https://www.c2g2.net/stratospheric-aerosol-injection-could-be-a-painkiller-but-not-a-cure-and-more-research-is-needed/

Stratospheric aerosol injection could be a painkiller, but not a cure – and
more research is needed
Guest blog by Frank Keutsch, Stonington Professor of Engineering and
Atmospheric Science, Harvard John A.Paulson School of Engineering and
Applied Sciences and principal investigator of the Stratospheric Controlled
Perturbation Experiment (SCoPEx) / 22 March 2021

[The views of guest post authors are their own. C2G does not necessarily
endorse the opinions stated in guest posts. We do, however, encourage a
constructive conversation involving multiple viewpoints and voices.]

Research into climate intervention methods, including stratospheric aerosol
injection (SAI), is controversial for good reason.

It has to be clear that at best SAI would be a complement to emission
reductions, which have to be the absolute priority, and probably carbon
dioxide removal. SAI could reduce climate change impacts, but it would not
contribute to the ‘solution’.

I often compare SAI to painkillers, opioids, which treat symptoms but don’t
solve underlying problems – and their use can delay much needed action on a
solution.

This corresponds to my largest concern about the risks of SAI research: the
moral hazard. This is the idea that humanity will relax its already feeble
efforts on mitigation because of the hope of a ‘painkiller‘.

Also similar to painkillers, there is the danger of addiction to SAI, in
which continued use requires higher and higher doses as no action on
emissions is taken. Just like sudden withdrawal of opioids can be
disastrous, so could sudden cessation of SAI – creating a ‘termination
shock’, as the full force of underlying climate change came to bear over
the 2-3 year lifetime of stratospheric aerosol. How likely such a scenario
would be can be debated, but it certainly has to be considered.

Lastly, the question of whether and what financial interests are
encouraging opioid use or supporting SAI research is very important. [1]

The state of our climate emergency today is such that humanity cannot
afford to relax. We need invasive surgery – i.e. drastic emission
reductions – not just morphine. But there is clearly also utility in
painkillers during surgery. And actual painkillers have approval processes
and in-depth research.

SAI has not been researched nearly enough to even consider anything close
to deployment and research is slow. There are essentially no existing
governance processes specific to small-scale outdoor experiments on SAI.

As the principal investigator of the Stratospheric Controlled Perturbation
Experiment (SCoPEx) – a proposed experiment that would be the first to
inject particles into the stratosphere, but which would begin outdoor
testing without particle injection – I share concerns about SAI research.

However, the concern about the risk and uncertainties of SAI is the reason
why I believe SAI research (not actual geoengineering) is needed – and why
they should also frame the way that research is conducted.

Research to quantify risks and efficacy is needed now. Otherwise it may be
too late.

What is known, and not known, about stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI)?
SAI is the idea of introducing particles into the stratosphere, which would
scatter sunlight to space and cool the Earth’s surface. Our prediction is
that they would stay there for 2-3 years before returning to ground.

Current computer-based models make injecting particles into the atmosphere
look good – I fear too good. Some simulations have suggested that combining
SAI with emissions cuts could reduce many global climate impacts, such as
extreme temperatures, droughts, and tropical storm intensity.

SAI could perhaps be used to slow down the rate of climate change (a rapid
rate of change could make it impossible for humanity and ecosystems to
adapt), while the slower acting – but more important – emission reductions,
and very likely carbon dioxide removal, are taking place.

Yet, there are also tremendous uncertainties and potential risks around
SAI. For example, sulfate aerosol, a commonly modelled aerosol due to its
natural stratospheric occurrence, destroys the stratospheric ozone layer
and heats up the stratosphere, changing atmospheric circulation.

We do not understand stratosphere circulation well enough, and so we cannot
know the implications of messing with it without research.

What is SCoPEx?
My team and I have proposed a world-first experiment that could help assess
some of the risks and efficacy of SAI.

If we receive permission, our Stratospheric Controlled Perturbation
Experiment (SCoPEx) would launch a large research balloon from Esrange
Space Center in Kiruna, Sweden. It would rise to approximately 20
kilometers, where we would test its navigation, communication, and
instrumentation under extreme stratospheric conditions.

Later, if approved by the independent Advisory Committee, follow-up
experiments would release about 2 kilograms of calcium carbonate particles
over an area roughly 1 kilometer long and 100 meters wide. (SCoPEx proposes
to study calcium carbonate as early indoor research suggests it may cause
lower ozone destruction and significantly less stratospheric heating than
sulfate.)

The balloon would then turn around to measure whether the particle sizes,
locally reflected sunlight, and chemical impact on ozone match our models.

These results and meteorological measurements would then be integrated into
global climate models, improving their ability to predict the effectiveness
and risks of stratospheric geoengineering.

I fully expect that during the first few flights some of the instruments
will fail, or – more difficult – produce unreliable data. The instruments
will have to operate at ambient temperatures of -60°C at low pressures,
which can result in different parts of the same instrument overheating and
getting too cold, and laser optics can distort.

This will have to be evaluated carefully and problems will have to be fixed
before actual scientific data can be obtained, which is an example of why
stratospheric experimental research is slow.

However, there are no existing observational data that can be used to
provide empirical evidence for models on lower-risk SAI materials or
particle plume evolution, which is why limited experiments, such as SCoPEx,
are critical.

My motivations for this experiment
I am conducting this research not because I am an advocate for the
large-scale deployment of SAI, but rather because the state and direction
of climate change makes me extremely concerned that such an approach will
be considered at some point.

One of the issues that keeps me up at night concerns sulfate aerosol, a
commonly modelled aerosol due to its natural occurrence, including from
volcanic eruptions such as Mount Pinatubo.

Sulfate not only destroys the stratospheric ozone layer but also heats up
the stratosphere. A large scientific community is trying to better
understand stratospheric dynamics, the circulation of air in the
stratosphere, which connects to the troposphere where we live, and even the
oceans.

By heating up the stratosphere we would be messing with a system we do not
understand well enough. In addition, we don’t really understand how a plume
of particles will evolve from a point source to the enormous grid boxes of
climate models.

These are just two specific examples of why we need to conduct research
into particles that may have fewer side effects, such as less ozone
destruction and reduced impacts on circulation, and how the particles will
actually behave.


Reducing moral hazard and slippery slopes through governance
In view of the concerns about moral hazard (which I explained above), and
also about a potential slippery slope – whereby experiments could evolve
into deployment, which I share – an important question is how to conduct
research.

The issue lies not in the physical risk of SCoPEx, which is the same as any
stratospheric balloon flight as it will emit less than an aircraft or
rocket releases in a few minutes of flight. The risk lies in the
implications.

This is why SCoPEX has an independent advisory committee that conducts
financial, legal, safety and science reviews, as well as a societal
engagement plan. SCoPEx only proceeds with each experimental step with
committee approval. The advisory committee is in the process of deciding on
a test flight without any particle injection. Originally, the decision was
planned for February but the committee is still deliberating, which
reflects the complexity of this project.

Is this process perfect? Almost certainly not. But in the absence of other
governance mechanisms which adequately address the complex nature of this
novel project the committee plays a critical role in the development of
future governance mechanisms. The development of research governance is as
important as the research itself.

The risk of moral hazard of SAI research also has to be weighed against the
risk of no research.

Due to the enormity of the integrated greenhouse gases emissions, there is
no fast solution with low impact.

The IPCC tells us that if we cut emissions over the next decades we can
stay below 1.5°C. However, not obvious in such statements, is that vast
areas of land might be used for bio-energy with carbon capture and storage
(BECCS) depending on the the exact scenario (e.g. 1.6 times the EU land
area by just 2050). The profound impacts of such staggering land use
changes have to be made clearer.

Winners and losers
I believe that any solution to climate change will have profound impacts,
creating winners and losers. Among the latter are likely to be those who
are not at fault, in the Global South and future generations.

In view of this reality, I am extremely concerned that at some point in the
not too distant future it will be the responsibility of decision makers to
consider SAI and other geoengineering methods. If these methods suggest a
substantial reduction in human suffering, as computer models do in some
respects, SAI could look incredibly attractive.

If populations demand that decision makers take action rather than talk
about taking action, SAI may be the only fairly fast option, and SAI could
be cheap when not considering the holistic costs.

Will lack of research on risks and efficacy of SAI prevent decision makers
of considering it? I think not. If decision makers make poor decisions
because of no research, can they be blamed? As research is slow we need to
start doing this research now.

As a scientist, I have no say on the decisions that society ultimately
takes. But I can help provide facts for those who do.

_______________
[1] SCoPEx does not accept anonymous donations, nor donations from
corporations, foundations or individuals if the majority of their current
profits or wealth come from the fossil fuel industry, unless they can
clearly demonstrate that they do not have a conflict of interest and
present a strong track record of supporting efforts to address climate
change. SCoPEx also does not file any patents on technologies developed,
and will make them publicly available

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