https://physicstoday.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/PT.3.4768

Should solar geoengineering be part of how humanity counters climate
change?Moving
forward requires research and international and intergenerational
participation.
Toni Feder

Solar geoengineering research should be cautiously ramped up, says the US
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) in a
report released on 25 March. Tools to cool the planet cannot undo global
warming, but they may avert some of its worst impacts.
Today’s average global temperature is 1.2 °C higher than preindustrial
levels, and last year was among the three hottest on record, according to
the World Meteorological Organization. The 2015 Paris Agreement’s long-term
goal is to keep the rise well below 2 °C and to try to limit it to 1.5 °C.
But models predict that unless extraordinary measures are taken, the
increase could reach or even exceed 4 °C by the end of the century.
“We are in a critical time for tackling climate change,” says Chris Field,
an environmental scientist at Stanford University who chaired the NASEM
committee. “We know it’s difficult to make societal changes to get to zero
greenhouse gas emissions. That difficulty provides a compelling motivation
to understand the full portfolio of options.” Solar geoengineering may be a
useful addition to the existing options of reducing emissions, removing
carbon from the atmosphere, and adapting to warming. (See, for example, the
article “Negative carbon dioxide emissions,” by David Kramer, *Physics
Today*, January 2020, page 44 <https://doi.org/10.1063/PT.3.4389>.)
The report, *Reflecting Sunlight: Recommendations for Solar Geoengineering
Research and Research Governance*, urges that research be pursued in the
intertwined areas of science, technical feasibility, impacts, risks, and
benefits. Ethics, public perceptions, and governance of climate
interventions also need to be considered. It recommends that the US
government invest $100 million–$200 million over five years. Such a funding
level would represent a multifold increase over current global spending on
climate intervention but would be a small fraction of the overall funding
for climate studies.
The report emphasizes inclusivity; the whole world should be involved in
decisions that have universal impact. And while it endorses research, it
also stresses that neither NASEM nor the report’s authors advocate the
deployment of solar radiation modification. Research into solar
geoengineering “is a threat-reduction study,” says Paul Wennberg, an
atmospheric chemist at Caltech and a member of the NASEM committee. “It’s
shocking that we are thinking about doing this kind of stuff. It shows we
are globally in a pickle. It highlights how critical it is to quickly
reduce our greenhouse gas emissions.”

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