https://thebulletin.org/2019/12/geoengineering-is-no-climate-fix-but-calling-it-a-moral-hazard-could-be-counterproductive/

Geoengineering is no climate fix. But calling it a moral hazard could be
counterproductive
By Soheil Shayegh, December 10, 2019

sunrise over cloudsSolar radiation management is perhaps the most
controversial type of geoengineering. It would create a medium to block the
sunlight from reaching the atmosphere, but it would also change our planet
forever. Photo credit: author.

Desperate times call for desperate measures. In recent years and in the
face of unprecedented changes in the climate system, some previously
unknown and risky solutions have been proposed to put a halt to the chain
of climate disasters, or at least to slow down the speed of their
onslaught. These methods, lumped under the heading of geoengineering, aim
to reduce the impact of greenhouse gases on global temperatures, and thus
on sea-level rise.

Many experts are already worried that public discussion of geoengineering
might dissuade policy makers from making harder but more substantial
choices to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. This is commonly called the
“moral hazard” problem, and it has become a major argument against even
pursuing further research into geoengineering technologies. However, we
should be cautious about applying the moral hazard framework to
geoengineering, because it may actually elevate it to a standing it
shouldn’t have and distract us from discussing more fundamental ethical
problems associated with it.

What is geoengineering? Geoengineering is any deliberate, large-scale
intervention by humans in the climate system. Broadly speaking, there are
two different types of geoengineering technologies. The first aims to solve
climate change by addressing the carbon emissions problem. This family of
technologies is sometimes called carbon dioxide removal or negative
emissions technologies, as these methods try to not only remove the
concurring emissions but also reduce the stock of carbon dioxide that is
already in the atmosphere in order to turn back the clock and stop global
warming.

The second group is solar radiation management technologies. They aim to
reflect a fraction of sunlight back to space in order to generate a cooling
effect that can offset the warming effect of greenhouse gas emissions. One
of the most well-known examples of solar geoengineering is to spray tiny
particles of sulfate aerosol into the upper atmosphere to scatter the
sunlight—mimicking the effect of a volcanic eruption.

There are several different methods at different stages of development
under each of the two groups. Some have been already commercialized while
others are just ideas discussed in academic papers. However, and regardless
of their different development outlook, geoengineering techniques impose
some serious moral and ethical questions.

Why geoengineering is not a real fix. Proponents of geoengineering often
describe it as a rather quick technical fix for climate change compared to
lengthy and hard mitigation efforts. In that sense, geoengineering is
framed as a form of insurance against the worst outcomes of climate change
or the last resort in the fight to keep the global mean temperature below
its disastrous threshold. However, these framings come with an underlying
assumption about the reliability, scalability, and acceptability of the
geoengineering solutions.

First, it assumes that geoengineering is reliable and functioning with a
proven track record. In reality, this is not the case. The best we have
achieved with most geoengineering technologies so far is a series of
uncoordinated, small, laboratory-scale tests with non-conclusive results.
Inherent uncertainties in the climate system, coupled with technological
barriers, have contributed to the limited functionality of current
geoengineering proposals. This is certainly more of an issue for solar
radiation management technologies. With no outdoor experiments to date,
most of projections are drawn by studying past volcanic eruptions. However,
computer models of the climate system show that the impact of a short‐term
volcanic eruption would be quite different from a long‐term sustained
aerosol injection.

Second, even if the technology were ready and proven, it is far from clear
that it could be scaled up to the level that is a match for the climate
change problem. For example, according to a 2018 report of the UN
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, to keep global temperature rise
below two degrees centigrade (a promise of the Paris climate agreement), a
deep decarbonization is required to reach net zero emissions by around
2050. The report states that “all pathways that limit global warming to
1.5°C with limited or no overshoot project the use of carbon dioxide
removal on the order of 100 to 1000 [gigatons of CO2] over the 21st
century.” However, such scale of carbon removal is simply unthinkable with
today’s technologies. For comparison, the entire world population is
collectively emitting about 40 gigatons of CO2 per year. The most suitable
technologies for ramping up in that scale are bio-energy with carbon
capture and storage and direct air carbon capture and storage. Still, both
of these technologies are facing major hurdles to implementation, from land
and energy use to investment and financing. Geoengineering is very unlikely
to replace or downgrade the importance of mitigation efforts because it
simply does not match the scale of the problem.

Finally, social and political acceptability remains a major barrier in
pursuing geoengineering technologies. The first problem here is the lack of
knowledge among the public about what geoengineering really is. Public
opinion surveys show a direct link between learning about geoengineering
and the public support for research into it. The second problem is that
deliberate manipulation of the climate system imposes great ethical
questions with implications that will extend beyond our current generation.
Finally, there are political challenges as to how to govern the deployment
of these technologies on a planetary scale. The threat of unilateral
action, particularly when it comes to solar radiation management through
aerosol injection, in our current fragmented world seems more real than any
time before, bringing a particular urgency to the governance problem. But
carbon dioxide removal proposals are no less politically fraught. Mass
afforestation and large-scale bio-energy with carbon capture may threaten
food security, water resources, and biodiversity.

Can moral hazard apply to geoengineering? There are, in general, two ways
of thinking about the moral hazard problem. In neither case does
geoengineering fit. First, moral hazard can be applied to cases with
imperfect or insufficient information. Imagine a case where you hire a
contractor to fix the air conditioning at your house. The contractor may
use low-quality materials to get your air conditioning back to work
quickly, but it leaves you exposed to higher costs down the road. Since you
do not have any expertise in determining what the contractor has actually
done, you are at his or her mercy. In other words, an easy fix, combined
with imperfect information, may discourage people from choosing the right
alternative.

In the climate change realm, this may seem to be the case at least when
people are talking about solar radiation management. Spraying aerosols into
the atmosphere would only reduce the global mean temperature— it would not
address the greenhouse gas emission problem as the underlying cause. It
seems like an easy fix that will discourage or distract people from
choosing the right alternative: more serious emissions reduction efforts.

However, this would only be the case if we had insufficient information
about the cause of climate change and were only concerned about global
temperature rise. But in reality, we have little doubt about the cause of
climate change or about the distinction between alternative options to stop
it. We are not by any means being kept in the dark about what the various
options entail.

Furthermore, not every climate-driven event is related to temperature, and
not every region or country has the same desired temperature target that
can be achieved by solar radiation management. Therefore, it is hard to
conceive of a situation in which geoengineering would be deployed in such a
satisfactory way that would dissuade people from seeking more substantial
decarbonization pathways.

The second approach to thinking about moral hazard frames it as the problem
of illusive protection. In this case, providing an easy fix makes people
take unnecessary risks, thinking that they are immune to the consequences
of their actions. A classic example is the invention of the seat belts for
cars—some say they pose a moral hazard because they have led people to
drive more carelessly. Those who worry that geoengineering poses a moral
hazard have argued that, in this case, providing geoengineering options
will encourage people to consume more fossil fuels and care less about
shifting to a green lifestyle. However, this argument assumes that we know,
rather perfectly, that solar radiation management will work and will reduce
the temperature. In reality, we do not know how large-scale solar
geoengineering works because even small-scale experiments have not yet been
undertaken. Further, even if it works perfectly, we do not know if it will
provide the protection that supposedly will give people the illusion of
immunity. The climate system is a highly complex and interconnected
collection of thousands of factors, and deploying solar radiation
management could be more dangerous than not doing it.

In sum, the moral hazard framework is a good way of thinking about problems
where there are two competing solutions, one hard but substantial and the
other one easy and rather superficial. The key here is that, for moral
hazard to apply, both options must be real and functioning. But
geoengineering is not a functioning option, much less an easy one. Those
who use the moral hazard framing to argue against geoengineering are
unwittingly reinforcing the mistaken notion that it might be some kind of
an insurance policy. The more scientists wring their hands about a moral
hazard, the more the public may come to see geoengineering as the quick fix
that it isn’t.

Geoengineering in many ways resembles genetic engineering. Both
technologies may hold promise in addressing serious problems that humanity
faces today. As genetic engineering would solve only a subset of health
issues and would not be a panacea, no serious objection has been raised
against it on the basis of moral hazard. No one thinks that it will
dissuade societies from investing in other areas of medical science and
public health. Similar to genetic engineering, geoengineering is not a
final solution, nor an easy fix. It would be best understood as a
complement to ongoing decarbonization efforts—but only once the
reliability, scalability, and acceptability issues have been resolved.
Using the moral hazard framework is a distraction from the more fundamental
ethical challenges facing these technologies.



Keywords: carbon dioxide removal, geoengineering, moral hazard, negative
emissions technologies, solar radiation management
Topics: Climate Change, Disruptive Technologies, Opinion

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