https://thehill.com/opinion/energy-environment/559859-climate-engineering-research-is-essential-to-a-just-transition-and
 
<https://thehill.com/opinion/energy-environment/559859-climate-engineering-research-is-essential-to-a-just-transition-and>

BY BEN KRAVITZ, DANIELE VISIONI, LISA H. SIDERIS, AND DOUGLAS G. MACMARTIN

The U.S. National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine have recently 
recommended an expansive federal research effort into climate engineering 
techniques. These proposed interventions, like creating a layer of microscopic 
droplets in the upper atmosphere or brightening low clouds over the ocean, aim 
to reduce solar radiation arriving at Earth’s surface. While only a temporary 
means of addressing climate change, these strategies could prevent some of the 
worst effects of climate change while more permanent methods, like reducing 
greenhouse gas emissions, are ramped up.

Through the past few decades of research, mostly with climate models, we are 
starting to gain an understanding of the benefits and risks of climate 
engineering. Climate engineering cannot perfectly cancel the climate effects of 
greenhouse gases. For many climate aspects (like temperature, rainfall and sea 
ice), climate engineering does a good job of offsetting climate change in most 
places, but not all. There would also likely be many serious sociopolitical 
risks, such as geopolitical negotiations about ideal climates or transboundary 
harms (real or perceived) and compensation for them. These risks need to be 
carefully studied and weighed so that decision-makers can decide whether and 
how climate engineering should be used as part of the overall response to 
climate change. 

Despite researchers’ acknowledgment of these risks and the need to proceed 
cautiously, some have voiced total opposition to even conducting research on 
climate engineering. Climate engineering experts have been accused of looking 
for ways to prolong society’s use of fossil fuels or being guided by a 
“paternalistic form of humanitarianism” while aiming to suppress any other 
systemic solution to climate change. These arguments have undertones that 
climate engineering research and the pursuit of equitable systemic changes are 
mutually exclusive. We argue that such claims are wrong.

Keeping fossil fuels in the ground instead of burning them will prevent climate 
change from getting worse. Reversing climate change requires removing 
greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. Any honest framing of climate engineering 
needs to start with these physical science-based facts. However, a rapid 
transition to non-fossil fuel sources is unlikely to keep the world below the 
temperature targets negotiated under the Paris Agreement. A global temperature 
increase of 1.5 degrees Celsius could easily be reached by 2035, and serious, 
damaging climate change is already occurring prior to that threshold.

Some sectors, such as transportation, are difficult to decarbonize. In some 
cases, especially in developing countries, reliable, cheap electric power is 
more effective at preserving equity than green economy investments.

This already “baked in” warming increases risks. Glaciers are retreating, and 
with them, regular water supply for billions of people. Extinctions have been 
directly tied to climate change. Global agricultural productivity has slowed. 
The Antarctic ice sheet may be irreversibly collapsing, and the oceanic 
“conveyor belt” is slowing down.

These are not “punishments” by Mother Earth for our collective misbehavior, as 
some have framed them. They are the consequences of past and present political 
decisions, blended with misinformation campaigns and both corporate and 
governmental delays, which prevented the world from steering away from fossil 
fuels decades ago. The worst of these consequences are being felt by poorer, 
developing countries whose contributions to climate change have been minimal.

Climate engineering has been accused of being a “climate fix” or workaround 
that perpetuates addiction to fossil fuels and removes incentives to address 
the root causes of climate change. Such accusations often argue that the same 
technological thinking that is responsible for climate change cannot get us out 
of climate change. But greenhouse gas emission reductions will take time and 
require incredible political will. At the same time, planetary-scale greenhouse 
gas removal will be expensive, if it will even work at that scale. 


Climate engineering may be the only available option that could rapidly reduce 
the risks of climate change, and it will introduce novel risks as well. 
Opinions on whether and how it should be used may differ, and that’s a good 
thing. Concerns about research being a slippery slope to deployment or the 
specter of unintended consequences are legitimate and should be discussed. But 
shutting down the discourse dismisses voices from climate-vulnerable 
communities, including in developing countries and the long disenfranchised 
Global South, who want to have a say in the matter. There is much common ground 
and good will to be found between researchers and advocates for climate 
justice. Blanket dismissals of climate engineering research and the motives of 
those doing the research benefit no one. 

To start, we need to change the way climate engineering is often talked about: 
It is not a “solution” to climate change, a Plan B (a false dichotomy — should 
it only be used if mitigation fails?), nor a panic button in case of climate 
emergency. It is a possible tool to reduce suffering, particularly in the 
developing world. This tool needs evaluation. It does not “buy time” for an 
energy transition: the transition has to start now, regardless of whether 
climate engineering is used. No one thinks that climate engineering is an easy 
fix. It should be envisioned as a supreme assumption of responsibility: If 
climate change is indeed an existential crisis, then no option should be left 
off the table, and the benefits and risks of all possible methods of addressing 
climate change need to be understood.

Our hope is that society collectively realizes that moving as fast as possible 
toward reducing climate change is our best chance of preserving a liveable 
planet. If climate engineering could help, especially vulnerable communities, 
then outright dismissal may end up undermining a just transition to a 
sustainable world and ensuring more suffering than anybody deserves. 

Ben Kravitz is an assistant professor in the Department of Earth and 
Atmospheric Sciences at Indiana University. He is an expert on climate 
engineering research and is the co-founder and long-time chair of the 
Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project (GeoMIP). His work has been 
featured in national and international reports, including the Fifth and Sixth 
Assessment Reports of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 
for which he was a contributing author, as well as testimony to Congress and 
the recent National Academies report on climate engineering.







-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/geoengineering/574804BC-4522-463F-A44A-AE5414184B35%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to