https://amp.theguardian.com/environment/2021/mar/25/top-us-scientists-back-100m-geoengineering-research-proposal

Dimming the sun’: $100m geoengineering research programme proposed
All options to fight climate crisis must be explored, says national
academy, but critics fear side-effects

Damian Carrington Environment editor
 @dpcarrington
Thu 25 Mar 2021 15.00 GMT
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The US should establish a multimillion-dollar research programme on solar
geoengineering, according to the country’s national science academy.

In a report it recommends funding of $100m (£73m) to $200m over five years
to better understand the feasibility of interventions to dim the sun, the
risk of harmful unintended consequences and how such technology could be
governed in an ethical way.

The National Academies of Sciences (NAS) said cutting fossil fuel emissions
remained the most urgent and important action to tackle the climate crisis.
But it said the worryingly slow progress on climate action meant all
options needed to be understood.


Outdoor experiments should be allowed only if they provide critical
knowledge that cannot be obtained by other means, said the report, and the
research programme “should not be designed to advance future deployment of
these interventions”. Harvard University is hoping to gain imminent
approval from an independent committee for test flights, which are opposed
by environmental groups.

The report considers three types of solar geoengineering to allow more heat
to escape the Earth’s atmosphere: injecting tiny reflective particles into
the stratosphere to block sunlight; using the particles to make low-lying
clouds over the oceans more reflective; and thinning high-altitude cirrus
clouds. Major volcanic eruptions are already known to cool the climate by
pumping particles high into the atmosphere.

Proponents of geoengineering argue that impacts of global heating could be
so great that every option to limit these must be explored. Opponents argue
that such research increases the risk that such technologies could be
deployed, perhaps by rogue states, instead of cutting emissions. Critics
also warn that solar geoengineering could cause damage such as crop
failures, and would need to be maintained to avoid a sudden hike in
temperature, unless carbon emissions fall rapidly.


“Given the urgency of the climate crisis, solar geoengineering needs to be
studied further,” said Prof Marcia McNutt, the president of the academy.
“But just as with advances in fields such as artificial intelligence or
gene editing, science needs to engage the public to ask not just can we,
but should we?” She said questions of governance – who will decide to
deploy this intervention and for how long – were as important as the
scientific questions.

“The US solar geoengineering research programme should be all about helping
society make more informed decisions,” said Prof Chris Field of Stanford
University, who was chair of the committee that wrote the report. “Based on
all of the evidence from social science, natural science, and technology,
this research programme could either indicate that solar geoengineering
should not be considered further, or conclude that it warrants additional
effort.”

The report said: “A reasonable initial investment for this solar
geoengineering research programme is within a range of $100-200m total over
five years.” It said the programme would be a small fraction of the US
budget for climate change research and should not shift the focus from
other projects.

It said the programme should be designed to “move forward in a socially
responsible manner” with researchers following a code of conduct, research
catalogued in a public registry, and public engagement undertaken. Outdoor
experiments should be subject to appropriate governance including impact
assessments, said the report.

The academy said the programme should include scientific research on the
possible climate outcomes of geoengineering and impacts on ecosystems and
society. Social dimensions cited for research included “domestic and
international conflict and cooperation” and “justice, ethics, and equity”.

Solar geoengineering could be ‘remarkably inexpensive’ – report
Prof Gernot Wagner of New York University, whose research includes
geoengineering, said: “The report’s focus on research and research
governance is important for one simple reason: the current discussion is –
and should be – all about research into solar geoengineering, certainly not
about deploying the technology, where, if anything, a firm moratorium would
be appropriate.”


“Solar geoengineering is an extremely risky and intrinsically unjust
technological proposal that doesn’t address any of the causes of climate
change,” said Silvia Ribeiro, Latin America director for the ETC campaign
group. “The report asking for more research into a technology we don’t want
is essentially flawed.”

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