https://insideclimatenews.org/news/07072021/sami-sweden-objection-geoengineering-justice-climate-science/

An Indigenous Group’s Objection to Geoengineering Spurs a Debate About
Social Justice in Climate Science

The Sámi people of Northern Sweden say blocking out the sun with reflective
particles to cool the earth is the kind of thinking that produced the
climate crisis in the first place.

By Haley Dunleavy
July 7, 2021

It was February in northern Sweden and the sun was returning after a dark
winter. In the coming months the tundra would reawaken with lichens and
shrubs for reindeer to forage in the permafrost encrusted Scandinavian
mountain range. But the changing season also brought some unwelcome news to
the Indigenous Sámi people, who live across northern Scandinavia, Finland
and eastern Russia.
The members of the Saami Council were informed that researchers at Harvard
planned to test a developing technology for climate mitigation, known as
solar geoengineering, in Sápmi, their homeland. “When we learned what the
idea of solar geoengineering is, we reacted quite instinctively,” said Åsa
Larsson Blind, the Saami Council vice president, at a virtual panel about
the risks of solar geoengineering, organized by the Center for
International Environmental Law and other groups.
“This goes against our worldview that we as humans should live and adapt to
nature,” she said.
The planned geoengineering project sought to limit global warming by
releasing reflective particles into the stratosphere, reducing the amount
of sunlight that beams down to Earth’s surface. The test, originally
scheduled for June, would have been the first step in a series of
small-scale experiments aimed at understanding the feasibility of combating
global warming.
Although the test would only have focused on ensuring that a high-altitude
balloon worked as designed and would not have involved any immediate
atmospheric experiments, the Saami Council spoke out against it, objecting
not just to the lack of consultation about research conducted on and above
their lands but to any solar geoengineering development, regardless of
where it took place.
After the Saami Council objected, writing letters to the Harvard
researchers, their external advisory committee and the Swedish Space
Corporation (SSC), the balloon test was suspended until further discussion
between research agencies and local stakeholders like the council could
take place.
“Our research team intends to listen closely to this public engagement
process to inform the experiment moving forward,” the advisory team for the
research project said in a statement.
But the council’s opposition has renewed global debate about the role of
geoengineering and other types of actions to reduce warming and who gets to
make the decision about whether, when and where to implement them. In many
ways, the controversy in Sweden is a microcosm of the broader issues:
Should scientists continue to research geoengineering in the face of
multiple ethical and physical risks? And how do scientists make sure that
Indigenous voices are included in discussions on climate solutions?
Many climate and social justice activists object to the ethical
implications of geoengineering as a solution for global warming and the
potential for an untested technology to go wrong. And they warn that the
fossil fuel industry could use it as a free pass to continue business as
usual.
Some scientists, meanwhile, view the idea of precluding promising
geoengineering projects as potential climate solutions as equally
troubling. There may come a time in the near future when such technology is
urgently needed, these scientists say, and shutting down benign,
preliminary experiments sets a dangerous precedent.
The Harvard project, known as SCoPEx, or the Stratospheric Controlled
Perturbation Experiment, proposes to fly a balloon 12 miles above the
Earth’s surface to release reflective calcium carbonate particles into the
stratosphere. If successful, the SCoPEx team hopes their findings will
better inform future efforts towards solar geoengineering.
Lead SCoPEx researcher Frank Keutsch said the proposed tests have no
physical impact beyond that of any other balloon flight. “The same is even
true for the one where we would put particles in the stratosphere,” he
said. “It’s really less than a minute flight of a Boeing 747 that puts
particles into the atmosphere.”
The Saami Council’s opposition stems from a belief that geoengineering is
the wrong way to approach climate change.
“The way of thinking that humans are entitled to change and manipulate our
surroundings has actually brought us into the climate crisis in the first
place,” Larsson Blind said.
She also cited the danger of relying on the development of geoengineering
technology as a solution. Because solar geoengineering presents a pathway
for climate mitigation that is an alternative to reducing the burning of
fossil fuels, the large corporations or nations that are responsible for
the majority of greenhouse gas emissions might see it as an opportunity to
avoid changing their damaging climate-practices.
Though the Sámi people have adapted their traditional cultural practices in
the face of colonization, many Sámi continue to maintain a traditional
semi-nomadic livelihood in the summer, herding reindeer in addition to
farming, hunting, fishing and gathering. Rapid climate change in the
Arctic, as well as the extractive businesses associated with fossil fuel
consumption, threaten that livelihood. Larsson Blind said that the risks
that climate change poses to Sami culture are motivation to reject
geoengineering as an alternative to cutting emissions.
 “A plan B for some business somewhere might still mean that our culture
will not survive, so we are sticking to the one path that we know is
respectful towards nature,” she said.
Larsson Blind said that, despite opposing geoengineering, the Saami
Council’s position wasn’t based on a universal disapproval of science. “I’m
convinced that research and technology development will play a very
important role,” she said. “But that’s not the only thing we need.”
She added: “There are no others that can transform Indigenous knowledge
into needed action other than Indigenous peoples themselves. I’m confident
that Indigenous peoples can play a key role in contributing to the needed
transformation. For us to do that, we need to be part of the discussion.”


*SCoPEx Will Revise Their Plans*
Originally, SCoPEx researchers and their advisory committee planned to
invite public opinion and guidance, both globally and locally in Sweden,
once the tests that involved releasing particles began. The Saami Council’s
letters changed that. The suspension of the balloon test now comes with a
rescheduled public engagement process that will occur before any future
tests take place.
Frank Keutsch, lead researcher of SCoPEx, said he saw this change as part
of the project itself. “In many ways,” he said, “we designed SCoPEx to be
an experiment both in science and [the governance involved in] how to
conduct experiments.”
Keutsch said that maintaining the legitimacy and transparency of SCoPEx has
been key in the project’s development. In their new plan, the SCoPEx
advisory committee recognizes the need for greater engagement of Indigenous
groups like the Sámi.
After public feedback, as well as further legal, financial, and scientific
review, the advisory committee said, the members will recommend whether or
not the experiment should proceed.
Keutsch said he shares some of the Saami Council ethical worries about the
SCoPEx project. “The biggest concern I have about doing the research, is
just knowing that somebody doing research may be a disincentive for people
to cut emissions,” he said.
Even despite that risk, he and the external SCoPEx advisory committee view
the research as necessary to better prepare for a future in which
geoengineering has to be implemented.
“People often fail to fully consider that there are both significant risks
of conducting tests and significant risks from not conducting tests,” a
committee spokeswoman said in an email.
Keutsch added, “I believe the science is important, so to be clear, I do
want to continue these experiments.
Keutsch said he wants to have a conversation with Saami Council members to
better understand their position on solar geoengineering.
The advisory committee has reached out to the Saami Council to discuss how
to “acknowledge [the Saami Council’s] concerns and have given a commitment
to reconnect and engage should any future flight be proposed in their
region.”
But, Larsson Blind said, the Saami Council wants the conversation to be
about the efficacy of geoengineering rather than SCoPEx’s future activities
in Sweden, which is what the council understood the invitation for
discussion to be. The council has sent a second letter to Harvard, signed
by 35 other Indigenous groups across the world, this time calling for a
complete shutdown of SCoPEx.


*Broken Trust*
The back-and-forth between the Saami Council and SCoPEx is part of a
larger, continuing discussion about how to seek Indigenous perspectives on
climate research and adaptation when the history of colonization persists
in today’s scientific pursuits.
In a recent editorial in Science magazine, Robin Bronen, at the Alaska
Institute for Justice, and Patricia Cochran, Executive Director of the
Alaska Native Science Commission, wrote, “Scholars continue colonization
when Indigenous Tribes are not represented in, or consulted for permission
to do, research on their communities and lands.” The Saami Council’s
interaction with SCoPEx may be one example of how the historical traumas of
colonization can make Indigenous groups reluctant to engage in further
discussion if trust has already been broken, whether intentionally or not.
Kyle Whyte, a member of the White House Environmental Justice Advisory
Council, has studied the role of Indigenous peoples in geoengineering
discussions across the globe. He has found that Indigenous perspectives on
whether climate practices should be supported often are sought only after
the projects are fully developed.
“There’s a large academic literature that shows you can’t make up a
solution and then try to persuade Indigenous people to go along with it.
It’s just not democratic,” he said. Instead, Whyte said, research needs to
adopt “a consensus process before any ideas have crystallized.”
Whyte, a professor at University of Michigan and member of the Citizen
Potawatomi Nation, said that Indigenous people’s motivations for finding
climate solutions often include urgent factors other than researchers’
goals of stopping global warming and lowering emissions.
“There are tribes right now that are having to relocate, tribes that can’t
practice cultural ways, and communities experiencing direct violence from
extractive industries operating in their territories,” said Whyte, “To
suggest that our understanding of the solutions are the same [as that of
non-Indigenous researchers] is ridiculous.”


*The Risks of Stopping Research*
While the Saami Council said that conducting any research on solar
geoengineering presented high risks, SCoPEx and other scientists have said
that not conducting research could be even riskier. Some researchers argue
that global emissions aren’t dropping fast enough to reach the goal
identified by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change to limit
warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit).
Ken Caldeira, a scientist at Stanford University’s Carnegie Institution for
Science who researches pathways to net-zero carbon emissions, said there
may come a time when solar geoengineering is urgently needed. The worst
case scenario, he said, is that solar geoengineering is deployed in haste
without a full understanding of all the consequences. Doing the research
could help prevent any unknown—and unwanted—repercussions.
Jessica Hellman, director of the Institute on the Environment at University
of Minnesota, who has argued for better collaboration between
geoengineering researchers and ecologists, said,  “Science could help
navigate the complexities of risk. I guess there is an underlying
assumption that if you study something, you’re just going to enable it to
happen.”
Instead, Hellman said, “Maybe the science helps figure out like ‘Oh wow,
that’s harder than we thought. Maybe we shouldn’t do it.’ ”
There are also implications for science as a whole. Caldeira, who is also a
senior scientist at Breakthrough Energy, said, “The precedent of stopping
experiments that are in themselves benign and that do not have any
expectation of leading to any sort of imminent harm—that it’s a very
dangerous precedent.”
Yet, what is benign to one group may not be considered benign by another.
Jennie Stephens, the director of the School of Public Policy and Urban
Affairs at Northeastern University, agreed with Whyte’s view that more
effort was needed toward climate solutions that also include social change.
Solely focusing on the technical solutions to climate change and not
investing the same amount in social innovation and justice, she said, has
resulted in climate action that exacerbates inequities and disparities.
“We won’t be able to make the transformative changes that we need until and
unless we focus on social justice,” said Stephens.


*The Way Forward*
To Hellman, these are questions that are pressing not only for
geoengineering but for climate adaptation as a whole. “This is just the
first of so many potential debates about proper stewardship of the planet
in the face of concerns about catastrophic climate change,” she said, “I
think it’s wise for [SCoPEx] not to push forward in the face of discontent,
especially with Indigenous groups.”
Keutsch said he thinks it’s important that scientists “find mechanisms
where a diverse range of voices will be heard.” He said one lesson from
Sweden was to seek collaboration earlier.
“I was always very hesitant to go out and try to engage scientists
globally. I always thought it’s really pretentious to go out and say to
other scientists ‘Do you want to be part of this experiment?’ when I don’t
even know if it works.”
Whether Indigenous knowledge holders and climate researchers can work
together to find solutions relies on their ability to repair relationships.
Said Whyte: “I think the question really is, is there a future where
Indigenous people and scientists from academic institutions, like Harvard,
will have adequate levels of trust and consent and reciprocity and
accountability to be able to make responsible decisions together.”

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