https://www.globalpolicyjournal.com/blog/15/12/2020/could-climate-interventions-slow-melting-cryosphere

Could Climate Interventions Slow the Melting of the Cryosphere?
By John Moore - 15 December 2020
 CLIMATE CHANGE, ENERGY AND SUSTAINABILITY
Could Climate Interventions Slow the Melting of the Cryosphere?
This blog is based on a new free to access paper published in the
forthcoming special issue of Global Policy, edited by C2G. To access the
full article, click here.
The ice sheets, sea ice and permafrost provide little direct economic
benefit to nation states, despite their importance for Arctic indigenous
peoples. But they do provide extremely important features that enable the
present climate to operate as humankind has grown used to.

Arctic sea ice and permafrost have declined rapidly in the last few
decades, and the West Antarctic ice sheet is close to (or beyond) the point
of widespread, inevitable, collapse.

The timescale of these losses raises questions about whether they can be
addressed in the typical 30-year timeframes of political
consensus-building. Yet the consequences of not addressing them are too big
to ignore.

Permafrost stores more than twice the present-day atmosphere’s load of
carbon. Such a huge reservoir becoming a source of carbon in the coming
centuries could dwarf efforts to mitigate anthropogenic emissions and alone
would cost trillions this century in climate damage.

In West Antarctica, the unstable parts of the ice sheet have the potential
to raise sea level by about 5m over the coming centuries. Such a collapse
would be effectively permanent, flooding coastal wetland ecosystems and
cities, and forcing migration of over half a billion people.

Targeted interventions vs global geoengineering* to protect the cryosphere
Unfortunately, global emissions reductions are likely to be too slow to
preserve many important parts of the cryosphere. This remains true even if
those emissions reductions are supplemented by active Carbon Dioxide
Removal.

While some of the at-risk parts of the cryosphere (such as Arctic summer
sea ice) could potentially be preserved with solar geoengineering
approaches that cool the entire planet, other parts cannot be saved by
simply lowering the surface temperature.

For example, much of West Antarctica is susceptible to rapid collapse
because it stands on bedrock that deepens inland. The floating ice shelves
that surround and stabilize the grounded ice sheet have been dramatically
thinned in recent years by basal melt caused by the intrusion of warm ocean
waters, leading to acceleration and potential destabilization. Preventing
this requires reestablishment of the physical buttressing from the rocky
outcrops that the thinned ice shelves no longer reach.

Locally targeted interventions represent a different approach from global
geoengineering schemes, the goal being to counteract a specific harmful
climate outcome with global implications.

Potential targeted interventions include:

conserving the ice sheets by building barriers to divert warm ocean
currents;
maintaining Arctic sea ice by making the ice thicker and its surface whiter;
or modifying Arctic land usage, via re-wilding, to cool permafrost.
The outlet glaciers that are the focal points of the ice sheet instability
are 50-100 km wide in Antarctica and less than 10 km wide in Greenland.
Since the vast majority of ice raising sea level drains through these
narrow passages, interventions at just a few strategic locations have the
potential to affect the entire ice sheet catchment without requiring
continent-wide infrastructure.

On the other hand, both sea ice management and permafrost re-wilding
provides no such “leverage” and would be vastly more expensive than solar
geoengineering, but they may have a role in specific local instances.

Perhaps where large carbon releases are likely to occur with modest
temperature rises, or because of a significant cultural value, they may
also be useful in contexts of ecosystem services by maintaining
environments that are highly valued for human or ecological reasons. This
is already motivating cloud brightening experiments aimed at preserving the
Great Barrier Reef.

Ethics and governance of targeted interventions
The piece-meal approach of targeted interventions has governance advantages
over global geoengineering because fewer countries are involved, and
existing treaties tend to address specific regions, often emphasizing the
importance of the Precautionary Approach, conservation and preserving the
status quo.

Since targeted interventions address global problems at their source rather
than where they do damage, they are equitable and have more in common with
mitigation than adaptation.

The legal framework for interventions is based on environmental impact
assessments: for example, demanded by Greenland or The Protocol on
Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty (Madrid Protocol).

The Madrid Protocol states that “adverse effects on climate or weather
patterns” must be avoided. The objective of conserving the ice sheets would
actively seek to maintain those patterns.

Not doing glacier geoengineering, where it would allow a continental-scale
ice sheet to collapse, would change the global climate, atmospheric and
ocean circulations. Similar changes in the glacial environment should also
be avoided, and again this would be better served by preserving the ice
sheets than allowing them to collapse.

In the case of Arctic sea ice, all states have guaranteed access to
navigation routes, but the Law of the Sea Conventions provides for the
construction of artificial structures of limited extent.

Who is primarily involved in governance of the cryosphere?
The governance of both the Antarctic and much of the Arctic Ocean is
largely in the hands of the developed and relatively rich countries, and
legally they should take prime responsibility, and proactively preserve the
cryosphere.

The Arctic permafrost is largely contained within Russia, Canada and the
United States (Alaska). Permafrost preservation attempts have been
pioneered at the Pleistocene Park in Siberia. Bison and other large
herbivores have been introduced to a fenced enclosure that has also been
partially denuded of tree cover. In practice the First Nations and the
Canadian government would decide together on targeted permafrost
geoengineering regulations in Canada.

Alaska permafrost area and carbon storage are much smaller than in Canada
and Russia, but the region has been warming rapidly. Thawing permafrost is
an infrastructure issue – affecting buildings, food security, and
especially the trans-Alaska pipeline carrying oil from the Arctic Ocean
across the whole state to Valdez.

What role can the Arctic peoples play?
The Arctic peoples have been long-marginalized and largely removed from
decision-making regarding extraction of the large mining and fossil fuel
reserves in the Arctic, despite the UN Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous People, which requires ‘free, prior, informed consent’.

Institutions based in and representative of local Arctic people could and
should play an important role in empowering and educating the region on the
value of the ice sheet and permafrost to the whole planet, in addition to
the region itself.

Who should pay for cryosphere conservation?
Costs involved are difficult to quantify now:  we estimate ice sheet
conservation might be US$100 billion over a century, which works out to
about 1$ per year per person directly affected by rising seas.

A 1 m increase in sea ice thickness over 10% of the Arctic  would cost
about $50 billion per year. Permafrost re-wilding could return around 1%
per annum on investment  in carbon storage if carbon prices are at as low
as $5 per ton, or less depending on carbon tax mechanisms.

Monetizing the natural environment – the Greenland ice sheet, sea ice and
permafrost – in the style of Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) could
provide a much more sustainable and equitable source of income than present
efforts to extract resources from the Arctic.

The UNFCCC concept of shared but differentiated responsibilities may imply
that funding for cryosphere conservation should come from rich nations, and
enlightened self-interest would point towards tackling rising sea level and
other impacts by conservation rather than defending their own coastlines.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/geoengineering/CAJ3C-05Q7vchduktBkUxoU2-TxTi_5XL6sAEQUiQpmuz%3DFo7Lg%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to