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Scientists Who Want To Study Climate Engineering Shun Trump
Posted by SDD Contributor on December 16, 2019 at 5:11 am
President Trump issued a sweeping executive order on Tuesday that will
begin to undo a slew of government efforts to fight global warming.

Among those worrying and watching to see how the executive order plays out
are scientists who actually are in favor of exploring bold interventions to
artificially cool the climate.

Just a year ago, some hoped that the U. S. government would start funding
such research and take a leadership role. Back then, advocates for the work
saw public funding as ideal, because it would foster transparency,
accountability and public trust.

But now that the Trump administration is in charge, those folks have
changed their views.

Today, if officials offered money for a big research program on climate
engineering, “I would say, ‘No, thank you,‘ ” , who specializes in
environmental law at UCLA, told NPR.

Deliberate climate engineering has long had a reputation for being
controversial and somewhat wacky — possibly even dangerous. But as our
climate heats up, have called it a bad idea whose time has come.

Proposals include spraying particles into the stratosphere to reflect
incoming sunlight and cool the entire planet. Serious research groups want
to conduct small, low-risk studies to see what might be possible, and to
probe the particles‘ microphysics and chemistry.

This kind of approach is starting to seem downright respectable — even the
prestigious National Academy of Sciences recently for more research on
climate geoengineering.

“The research that is being proposed is tiny and completely innocuous,”
Parson said. “One of the groups that‘s interested in doing this wants to
spray sea salt up into the air to see what happens to the transmission of
sunlight.”

But many environmentalists are suspicious of efforts to tinker with the
climate. What‘s more, they think just talking about the possibility of
cooling the planet will threaten the global effort to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions.

So the last thing Parson would want is for this research to be associated
with the Trump administration.

“To the extent you‘re in a political setting where misinformation about
climate change is being spread, efforts to cut emissions are being
undermined or threatened,” Parson told NPR, “then that suggests the
possibility that the risks of pursuing research of this kind might actually
outweigh the benefits.”

With the Trump administration advocating cuts for climate science, it‘s
unlikely they‘ll face a decision of whether to turn down funding. In fact,
many who think it‘s important to start studying ways to engineer the
climate are now turning to private groups and philanthropists, which are
increasingly serious about supporting such research.

More than a hundred people at a science and policy forum in Washington,
D.C., a few days ago to talk about how climate engineering research could
go forward.

And the elephant in the room was the recent change in the U.S. government‘s
policy toward climate change.

“I just don‘t think that right now the U. S. should be federally funding
this,” , a researcher at Cornell University, told the group. “I don‘t think
we can legitimately put federal money into this right now.”

Some would prefer that no research be done at all.

“Given that resources for research are finite, the question is to where we
as a society should allocate these funds, and hence where societal
attention should be directed,” said of the University of Sussex. “The very
existence of significant research programs, whatever their impact on the
physical environment, will fundamentally alter in unpredictable ways the
social and political context in which climate governance of the future will
be conducted.”

She pointed to potential problems that might occur if anyone ever wanted to
try this on a large-scale: How could all the nations of the world ever
agree on the “right” temperature for the planet? And if climate engineering
ever got started, couldn‘t it be blamed for bad weather — and perhaps even
start an international conflict, if one country took unilateral climate
action?

Others conceded that there are thorny issues, but that this option can‘t
just be ignored.

“It‘s with great reluctance that a lot of us are here,” said , from a think
tank called the Climate Leadership Council. He argued that climate
engineering has to be on the table because “we live in a world where we‘re
heading towards 4 degrees of warming.”

, a climate scientist at Harvard University who is planning to use a
balloon to test putting particles in the stratosphere as early as next
year, is well aware of the need to reassure the public about his small
experiment.

“We are horrified by the idea that there might be some huge backlash,”
Keith said, “and so the questions of how to avoid that are top of our
minds.”

He used to want public funding, he said, partly to inspire trust. But, for
now, he‘s happy to stick to private sources.

“I am more comfortable,” Keith said, “taking money from clearly
environmentally aligned philanthropies or philanthropists than I am taking
money from the administration.”

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