https://geoengineering.environment.harvard.edu/blog/uncovering-origins-false-claims-solar-geoengineering-discourse

UNCOVERING THE ORIGINS OF FALSE CLAIMS IN THE SOLAR GEOENGINEERING DISCOURSE
September 9, 2019

By Jesse L. Reynolds

The story behind a recent news article reveals how activist groups—with the
media’s help—cause misleading and false assertions to arise, persist, and
spread.

Much of my work concerns solar geoengineering, a set of proposals to block
or reflect a small portion of incoming sunlight in order to reduce global
warming. Unfortunately, the discourse is rife with specious,
misrepresented, and outright false statements – many of which are
consistent with intuition – that are repeated until they acquire a sheen of
quasi-truth. The story behind a recent news article reveals how a few
activist groups, with the news media’s cooperation, generate and spread
such claims.

A couple weeks ago (Aug 23), the Agence France-Presse (AFP) news service
reported that the International Organization for Standardization (ISO)
“touts” solar geoengineering as a “climate fix” on behalf of “the fossil
fuel industry.” The ISO is a staid, long-standing body that,
unsurprisingly, develops international standards for diverse products,
services, and processes. According to the article, the ISO is purportedly
advancing this agenda via its draft standards for reducing radiative
forcing. This is the effect that greenhouse gases and other “climate
forcers” (such as clouds and aerosols) have on the planet’s energy balance,
which in turn cause global warming. The AFP article didn’t seem right to
me, and I tweeted at the time:

I'm sceptical because
1 The ISO is a very measured, moderate organization
2 That committee is also working on standards for e.g. [greenhouse gases]
reductions
3. That article has a breathlessly sensationalist tone.

The article also repeatedly quoted the director of the Center for
International Environmental Law (CIEL) – which previously co-published with
the Heinrich Boell Foundation (HBF) a highly misleading report on the
fossil fuel industry and geoengineering – while providing no balance, much
less corrective. And it claimed that the ISO “defines the Paris [climate
agreement] temperature goals as ‘problematic’,” which seems well beyond the
organization’s mandate and cautious practice.

I asked the author of the AFP article for a copy of the draft ISO
standards. He kindly obliged. They are what I thought: an effort to assist
private and public actors in reducing various emissions and other
activities that contribute to global warming. It barely mentions solar
geoengineering, only defining it. Moreover, the draft calls the Paris
Agreement’s temperature goals “problematic” only in the sense that global
warming lags several years behind changes in radiative forcing. In other
words, the ISO sees radiative forcing as a more cautious metric than
temperature. Consistent with my reading, the ISO subsequently tweeted (Aug
28) “The Working Group voted unanimously that SRM [i.e. solar
geoengineering] is completely out of scope.”

However, before sending me the ISO’s draft standards, the journalist
accidentally sent the wrong attachment: a private briefing by CIEL, HBF,
and the ETC Group – the leading purveyors of spurious geoengineering
assertions. Notably, the briefing made the same spurious claims as the AFP
article:

[The draft] Promotes and facilitates the deployment and commercialization
of internationally controversial, risky and uncertain geoengineering
activities, such as solar or earth radiation modification technologies…

[The draft] describes the Paris agreement’s focus on temperature targets as
“problematic”...

[The ISO] driven by the interests and agendas of industry actors…

This confirmed my suspicion that the article merely echoed activists'
views. The AFP journalist either was a dupe of these groups or an activist
whose agenda aligns with these groups.

After some internal debate, I wrote a critical email to AFP’s editors. The
next day (Aug 30), AFP published an article that says “Draft international
guidance on how industry measures its efforts to fight global warming will
not include untested geoengineering technology.” However, the new article
does not point to their previous inaccurate reporting, instead merely
noting that “AFP last week reported on the draft.” Furthermore, the new
article claims that “Environmental groups and climate scientists raised
concerns over the draft guidance,” yet—as far as I’ve seen—the only
environmental groups that were worried were the ones whispering in the
journalist’s ear, and the only scientists who expressed concerned had read
AFP’s first, false article – which remains online, uncorrected.

This story—already outrageous—wraps up with two final “kickers.” First, the
day after the ISO’s clarifying tweet (i.e., Aug 29), the ETC Group—the
anti-technology activist group that was among those behind the private
briefing sent to AFP—issued a statement*. Feigning surprise, they led with
“A report from Agence France-Presse has revealed a new effort to establish
the basis for a market for ‘climate credits’ for the use of geoengineering
technologies”, using AFP’s “revelation” to insinuate that shadowy business
interests are pushing for solar geoengineering to become the central focus
of global climate policy. Of course, that “revelation” was based on the ETC
Group’s own (misleading) work.

Second, how did these groups react to AFP’s admission that the ISO’s draft
standards were not a covert vehicle for solar geoengineering?
Geoengineering Monitor—a collaboration of the ETC Group, HBF, and two other
groups—immediately tweeted “Great news! ‘On Friday, the ISO stressed that
SRM and similar untested geoengineering schemes were out of the scope of
the guidance,’” linking to the new AFP article. (The ETC Group quickly
retweeted this.) In other words, the activist groups tried to frame the
disclosure that their original concerns were unwarranted because they were
grounded in their own specious assertions as a victory. Is this a tragedy
or comedy?

The lesson here is not about this specific incident, but instead concerns
how misleading, misrepresented, and outright false statements are produced
and propagated within the solar geoengineering discourse. First, activist
groups make claims that seem true but are deeply spurious and, in some
ways, demonstrably wrong. Then they work with a journalist (often, it
seems, at The Guardian: e.g. 1, 2)—who is either duped by the groups or
aligned with their agenda—who publishes the assertions as news. Finally,
the activists point to the published news as revelation of a purported
previously hidden truth. (And as a backup plan, if the assertion is shown
to be false, then they can try to claim a victory.) It is a cycle in which
misleading and deceptive statements are generated, laundered, and repeated.
In this case, only an email sent in error revealed the disturbing mechanism
at play.

In the past, where I have noticed bad-faith actors disseminating
problematic nonsense in the solar geoengineering discourse, I have tried to
call it out (1, 2, 3, 4, 5). But following this episode, I wonder how often
the ETC Group, HBF and CIEL have run this play before. In this environment,
how can a layperson, a graduate student, a policy maker, or even a leading
climate scientist identify what is true and what isn’t? I, and many
experts, recommend being skeptical of the pronouncements and publications
of CIEL, HBF and ETC Group regarding solar geoengineering, as they have
shown themselves to be serial peddlers of rubbish in this space.
Fortunately, it is my sense that news coverage of this important topic is
gradually improving. And hopefully, the AFP and other outlets will perform
their due diligence in future.

* In an apparent typing error, the ETC Group page gives a date of “August
08,” but the organization’s home page accurately lists it as “29 Aug.”

Jesse Reynolds is an Emmett / Frankel Fellow in Environmental Law and
Policy at the Emmett Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at the
University of California, Los Angeles School of Law. He is also a research
affiliate at Harvard’s Solar Geoengineering Research Program and, most
recently, the author of The Governance of Solar Geoengineering: Managing
Climate Change in the Anthropocene (Cambridge, 2019). See his website and
Twitter feed.

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