https://www.newscientist.com/article/2272646-is-it-time-to-try-geoengineering-to-solve-the-climate-crisis/

Is it time to try geoengineering to solve the climate crisis?
ENVIRONMENT | ANALYSIS 25 March 2021
By Adam Vaughan

New Scientist Default Image
The launch of a stratospheric balloon at Esrange Space Center in Sweden

SSC

The United Nations last month laid bare how badly the world is doing on its
climate targets. Today the US National Academy of Sciences (NAS) says such
slow progress means the US should launch a $100-$200 million research
programme on solar geoengineering, a controversial set of techniques to
reflect sunlight back to space in order to cool the Earth.

However, the group stressed in a report that it isn’t calling for
deployment of such solar geoengineering technologies and warns that doing
more research is no excuse for “giving up on decarbonisation”.


The report reviews geoengineering methods such as “solar shields”, which
rely on injecting aerosols into the stratosphere. A group led by Harvard
University is researching this approach with an experiment releasing a few
hundred grams of mineral dust from a high-altitude balloon above Sweden
later this year. It will be the first time that particles have been
intentionally injected into the stratosphere in an attempt at
geoengineering.

That project, called SCoPEx, will only go ahead if an initial test balloon
flight at Esrange Space Center in Kiruna, Sweden, goes well. It also hinges
on a green light from an independent advisory committee, which has delayed
giving a verdict, initially due on 15 February.

“We really need to do the research because I’m really worried where we’re
going with climate change, as action is just not fast enough,” says Frank
Keutsch at Harvard University, who is leading SCoPEx . Modelling how
particles behave that high up, and how much sunlight they reflect, or
extrapolating from what happens during a volcanic eruption only goes so
far, says Keutsch – at some point observational data is needed.

Read more: Destroying a type of cloud may help stabilise climate change
The NAS backs the idea of real world experiments like Keutsch’s, provided
they are subject to good oversight. “Limited outdoor experimentation could
help advance the study of certain atmospheric processes that are critical
for understanding solar geoengineering,” the report says.

Shaun Fitzgerald at the University of Cambridge says more research and
funding is welcome so that governments are informed if they have to deploy
such radical measures one day. “There is a responsibility that when
decisions are made on deployment, they are not made in the absence of
knowledge. That would be a dereliction of duty,” he says. The research
could conclude that deployment must be ruled out entirely, he adds.

Evidence to date suggests that solar geoengineering could lower Earth’s
surface temperature, but also indicates that there could be unintended
negative consequences. Those include weakening resolve to cut carbon
emissions and creating “unfavourable” changes in rainfall and extreme
temperatures in some countries, says the report.

Still, critics fear that crossing the Rubicon of moving from indoor to
outdoor tests would ultimately lead to deployment. Without limits imposed
by the SCoPEx advisory committee on what the team can do after initial
tests, “there is a real risk of inducing a slippery slope where one
experiment will lead to another”, says Ina Möller at Wageningen University
and Research in the Netherlands.

Read more: Yes, the global finance system must reform to avert a climate
disaster
The NAS report calls for the US government to adopt a $100-200 million
research effort over five years. It could explore which solar
geoengineering approaches are “most fruitful”, fund chemistry and
microphysics research on the properties of particles used for reflecting
sunlight, and gain a better understanding of what the public thinks about
the technology.

“It isn’t saying solar geoengineering’s time has come,” says Emily
Shuckburgh at the University of Cambridge. “It is very specifically saying
only that the time has come for an international transdisciplinary solar
geoengineering research programme focused on understanding the options and
risks, and explicitly not on a path to deployment.”

Fitzgerald questions whether the three technologies covered by the NAS
report – which also include cloud brightening and cloud thinning – are
necessarily the right ones to focus efforts on. He says more localised
approaches, such as trying to preserve Arctic ice to reflect light back to
space, may be worth considering too, partly because they would be less
controversial.

If the US did adopt a major research programme, it might go part way
towards allaying one of the biggest concerns of opponents of solar
geoengineering: the lack of any international body controlling what
experiments and deployment could take place. The NAS says the research
effort “should support the development of international governance
mechanisms”.

But David Santillo at the University of Exeter, UK, says bodies such as
SCoPEx’s advisory committee aren’t sufficient because they won’t consider
all the social and ethical issues. He thinks the role could go to an
existing United Nations body, such as one overseeing a treaty on
long-distance air pollution that crosses borders, or a new one could be
created.

Such global governance is a long way off, though. In the short term, the
NAS report is a boost for Keutsch’s experiments, and any that might follow.
Keutsch is aware that the success or failure of his project could determine
whether future experiments happen. He is also clear the world stands at an
important milestone. “It doesn’t get much more symbolic than some balloon
you’re launching up there, it symbolises ‘oh, where has humanity got itself
to’,” he says.



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https://www.newscientist.com/article/2272646-is-it-time-to-try-geoengineering-to-solve-the-climate-crisis/#ixzz6q9Re42Mh

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