https://legal-planet.org/2020/11/12/the-ipcc-misses-the-mark-on-solar-geoengineering/

The IPCC Misses the Mark on Solar Geoengineering
The Intergovernmental Panel Climate Change poorly portrays the
“institutional and social constraints to deployment related to governance”
Not long ago, I re-read the top-level messages from the Intergovernmental
Panel Climate Change (IPCC) on solar geoengineering’s governance issues.
The Summary for Policymakers of most recent broad report, Global Warming of
1.5°C (SR1.5), says, in full:

Solar radiation modification (SRM) [i.e. solar geoengineering] measures are
not included in any of the available assessed pathways. Although some SRM
measures may be theoretically effective in reducing an overshoot, they face
large uncertainties and knowledge gaps as well as substantial risks and
institutional and social constraints to deployment related to governance,
ethics, and impacts on sustainable development. They also do not mitigate
ocean acidification.
And in that of the Synthesis Report its most recent (although now a bit
dated) full Assessment Report:

Solar Radiation Management (SRM) involves large-scale methods that seek to
reduce the amount of absorbed solar energy in the climate system. SRM is
untested and is not included in any of the mitigation scenarios. If it were
deployed, SRM would entail numerous uncertainties, side effects, risks and
shortcomings and has particular governance and ethical implications. SRM
would not reduce ocean acidification. If it were terminated, there is high
confidence that surface temperatures would rise very rapidly impacting
ecosystems susceptible to rapid rates of change.
Cover of IPCC's special report on 1.5°C warmingThese two paragraphs struck
me as odd. Only 12 of 146 words speak of solar geoengineering’s efficacy,
and even this clause is qualified with “although” and “theoretically.” Most
of the remaining words address solar geoengineering’s risks and
limitations. Furthermore, these reports give no reason for excluding solar
geoengineering from their scenarios. Yet evidence from modeling
consistently indicates that a judicious use of solar geoengineering could
greatly reduce climate change. This was especially clear by the time of
SR1.5, which, in a box toward its end (pp. 349-350), concludes “with high
agreement that [stratospheric aerosol injection] could limit warming to
below 1.5°C,” a goal that is out of reach through emissions reduction
alone. (At the time, I called this “burying the lede.”)

Wondering what the IPCC authors meant by “institutional and social
constraints to deployment related to governance” and “particular governance
and ethical implications,” I dived into the reports’ characterization of
solar geoengineering’s regulatory, political, social, and ethical
challenges. (These are largely considered only in the recent two reports,
cited above.) I grouped the report’s claims into seven categories:

that solar geoengineering could lessen mitigation;
that its termination would cause severe climatic impacts;
that researching solar geoengineering would create a “slippery slope” to
its inevitable and unwanted use;
that decisions to use it could be contrary to democratic norms;
that the public may not accept solar geoengineering;
that it could be unethical; and
that decisions to use solar geoengineering could be unilateral.
I was surprised to find that most of these are supported poorly or not at
all. For six of these seven challenges, the reports’ claims are variously
speculative, fail to consider both advantages and disadvantages, implicitly
make unreasonable negative assumptions, are contrary to existing evidence
(several times clearly misrepresenting the cited academic publications!),
and/or are meaninglessly vague. Only the last set of claims — potential
unilateral action — is stated coherently and consistently with evidence and
scholarship. Here is one example, that of the “slippery slope,” excerpted
from my new publication “Is Solar Geoengineering Ungovernable? A Critical
Assessment of Governance Challenges Identified by the IPCC“:

As stated in AR5 [the Fifth Assessment Report], “research might make
deployment inevitable.” SR1.5 is vaguer, passively saying that “The
argument that SRM research increases the likelihood of deployment (the
‘slippery slope’ argument), is also made.” AR5’s claim of inevitability is
illogical and contrary to evidence. Research of new technologies is usually
unsuccessful, but the failures are not widely known due to survivorship
bias… Other successfully developed technologies, such as supersonic
commercial passenger transport, have been developed and later rejected
through social and political means. What’s more, the two scholarly sources
that AR5 cites do not support the above-quoted claim that “research might
make deployment inevitable.” Each asserts that research programs make
development and use more probable (Bunzl, 2009, p. 2; Jamieson, 1996, p.
333). Only one (Jamieson) says that this could be a problem, and even that
calls for geoengineering research with safeguards. The claim of SR1.5 that
research increases the chance of the use of SRM is obviously true but
trivial, because the latter requires the former. And as in AR5, the one
article that SR1.5 cites does not make a slippery slope argument. Instead,
it reports an increase in implementation’s likelihood due to the abstract
economic model’s initial assumptions (Quaas et al., 2017). SR1.5’s claim is
unsupported.
The full text of my article is available as Open Access in Wiley
Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change.

To be clear: I am unenthusiastic about criticizing the IPCC, which provides
necessary functions of assessment and synthesis. Furthermore, picking apart
its reports’ statements and seeking (lack of) support for them has been the
domain of climate change deniers and skeptics, and I do not wish to
indirectly give such groups any additional credibility. However, the IPCC’s
objective is to “provide a balanced and complete assessment of current
information” described in “calibrated uncertainty language that expresses
the diversity of the scientifically and technically valid evidence, based
mainly on the strength of the evidence and the level of agreement in the
scientific, technical, and socio-economic literature” [PDF]. These two
recent reports do not meet this standard with regard to solar
geoengineering’s governance challenges.

What’s going on? I can think of three possible reasons for this disconnect
between the reports and existing scholarship:

First, SRM scholarship seems to have evolved. Early publications emphasized
solar geoengineering’s limitations, risks, and challenges, while more
recent ones — some of which were published after these recent reports —
offer relatively more nuanced considerations.
Second, among the reports’ authors are few, if any, solar geoengineering
researchers. Climate researchers who do not investigate solar
geoengineering may be skeptical of or even hostile to it. They may,
consciously or not, prefer that solar geoengineering remains as low as
possible on the climate change agenda in order to keep emissions cuts at
the top.
Third, the IPCC reports have, over the decades, increasingly considered
social, political, governance, and ethical issues. Its method of assessment
may be poorly suited for the social sciences and humanities, which rely to
a greater degree on qualitative evidence, inductive reasoning, subjective
values, and argumentation.
Given how solar geoengineering appears increasingly necessary to keep
global warming within 1.5 or 2°C and how it cuts across disciplines and
expertise, a Special Report on the topic may be warranted.

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