https://www.cfr.org/blog/can-solar-geoengineering-be-used-weapon

Can Solar Geoengineering Be Used as a Weapon?

*The following is a guest post by Joshua Horton
<https://keith.seas.harvard.edu/people/joshua-horton>, research director,
geoengineering, at the Harvard Kennedy School; and David Keith
<https://keith.seas.harvard.edu/people/david-keith>, professor of public
policy and professor of engineering at Harvard University.*

Solar geoengineering—the idea of using technology to reflect a small
fraction of incoming sunlight away from Earth to partially offset climate
change—poses many problems, including its potential to discourage emissions
cuts, its uncertain distributive consequences, and the possibility that
suddenly stopping implementation might result in dangerously rapid warming.
And yet available evidence
<https://www.nap.edu/catalog/25762/reflecting-sunlight-recommendations-for-solar-geoengineering-research-and-research-governance>
shows
that moderate use of solar geoengineering may offer an opportunity to
mitigate climate hazards beyond what is possible even if all emissions
could be eliminated tomorrow. In our view
<https://keith.seas.harvard.edu/files/tkg/files/horton_and_keith_2016.pdf?m=1519663371>,
the prospect that solar geoengineering could significantly reduce risks for
the world’s poorest, reducing income inequality
<https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-13957-x?utm_source=miragenews&utm_medium=miragenews&utm_campaign=news>,
is a strong basis for pursuing research and international governance.

Debate on solar geoengineering, however, is haunted by a concern that such
technology might be weaponized. This concern stems from longstanding
military interest in weather modification technologies, most notably
the U.S. use
of cloud-seeding during the Vietnam War
<https://www.nytimes.com/1972/07/03/archives/rainmaking-is-used-as-weapon-by-us-cloudseeding-in-indochina-is.html>,
which led to adoption of the 1976 Environmental Modification Convention
(ENMOD) <https://www.un.org/disarmament/enmod/> restricting hostile use of
environmental modification techniques. It also stems from suggestions that
governance of nuclear weapons may serve as a useful analog for governance
of solar geoengineering.

Fears about the dual-use nature of solar geoengineering are sometimes
stated explicitly (e.g., at 51:30 in this recent *Rolling Stone* debate
<https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-features/solar-geoengineering-risks-climate-crisis-1156443/>),
but more often implied in terms of vaguely defined security threats or
speculation about “predatory geoengineering
<https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/2016EF000464>*.*”
In a recent guest blog for the *Internationalist*
<https://www.cfr.org/blog/internationalism-protects-why-we-need-reboot-baruch-plan-geoengineering>,
for example, Elizabeth Chalecki argues that “Just as nuclear fission can
produce both weapons and energy, so too can geoengineering provide benefits
if applied judiciously;” unsaid but insinuated is that solar geoengineering
might also be used to wage war, which justifies placing it under
international control in the same way the Baruch Plan of 1946 sought to
internationalize atomic energy. (For other recent examples see here
<https://www.wilsoncenter.org/article/without-attention-geoengineering-could-upend-foreign-policy>
 and here
<https://ceobs.org/from-enmod-to-geoengineering-the-environment-as-a-weapon-of-war/>
.)

The premise that solar geoengineering is weaponizable, however, is either
false or grossly overstated and inapplicable to those technologies that
might plausibly be deployed. Precision is a defining attribute of weaponry;
indeed, the so-called revolution in military affairs has made it the most
prized attribute for many strategists, as exemplified by the dominant role
now played by precision-guided munitions. One hallmark of solar
geoengineering, however, would be its *imprecision*.

Take stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI), which would disperse aerosols
in the stratosphere to reflect sunlight and reduce some harmful aspects of
climate change. SAI is the most prominent type of solar geoengineering and
the one most associated with fears about weaponization. Yet injected
materials cannot be contained along lines of latitude and would quickly
encircle the globe. Some north-south control is possible, but only at a very
crude level
<https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14693062.2019.1668347?scroll=top&needAccess=true>
using
just a few knobs
<https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/2017GL076472> like
dispersing in equatorial versus polar regions or in northern versus
southern hemispheres. Only *climate* effects—changes in average temperature
and precipitation—could plausibly be induced; *weather* control at the
level of individual storms or heat waves would be impossible to engineer.
Moreover, there would be several steps between any induced climate *change *and
the types of climate *impacts*—like changes in water availability or crop
yields—that might affect states and societies in a somewhat predictable
manner. There is simply no physical basis
<https://keith.seas.harvard.edu/files/tkg/files/128.macmynowski.canwetestgeoeng.e.pdf?m=1528486753>
for
believing that significant—large compared to natural variability—impacts
could be targeted at the level of the nation-state.

Thus, SAI would be much too imprecise to function as a useful weapon. To
take just one scenario, suppose the United States wished to attack
Venezuela. The most predictable damage the United States could inflict
using SAI would be a reduction in precipitation caused by dispersing
aerosols solely in the southern hemisphere; doing so would shift the
Intertropical Convergence Zone
<https://www.nature.com/articles/nclimate1857> (ITCZ), an equatorial band
of tropical rainfall northward, leading to decreased rainfall over
Caribbean South America. But since the ITCZ circles the globe, this action
would disrupt (sub)tropical precipitation worldwide. Indiscriminate climate
modification of this nature would surely not be welcomed by China
(America’s principal rival), India (the linchpin of America’s Indo-Pacific
strategy), or Mexico (America’s southern neighbor and third largest trading
partner).

Furthermore, the effect would be slow-moving within Venezuela, requiring
perhaps years to determine whether reduced rainfall was responsible for
observed impacts like droughts or food shortages. And it would be even
harder to link this intervention to combat readiness, battlefield
conditions, and other operational variables with clear implications for
warfighting. Whatever strategic or tactical benefits might accrue to the
United States, they would be dwarfed by the costs, risks, and uncertainties
produced by worldwide rainfall disruptions affecting friends and enemies
alike. SAI lacks the minimum level of precision—in space, time, and
effect—implicit in the concept of a weapon.

The other two solar geoengineering technologies regularly
discussed—low-level marine cloud brightening (MCB) using seawater spray to
block incoming sunlight, and high-altitude cirrus cloud thinning (CCT) via
dissipative seeding to enable more outgoing heat to escape the
atmosphere—could be deployed with far more precision in space and time, yet
it would still be extraordinarily difficult to use them to produce strong
local effects, and such effects would inevitably cause significant distant
consequences <https://www.mdpi.com/2225-1154/9/4/66>. It is conceivable
that if MCB or CCT were deployed at global scale then they could be
fine-tuned using meteorological data to enable limited weather control. But
this is unproven, and even if possible, the physical consequences might be
too diffuse or easily countered to have significant military value.

This is not to say that weaponization is utterly impossible. If solar
geoengineering was implemented using low-Earth orbiting sunshades
adjustable in real time, then some more precise military applications are
imaginable. Yet this form of solar geoengineering is so far from practical
reality as to be science fiction.

Weaponization might therefore be at least theoretically possible in a few
exceptional cases, but in terms of real world policy relevance, the kinds
of solar geoengineering that might plausibly be deployed in the next
half-century—including SAI—would simply not be weaponizable. This
conclusion does not depend on any assumption of goodwill, but instead
follows directly from an understanding of the physical limits of practical
technologies. For this reason, serious assessments of solar
geoengineering—like the recently released National Academies of Sciences
report
<https://www.nap.edu/catalog/25762/reflecting-sunlight-recommendations-for-solar-geoengineering-research-and-research-governance>—ignore
the issue altogether.

This is encouraging, and yet the persistence of hints and suggestions that
solar geoengineering might be weaponizable has the cumulative effect of
helping shift attention away from hard, unavoidable problems toward more
fantastical concerns regarding nebulous threats to national and global
security. As discussions about solar geoengineering start to move from
academic forums to policy circles, it is time to leave such distractions
behind and focus more squarely on those aspects of this otherwise promising
technology with real potential to cause harm and destabilize world politics.

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