase.

Scientists at the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) sounded the alarm last October when they found that a 1.5 degree
Celsius increase should be the absolute maximum after unexpected rapid
melting of polar ice. According to them, humankind currently only has 11
years left to radically reduce emissions or face the consequences.

When weighing up the risks from the potential deployment of SRM in the
future, Parker says the socio-political dimension concerns him the most,
because, in theory, one country could choose to deploy the technology
unilaterally and affect the entire planet.

“So, what would happen in response to that? Would you get geoengineering
leading to conflict, and even war, between nations?” Parker asks.

“Even if geoengineering worked perfectly, which it never would, but even if
it worked perfectly and we knew there wouldn’t be any side effects and so
on, how would you get agreement between, say, Russia, and India on where to
set the global thermostat? Because, in isolation, Russia might benefit from
a warmer planet [and] it seems likely that India would suffer
disproportionately. And so how do you get agreement even to turn the system
off?”

SRM, Parker adds, can never be an alternative to cutting emissions. “It can
only ever imperfectly mask the impacts of warming. It doesn’t solve the
problem. It might be able to reduce some risks, but really if we want a
sane climate future, any sane climate future is based on massive emissions
cuts, as soon as we can manage those cuts.”

—

Article by Daniel Hurst.
Editing by Mike Tatarski.
Video editing by Katya Skvortsova.
Illustrations by Imad Gebrayel.
Animation by Denis Chernysh.

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