Not in the NOAA bill. That would be in the one written for DOE. (That I don’t 
recall the status of)

Douglas MacMartin
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering,
Cornell University
________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on 
behalf of Stephen Salter <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, January 25, 2020 1:38:13 AM
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [geo] A Small Provision in the FY20 Spending Package Deserves a 
Much Bigger Discussion SHUCHI TALATI


Hi All

Shame about no mention of the troposphere.

Stephen

Emeritus Professor of Engineering Design. School of Engineering, University of 
Edinburgh, Mayfield Road, Edinburgh EH9 3DW, Scotland 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>, Tel +44 (0)131 662 1180 
WWW.homepages.ed.ac.uk/shs<http://WWW.homepages.ed.ac.uk/shs>, YouTube Jamie 
Taylor Power for Change
On 24/01/2020 21:26, Andrew Lockley wrote:

https://blog.ucsusa.org/shuchi-talati/provision-in-fy20-spending-package-deserves-bigger-discussion

A Small Provision in the FY20 Spending Package Deserves a Much Bigger Discussion
SHUCHI TALATI, SOLAR GEOENGINEERING RESEARCH, GOVERNANCE AND PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT 
FELLOW | JANUARY 24, 2020, 2:36 PM EST


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The appropriations process is what Congress uses to make decisions about how 
the federal government will spend discretionary funds – funds that aren’t 
already designated to mandatory spending. The process is confusing, convoluted, 
and often gets behind schedule: the 2020 fiscal year appropriations process, 
for example, finally came to a close a few months after FY20 began. The 
spending package that passed both chambers of Congress and was signed by the 
president in December 2019 accounts for $1.4 trillion in spending, from 
national defense to housing to climate science.

Within that almost incomprehensible amount, there was a small, yet important $4 
million earmark that merits scrutiny: the National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
Administration (NOAA) was given this money specifically to conduct solar 
geoengineering research, the first time in the United States that Congress has 
allocated money to a federal agency to do so. It’s a small pot of money, but 
it’s important to understand the context in which it was allocated. Currently, 
two critical processes to help design solar geoengineering research governance 
are taking place, and there are consequences to the federal government jumping 
ahead of their results. For something as controversial and dangerous as solar 
geoengineering, we have to get the governance right.

Some context
Solar geoengineering describes a controversial set of proposed approaches to 
limit warming by reflecting sunlight to cool the planet. The most widely 
discussed approach is stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI), a method that 
would inject aerosols into the stratosphere, which is an upper layer of Earth’s 
atmosphere. These aerosol particles would then reflect sunlight and could 
rapidly cool the planet, offsetting warming from global warming emissions for a 
relatively low direct cost. However, such measures come with significant risks 
and uncertainties – scientists, for example, do not fully understand the 
impacts of such measures on global weather patterns. There are also legitimate 
risks to geopolitical stability and these approaches do not address the 
underlying cause of climate change. However, when considered as part of a 
portfolio of approaches to address climate change, solar geoengineering could 
limit harm while we scale up mitigation, adaptation and carbon removal efforts.

Solar geoengineering research is in nascent stages and has been largely limited 
to computer modeling. More modeling research is certainly needed, and there are 
now proposals for small-scale outdoor experiments, such as Harvard University’s 
SCoPEx project. But moving forward with solar geoengineering requires us to 
first establish robust governance. Lack of governance on any scale is arguably 
the most dangerous aspect of geoengineering, including governance for research. 
Research governance is critical for solar geoengineering since it is a 
technology that poses global impacts, even at the experimental stage. It 
ideally includes oversight, transparency, and measures to ensure that the 
public and a diverse set of stakeholders can participate in important 
decisions. There has been debate on whether and how a federal program in the 
United States may conduct, fund, and oversee future research, but thus far such 
a program does not yet exist.

Right now, a committee of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and 
Medicine (NASEM) is writing a report on developing solar geoengineering 
research priorities and approaches for research governance. This highly 
anticipated report is expected to provide detailed guidance on next steps in 
both research and oversight–a report that NOAA itself is helping fund. 
Importantly, National Academies reports provide legitimacy in their 
recommendations through a diverse and well-respected committee, thorough 
literature review, and external consultation. Due out in a matter of months, 
this report likely will be a basis on which future governance discussions and 
actions are built.

There is also an independent advisory committee in place to provide governance 
for the first outdoor small-scale experiment, the Stratospheric Controlled 
Perturbation Experiment, or SCoPEx for short, at Harvard University. This 
committee is working to produce an inclusive review process for the experiment 
and will publicly release its findings and recommendations that can hopefully 
serve as a governance model for future experiments.

What does this mean?
So back to the $4 million earmark. The language instructs NOAA to do more 
research related to the stratosphere itself, building on what the agency 
already does, and directs them to also conduct observations from natural 
systems releasing aerosols into the stratosphere (that is, volcanic eruptions) 
– an extremely useful enterprise. The language then also proposes NOAA research 
into solar climate interventions, including modeling but also potential outdoor 
experiments.

Given that this earmark is authorizing funding for solar geoengineering 
research for the first time, it’s especially important that it provides clear 
direction, which is not readily apparent from the vague language (see page 17 
for the relevant paragraph). While $4 million doesn’t amount to much money in a 
research context, designating this for solar geoengineering is jumping ahead of 
an important National Academies process that will provide specific 
recommendations for how to structure such funding and subsequent oversight for 
this and other geoengineering research.

At the same time the spending package passed this December, Congressman 
McNerney (D-CA), a member of both the House Science as well as Energy and 
Commerce Committees, built on the $4 million NOAA appropriation by introducing 
a separate bill that authorizes NOAA to create a formal program for solar 
geoengineering research. It would additionally grant the agency oversight 
authority to review research and related outputs from external groups in the 
United States. This would mean that NOAA could have oversight over research it 
is not conducting or funding.

Such a review process would likely be beneficially informed by the outcome of 
the SCoPEx governance process, as it’s not one that’s been done before and is 
being conducted by researchers outside of the government. While this bill is in 
the early stages of an arduous congressional process, it is also essential 
before moving forward to wait for the report from the National Academies to 
review and draw upon its recommendations.

Before Congress moves authorizes federal-level research and governance of an 
immensely controversial technologies, it must await input from external experts 
and publics to inform whether and how best to do so.

We need more research into solar geoengineering to understand these approaches 
and their risks. But a U.S. federal program that allows support for outdoor 
experiments is, at best, premature.

NOAA should use the $4 million to continue studying the stratosphere and 
observing natural changes. But in advance of the National Academies report – 
and in a time when the federal government is failing to act (let alone lead) on 
climate mitigation and adaptation, our tax dollars should not be supporting 
investments in solar geoengineering experiments
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