https://medium.com/@msaenger_52203/the-climate-emergency-intersectional-justice-and-the-urgency-of-solar-geoengineering-research-ae26266d7fbb

The Climate Emergency, Intersectional Justice, and the Urgency of Solar
Geoengineering Research
Marissa Saenger
Marissa Saenger
Sep 9 · 6 min read





I write this from a smoke-filled Northern California apartment, breathing
thick, ashy, overheated air as heat waves shatter records, wildfires blaze,
and glaciers collapse against the backdrop of a rapidly changing climate.
With emotions and particulates burning in my chest, it feels darkly ironic
that my current line of work involves injecting the (computer-simulated)
atmosphere with even more particles to avert climate disaster.
Image for post
Flames leap into the sky as the California Creek fire engulfs trees (Kent
Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)
I work (now remotely) in Harvard’s Solar Geoengineering Research Program,
investigating the effects of aerosol-based marine cloud brightening on
weather and climate dynamics. Solar geoengineering, also called solar
radiation management (SRM), refers to deliberate alteration of Earth’s
upper atmosphere and clouds by adding particles that reflect a small
fraction of sunlight to offset warming from greenhouse gases. Though
strictly theoretical, this research naturally draws controversy: lofting
particles into the atmosphere as a last-ditch effort to cool the planet is
a deeply unsettling concept.
To be abundantly clear about this research in the context of the climate
crisis, cutting emissions is indisputably first priority. SRM is not a
solution to climate change ― if anything, it is an emergency band-aid.
Ending the fossil fuel economy and decarbonizing energy are immediately
necessary (read: several decades overdue). But since excess greenhouse
gases have accumulated in the atmosphere, even if emissions miraculously
reach zero today, current and future generations will not be spared the
consequences of inheriting an unstable climate.
It is this daunting reality ― that the best-case scenario still poses major
hazard for generations to come ― that has drawn me to study solar
geoengineering.
Image for post
The leading edge of Argentina’s Perito Moreno glacier collapses, sending
several tons of ice into the sea.
Intersectional climate activism centers the fact that climate justice and
environmental, social, and racial justice are deeply intertwined.
Intersectionality refers to the compounding effects of social identities on
the experiences of individuals and groups. Inequalities directly tied to
racism, for example, overwhelmingly put communities of color at the highest
risk from environmental hazards: racial redlining of cities in the United
States has historically forced Black Americans to live in neighborhoods
burdened with higher levels of air and water pollution than in
predominantly white neighborhoods. The growing impacts of climate change ―
extreme heat, intensified storms and flooding ― also disproportionately
affect these neighborhoods, deepening racial inequality.
Since Hurricane Laura, a storm intensified by warmer sea surface
temperatures, struck the southeast US last week, people living near
industrial factories in Louisiana ― predominantly low-income, minority
residents ― have suffered high exposure to toxic chemicals from the damage.
In California, minimum-wage migrant farm workers labor tirelessly through
heavy wildfire smoke and extreme heat, risking their health in order to
make ends meet while facing additional risks from COVID-19. Racial
disparities and lasting repercussions of colonialism similarly exacerbate
the adverse impacts of climate change on marginalized communities worldwide.
Those experiencing the most devastating and immediate impacts of the
climate crisis are least responsible for its causes: per-capita emissions
are much higher for the rich, and climate resilience also depends largely
on wealth. Communities severely imperiled by climate change ― Pacific
Island nations disappearing under rising seas, farmers forced to migrate
due to crop failure, Indigenous Arctic communities losing homelands as sea
ice melts away ― lack resources to cope with direct threats to their
livelihoods, while wealthy consumers can simply buy their way out of
experiencing the consequences of climate change, often amassing enormous
carbon footprints with impunity.
Image for post
Demonstrators march for climate justice, racial justice, and immigration
reform. Photo: Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP (2019 via CityLab)
Dismantling power structures that have willfully rendered droves of the
population profoundly vulnerable through the violent extraction of land,
resources and labor is as urgent as confronting the atmospheric drivers of
climate change. Addressing environmental racism and colonialism demands
reparative justice for populations long burdened by inequality: for
example, returning stolen land to Indigenous communities and issuing
monetary compensation to descendants of slaves for generations of unpaid
forced labor.
Solar geoengineering would not correct the injustices driving unequal
impacts of climate change. However, it could directly address the rising
global temperatures drastically intensifying disparity.
In fact, SRM is the only known strategy capable of limiting global
temperature rise this century.
By reflecting sunlight, SRM has the unique capacity to cool global
temperatures within 1–2 years of deployment. Comparatively, even if
greenhouse gas emissions cease today, accumulated atmospheric carbon
dioxide (CO2) will persist for at least several centuries, continuing to
warm the climate. Without SRM, limiting future global temperature rise
depends heavily on negative emissions to remove excess CO2.
Meanwhile, warmer temperatures are seriously compromising the efficacy and
permanence of natural CO2 sinks, while threatening reservoirs like melting
Arctic permafrost to release massive amounts of stored carbon. Reducing CO2
concentrations by even a small fraction of their excess this century
requires miraculous technological breakthroughs yet to be seen in
artificial carbon capture: current technologies remain very early-stage and
high in energy use, land use, and cost. Even if CO2 concentrations rapidly
decrease, thermal inertia of significantly warmed oceans will keep Earth
warmer for a while.
Critically, SRM could ameliorate catastrophic climate damages while
slower-acting mitigation takes effect. Though much remains unknown about
potential risks of SRM, when compared against continued warming ― and
potentially soon crossing irreversible climate tipping points ― the
relative risks may be small.
Image for post
Crops withering from intensified heat and drought conditions (Image: Carbon
Brief).
The risk that solar geoengineering unintentionally causes harm (for
example, by inducing unexpected and potentially destructive changes to
regional climates) presents a serious moral hazard. However, a future
without SRM may carry substantially higher risks and uncertainties than
with SRM, particularly for climate-vulnerable communities. Research is also
essential for identifying, understanding, and addressing as-yet unknown
risks. Delaying or dismissing research eliminates any possibility that a
well-informed SRM implementation could significantly reduce harm by
limiting warming sooner than would otherwise be achievable.
Nevertheless, climate-denying chemtrail conspiracy theorists and
well-respected environmental activists denounce SRM research as a malicious
plot to control the climate and weather for the benefit of specific
interests. In the latter case, concerns about power and interest are
absolutely warranted: ethical international governance and decision-making
― regarding research as well as implementation ― demands that distribution
of resources and political power favor vulnerable and developing nations.
This calls for thoughtful and inclusive discourse on restructuring global
power dynamics to create radically equitable international governance
systems ― a key priority in the social and political science spheres of
interdisciplinary SRM research.
Concerns about detracting from greenhouse-gas mitigation efforts have also
understandably turned many environmental advocates away from discussing or
supporting the study of SRM. The concept of climate change adaptation used
to draw concern for the same reasons; now, adaptation strategies are
acknowledged as essential for saving lives and managing risk in the face of
an overwhelming crisis.
SRM research may sound reckless and crazy; the stakes are indeed soberingly
high. But committing to the dangers of unchecked temperature rise may be
even crazier. In the work toward intersectional climate justice, SRM
research is increasingly urgent: a portfolio of climate risk management
strategies combining mitigation, adaptation, and solar geoengineering may
be our most effective ― and only ― shot at abating some of the most
threatening and unjust impacts of climate change before it’s too late.

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