https://legal-planet.org/2020/02/25/maxing-out-nepa-environmental-review-of-early-solar-geoengineering-field-research/


Maxing Out NEPA: Environmental Review of Early Solar Geoengineering Field
Research
Done right, environmental review can reach what worries people most about
climate engineering

The sky over the South China Sea, as seen from above. NASA 2006
A few months ago, Congress earmarked $4 million for the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to research:

stratospheric conditions and the Earth’s radiation budget, including the
impact of the introduction of material into the stratosphere from changes
in natural systems, increased air and space traffic, proposals to inject
material to affect climate, and the assessment of solar climate
interventions. Within these funds, the agreement further directs [NOAA
Research] to improve the understanding of the impact of atmospheric
aerosols on radiative forcing, as well as on the formation of clouds,
precipitation, and extreme weather.

The language above has been widely interpreted as the “first” federally
funded initiative to investigate solar geoengineering technology. Here
Congress instructs NOAA Research to study conditions in the upper
atmosphere to better understand how its workings influence our planet’s
flows of incoming and outgoing energy. These instructions could be
fulfilled—and likely will be —through passive observation of the
stratosphere and its natural changes. But the investigation would directly
connect to research needed to assess solar geoengineering proposals. For
example, NOAA Research’s observations could tell us more about how aerosols
behave in the stratosphere, as well as how stratospheric changes impact
weather in the sky below.

This development requires some concrete, practical thinking about
geoengineering governance. If this appropriation is a first step toward a
federal research program into solar geoengineering, what risks are
involved? How should they be managed? What tools do we have to meet those
goals? This post examines the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)—a
federal law requiring environmental review of federal actions—as a
springboard for federal geoengineering governance. NEPA has serious
limitations for technological assessments, especially concerning future,
speculative impacts. But in the right hands, NEPA can be a serviceable tool
to engage public opinion, seek expert advice, and consider the
environmental risks of an early research program.

Specifically, I recommend that NOAA Research complete a Programmatic
Environmental Assessment (PEA) before launching an expanded stratosphere
research program. It should be broad enough in its discussion to cover (a)
observation of natural phenomena and (b) field experiments without
significant impacts (that is, no effect on radiative forcing). The PEA
could then later be incorporated into agency NEPA analysis of individual
experiments, all of which would almost certainly qualify for categorical
exclusions. NOAA Research wouldn’t have to do any field experiments. But
field experiments by others are likely in the foreseeable future (at least
one would likely need federal approval by the FAA) and sufficiently linked
to NOAA’s research objectives to warrant overarching programmatic review.

Early Field Research into Solar Geoengineering

Solar geoengineering describes a suite of speculative technologies to alter
the planet’s energy balance to compensate for global warming. Of these
techniques, the best understood and most discussed is “stratospheric
aerosol injection” (SAI). An SAI program would introduce a thin “veil” of
aerosols into the stratosphere, which, while suspended there, would reflect
away a very small portion of incoming sunlight (perhaps about 1%), thus
cooling the planet. This idea appears to be technically feasible, but it’s
very far off from any kind of deployment due to open questions about
stratospheric chemistry and physics, as well as uncertainty about the
distribution of effects down below. In the words of leading researcher
Prof. David Keith, the question before us is not whether to deploy solar
geoengineering. It’s whether we should research solar
geoengineering—enabling more informed decisionmaking by the generations
that come after us.

Accordingly, field research into solar geoengineering would seek to answer
basic questions of how the stratosphere behaves, how materials become
distributed through it, and how stratospheric changes influence the
troposphere below—the turbulent layer of the atmosphere where weather
happens and we live. The data gathered would be in the service of improving
models for depicting future climate change and hypothetical climate
interventions. At this stage, and for the foreseeable future, field
research would, by design, have vanishingly small impacts on the
environment and no impact on climate or weather. To give one example,
SCoPEx, a field experiment in development by Harvard’s Solar Geoengineering
Research Program (led in part by Prof. Keith) would release a couple of
pounds of material into the stratosphere, and then observe its behavior and
that of the surrounding air once introduced. The material released would be
less than what a commercial airplane emits during “one minute of flight.”

Concerns about solar geoengineering field research thus have little to do
with its immediate impacts on the physical environment. They’re driven
instead by worries about consequences further down the road. A slippery
slope, in that early research would commit us to bigger experiments,
development of the technology, and, ultimately, deployment. A moral hazard,
in that research would signal to policymakers and business leaders to take
emissions cuts even less seriously than they already do. That it would be
intrinsically wrong to tamper with nature this way, or that its deployment
would be inevitably unjust. These concerns would apply just as well to
Congress’s research earmark because it’s intended in part for the
“assessment of solar climate interventions,” and thus heads down the same
(purportedly) slippery, morally hazardous path.

NEPA: purpose, design, and limits

The point of NEPA is to integrate environmental considerations into federal
agency decisionmaking, as well as to assure the public the agency has
considered those impacts.[1] It does so by requiring an environmental
review process describing and analyzing the environmental impacts of
proposed actions (including funding decisions and permit approvals). The
bulk of impact analysis occurs through devising reasonable alternatives to
the proposed action, and then comparing the environmental impacts of the
different pathways. The agency must then describe the final action and
explain why it was chosen.

Courts and agencies have created an elaborate administrative scheme for
NEPA’s implementation.[2] A few concepts are needed to avoid losing one’s
way:

Environmental Assessment (EA): Environmental review document prepared if
the agency is unsure whether the proposal has significant impacts on the
environment, or where a proposal without significant impacts is unusual or
extraordinary in some way;
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS): In-depth environmental review
document prepared if the agency determines there will be significant
impacts for the proposed action;
Programmatic NEPA Review (PEA or PEIS): A broad, high-level EA or EIS that
examines the big-picture environmental consequences of a policy, often
covering many interrelated federal actions; and
Categorical Exclusion (CE): Frequent or routine agency actions determined
in advance to have no significant environmental impacts, therefore
presenting no need to prepare an EA or an EIS.
Agencies retain discretion in how to structure their NEPA analyses’ scope,
detail, and outcome, provided they take a “hard look” at the environmental
consequences of their proposals.[3] On judicial review, a court will defer
to those determinations so long as they are reasonable.[4] If the analysis
is found insufficient, the agency will be ordered to revise it. The
proposed action may be enjoined in the meantime, depending on the
circumstances of the case.[5]

NEPA is said to be “procedural” rather than “substantive.”[6] It requires
rigorous contemplation of environmental impacts, but doesn’t mandate an
environmentally friendly final decision by the agency.[7] It doesn’t
require agencies to commit to mitigation plans,[8] and agencies must
consider only the reasonably foreseeable effects of their actions, and not
the actions of others outside their control.[9] Also excluded are
psychological harms caused by a proposed action, absent a significant
physical change in the environment; risk of danger alone need not be
analyzed.[10]

Getting the Most out of NEPA for a Solar Geoengineering Research Program

Scientific research tends to be characterized under NEPA as lacking
environmental impacts, given “the long term effect of the accumulation of
human knowledge . . . [is] basically speculative and unknowable in
advance.”[11] Initial field research into solar geoengineering—be it
passive observation of the stratosphere by NOAA Research, or minimally
intrusive manipulation like in SCoPEx—wouldn’t produce “significant”
impacts under NEPA. Moral hazard or slippery slope risks lack a
sufficiently strong connection to the physical impacts of the experiments
themselves. NOAA has provided for categorical exclusions (CEs) that could
readily be applied to a stratospheric research program carrying out the
objectives of the FY2020 Congressional appropriation. Applying a CE would
obviate the need to do further NEPA analysis, such as an EA or EIS.

But that same NOAA guidance states that more in-depth analysis may be
warranted in “extraordinary circumstances,” such as “highly controversial
environmental effects.” (pp. 4–5). Furthermore, current implementing
regulations for NEPA advise that “[a]n agency may . . . prepare
environmental assessments” even when a categorical exclusion is
applied,[12] while current CEQ guidance instructs that programmatic review
can take the form of either an EA or EIS.[13] Pulling these principles
together marks a path for more expansive NEPA review.

The first federal research program into solar climate interventions is
certainly “extraordinary” and “highly controversial.” It would be well
within NOAA Research’s discretion to launch a Programmatic Environmental
Assessment (PEA) to explore the attendant risks and impacts. The PEA could
then be incorporated by reference if NOAA Research applies categorical
exclusions to individual experiments.

NOAA seems a good fit to lead such a review, with participation of agencies
like the FAA and EPA, given its duties to research earth systems, protect
marine environments, and manage living resources. Others appear to agree: A
bill introduced in the House would expand NOAA Research’s authority to
receive reports and give recommendations on solar geoengineering field
research (though it would still lack permitting authority).

The process could begin by publishing a request for public comment for
scoping the PEA. This would allow for the National Academies of Sciences,
Engineering and Medicine time to complete its report on research priorities
and governance recommendations for solar geoengineering, which could then
be incorporated in the final document. The NEPA process could also allow
for ample opportunity for public comment and public hearings, with remarks
noted and responded to within the PEA. The PEA could give some
consideration of the more abstract risks associated with an early research
program. It could also contemplate the risks of not doing research: of a
warmer world, facing mounting climate harms, but lacking SAI knowledge and
governance experience. Finally, the agency could commit itself to ongoing
commitments to monitor developments in the field and revamp the PEA as
necessary. Those would be binding commitments: Courts hold agencies
accountable for promises and measures announced in final NEPA decisions.

Conclusion

Solar geoengineering research is contentious. There’s a good chance that
the outcome of any accompanying NEPA process would be challenged in court.
It’s unclear, however, how program opponents could prevail under NEPA given
how far-flung deployment impacts are from initial field research. Moral
hazard is beyond NEPA because federal agencies lack authority over other
countries’ emissions,[14] while feelings of fear or distress at the
prospect of research are also out of bounds, absent a strong connection to
physical environmental impacts.[15] Whatever the agency decides to do under
NEPA will therefore be on strong legal footing. It has discretion to engage
in expansive review, but wouldn’t be required to do so. That’s why it’s so
important the right agency lead development of NEPA analysis, and that
experts and engaged communities step up to shape vigorous environmental
review.

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