https://legal-planet.org/2020/10/30/geoengineering-ready-for-its-close-up/

GEOENGINEERING
Geoengineering: Ready for its Close-up?
After long being marginalized in climate debates, geoengineering is
experiencing a surge in attention — which carries both opportunities and
risks.
If you’re a long-time Legal Planet reader, you may have noticed that I
weigh in once a year or so to say that geoengineering – active engineered
response to global climate change – is going to get prominent, and
intensely contentious, soon.

Geoengineering? Before continuing, we need a brief aside about names. Even
what to call it is contested and shifting. In addition to geoengineering,
people call it climate engineering, climate remediation, more recently
climate intervention. They argue about whether it’s all one thing, or
whether various methods and approaches are so different that they should
have different names and not be discussed together. The names are certainly
important for debate framing, and for shaping public and political
response, but they don’t change the substantive issues and arguing over
what to call this stuff has become tiresome. So for this post, I’m going to
call it “Norma.” (If this confuses you, check the classic Billy Wilder
film, “Sunset Boulevard.”)

Norma is intentional modification of the environment at large scale – large
meaning continental to global – to reduce the climate change and other
harms done by elevated atmospheric greenhouse gases. Norma comes in two
main types, interventions that remove CO2 or other greenhouse-gases from
the atmosphere (“Carbon dioxide removal” or CDR – for this post, “Removal
Norma”), and interventions that change the energy balance of the Earth,
mainly by scattering an additional percent or so of incoming sunlight to
make the Earth a little brighter (“Solar geoengineering,” solar radiation
management, solar radiation modification—for this post, “Solar Norma”). The
most prominent form of Solar Norma would spray mists of reflective aerosols
in the upper atmosphere, “stratospheric aerosol injection” (SAI). “Carbon”
and “Solar” are not necessarily the only possible types of Norma. Others
are occasionally proposed.

For 15 years or so, Norma has been argued over by small groups of
scientists, climate-policy wonks, and activists, but has not received wide
attention. This changed a few years ago for Removal Norma (CDR), which has
gained a surge of attention and resources since 2015. The main trigger for
this came from the emissions scenarios produced to show ways of meeting the
Paris climate targets, limiting global-average heating to 1.5 to 2ºC. Most
of these required hundreds of billions of tons (GtCO2) of Removal Norma by
year 2100. Solar Norma might be much more effective than Removal Norma at
limiting climate risks – and act much faster – but has enjoyed no such rise
in attention or respectability. On the contrary, Solar Norma has faced
starkly inadequate research funding, determined opposition to even
innocuous proposals for small-scale field research, marginalized and biased
treatment in official assessments, and exclusion from climate scenarios.
The widespread reluctance to study or research it, even to better
characterize potential risks and limitations, has been widely likened to a
religious ban on study or discussion of heretical doctrine.

Until now, that is. Over the past couple of months, Solar Norma is
everywhere. Research funding has started to flow (although still far short
of need), and research communities not formerly involved are starting to
pay attention. Stories about it are appearing every week in prominent,
respected publication outlets. Research and policy organizations are
staffing up. It finally hit me yesterday that this change is real, when
within a two-hour period both my teenaged sons sent me a link to a new
video on Norma their favorite cool-science-explained Youtube channel. (BTW,
the treatment of Norma in this video is excellent – it covers all the major
issues accurately and clearly, and is even-handed about the scariness, the
known problems and risks, and the reasons Norma still needs to be studied
and considered despite these.)

So why is this happening now? Is it a good or a bad thing? And does it
suggest that other things about the debate over Norma have changed?

One possible answer to the “why now” question is that it was bound to
happen eventually, and that it’s happening now is just a random event. The
familiar argument for increased research and governance attention to Solar
Norma remains valid, indeed grows stronger as time passes:

Climate-change risks are severe, getting worse, and slow to deflect:
climate change is a train-wreck in slow-motion;
Deep cuts to the emissions that are driving the changes, moving the world
economy to non-carbon energy sources, is the first-priority response,
essential to limiting risks;
But we’ve known this for 30 years, during which world emissions kept
increasing except for a few flat years. With a few small exceptions,
emissions-cutting efforts have thus far achieved little;
At this point, even an extreme effort on emissions-cuts might not
adequately limit risks, given the late start and the uncertainties about
the rate and impacts of climate change;
Removal Norma will probably help a lot, but will take decades to grow to
the assumed Gt scale – and is not confidently known to work, with
acceptable impacts, at that scale. So by all means pursue it, hard, but
don’t bet the farm on it.
Solar Norma appears able to make bigger, faster changes to limit climate
risks – so while it presents many scary risks and hard problems of
governance and control (real problems, but potentially remediable), it may
be a necessary part of an effective climate risk-limitation strategy,
offering risk-reduction opportunities not available in other ways;
And finally, the foregoing is not a secret. So no matter how much you may
hate or fear Solar Norma, you can’t guarantee that some government(s)
facing severe climate impacts won’t try to use it. This strengthens the
case for understanding how it would work, what risks it would pose, and how
to govern it, even if the endpoint is to reject it.
With this all old news, the reason for the sudden spike in attention now
could simply be that understanding of this tough situation has percolated
to enough people to pass some critical scale.  And like any issue dominated
by conformity and fear of speaking out, the first little crack in the wall
of silence leads quickly to the dam bursting. (Mix, mix, mix those
metaphors!)

But my guess is that there is more going on. The politics and public
awareness of climate change are undergoing a broader transformation. The
volume of alarming news about changes and impacts already occurring, the
shifts in public opinion and elevation of alarm, have greatly strengthened
the case for – and raised the likelihood of – serious action to cut
emissions. The multiple announcements of new emissions commitments –
notably China’s recent adoption of a net-zero target by 2060 – have further
strengthened the sense of possibility on this front, as has the prospect of
a new US administration that would take strong climate action seriously.

I speculate that all this movement toward getting serious about emissions
cuts – at last! – opens a window for a serious conversation about Norma,
including Solar Norma. Even a cursory examination of the extreme need for
emissions cuts, and the heavy lift involved in achieving them, has to raise
the question of how much can be achieved, how fast – and the severity of
remaining climate risks even under the most optimistic assumptions about
the ambition and effectiveness of mitigation. This line of reasoning
naturally directs inquiry to other, potentially additional approaches like
Norma. Moreover, the strongest objection to thinking about Norma has been
the risk that Norma may distract from, or undermine support for, the needed
deep emission cuts. This argument becomes less persuasive as public alarm
about climate change and support for emission-cutting policies grow
stronger. So Norma may really be ready for its close-up.

Whether my speculation about the cause of the current surge of attention to
Norma is right or wrong, the existence of the surge is undeniable. So what
happens now? What is likely to happen, and what should happen?

Part of the answer is obvious, and unchanged by the current surge of
attention. The first need is for a large expansion of research into
alternative methods, how they would work, and what impacts and risks they
would carry. Equally essential is starting the conversation about how to
research, develop, and control these technologies, how to assess and limit
their risks, how to fit them into an effective overall climate response
strategy. Most importantly, how can it be ensured that the development of
Norma does not impair, but rather strengthens, support for the other
essential elements of such a strategy, especially deep rapid cuts in world
emissions. The severity and novelty of Solar Norma’s governance challenges
cannot be over-stated, and if its use is ever to be considered it must be
with confidence that this can happen competently, prudently, and
legitimately. Whatever use is made of Solar Norma, if any, must advance –
and on all accounts not impair – effective overall management of climate
risks and global cooperation, development, and justice. This will be a tall
order for currently weakened international governance capacity, and the
exploration of how to achieve it needs to start immediately.

This emergence of Solar Norma as something that can be discussed in decent
company is not without risks. Indeed, many of these risks are closely
related to the concerns long expressed about Solar Norma, but the rise in
attention means these previously hypothetical risks are becoming real. I’ll
discuss these in future posts, including ways that some recent pathologies
in debates about COVID and its responses illustrate ways things could go
badly wrong with more active consideration of Solar Norma.

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