https://www.politico.eu/article/geoengineering-earth-global-warming-climate-change-carbon-dioxide-removal-solar-radiation-management/

The perils of making rules for climate manipulation

If humanity decides to tinker with Earth's thermostat, there are going to
have to be some rules on how to control the dial.

Many ideas for technologies to combat global warming by intervening in
planetary systems — sometimes called geoengineering — are still in the
research phase. But with climate change already taking hold, some could end
up getting used.

That's leading to growing questions about how they should be regulated.

"It's a major problem. We need a global governance mechanism to make sure
that rogue actors don't begin tampering with the world climate system
without adequate international consultation and assent," said Michael
Gerrard, director of Columbia University's Sabin Center for Climate Change
Law.

Most geoengineering tech broadly falls into two categories. The most
contentious is solar radiation management, or SRM, which aims to reflect
sunlight back into space to cool the planet by brightening clouds to make
them more reflective or injecting aerosols into the atmosphere to mimic the
sun-dimming effect of a huge volcanic eruption.

Despite the planet-wide consequences and risks — the aerosol injection
method could, for example, disrupt monsoon patterns
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00382-017-3810-y> — there's no
international law to stop someone deploying this type of tech, Gerrard said.

The other major category of geoengineering — large-scale carbon dioxide
removal (CDR) from the atmosphere, which includes ideas like fertilizing
oceans with nutrients to cause carbon-munching algal blooms or capturing
carbon directly from the air — is at least partially regulated.

Several international agreements apply to various CDR methods
<https://www.c2g2.net/wp-content/uploads/CDR-Evidence-Brief.pdf>, even if
"governance gaps" remain, said Janos Pasztor, director of the Carnegie
Climate Governance Initiative and a former United Nations assistant
secretary-general for climate change.

One example: the London Protocol
<https://www.imo.org/en/OurWork/Environment/Pages/London-Convention-Protocol.aspx>,
which bans commercial ocean fertilization activities but has only been
ratified by 53 countries.

Few agreements address geoengineering directly. In 2008, however, the
196-member U.N. Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) adopted a decision
<https://www.cbd.int/climate/geoengineering/> that some see as a moratorium
on such technologies.

The signatories agreed that "no climate-related geo-engineering activities
that may affect biodiversity take place, until there is an adequate
scientific basis on which to justify such activities" and until there's
been a consideration of the risks. However, "small scale scientific
research studies" are allowed.
A touchy topic

While the European Commission does finance carbon capture, storage and use
projects
<https://ec.europa.eu/jrc/en/research-topic/carbon-capture-utilisation-and-storage>,
it is wary of geoengineering. The EU funds some research projects to better
understand the science, but does not support deployment of such technology.

"The EU’s different climate policies and their underpinning analysis do not
consider geoengineering techniques like SRM or ocean fertilization, and
there is no financial support," a Commission official said.

In 2019, Switzerland unsuccessfully tried to submit a resolution
<https://www.politico.eu/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/24/Draft-resolution-for-consideration-for-the-4th-UN-environment-assembly-%E2%80%94-Geoengineering-and-its-governance.pdf>
to
the U.N. Environment Assembly asking for an assessment of geoengineering
techniques — including SRM — as well as potential governance frameworks.

“There was acknowledgement that this topic is relevant, that was not the
challenge,” said Felix Wertli, deputy head of the Swiss delegation at the
time and now head of the global affairs section at the country’s
environment ministry.

The Swiss idea was killed by two opposing worries — on one side the fear
that an assessment could make such technologies acceptable and on the other
a concern that it would open the door for rules hamstringing their
development.

“It is a sensitive political topic: If you have a U.N. report, would that
be enabling technologies that might be dangerous or risky? That was a
concern of some,” Wertli said.

Saudi Arabia and the United States — home to fossil fuel giants that have shown
interest
<https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/07/business/energy-environment/climate-change-carbon-engineering.html>
in
geoengineering — reportedly
<https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/mar/18/us-and-saudi-arabia-blocking-regulation-of-geoengineering-sources-say>
led
the opposition to the failed Swiss resolution.

Critics also argue that debating such ideas risks undermining more
conventional efforts to cut greenhouse gases.

"As long as we discuss geoengineering, we take other options off the
table," said Lili Fuhr, leader of the international environmental policy
division at the Heinrich Böll Foundation, a think tank affiliated with the
German Greens. "The fast exit from fossil fuels, the reorganization of our
agricultural systems ... all these debates that we need right now get no
room. It's a waste of time and money and political resources."

Others say that discussions need to take place regardless, noting that
according  <https://www.ipcc.ch/sr15/chapter/spm/>to the U.N.'s
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, "all pathways that limit global
warming to 1.5°C ... project the use of carbon dioxide removal (CDR)."

And on SRM, Wertli said: "We see that discussions and some research
activities are going on and can’t exclude that in the future some actors
might want to test or even apply SRM on a large scale. We can’t put our
head in the sand and have to think [about] appropriate governance
frameworks to contain potential risks."
Building a consensus

The other major problem the Swiss effort faced — and that any future
attempt at regulation will also run into — is the difficulty of finding a
consensus on geoengineering.

“Climate politics is slow and complex; agreeing on using untested
technology on a planetary scale could prove impossible,” a report
<https://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/ATAG/2021/656339/EPRS_ATA(2021)656339_EN.pdf>
by
the European Parliament’s research service warned earlier this year.

An international agreement remains a remote prospect. “The priority now is
learning and understanding both about the risky situation we are in and
what options exist. Nobody is talking about a treaty,” said Carnegie’s
Pasztor.

But he believes that even reluctant governments will eventually want to
talk about governance — if only out of fear that another country might
unilaterally deploy geoengineering tech.

Given how controversial these technologies are, Pasztor thinks the most
likely scenario is a deadly climate-related crisis that puts pressure on
governments to deploy SRM. “If that were to arise, it would be extremely
useful to have in place an international mechanism equipped to assess the
legitimacy of that deployment,” he said.

Glen Peters, research director of the Center for International Climate and
Environmental Research in Oslo, Norway, said the deployment of solar
blocking technology was “hard to think about it in the context of, let’s
say, climate impacts that are a little bit uncomfortable.” But if the world
reaches a point where “these climate impacts are a disaster, we can’t bear
this, this is completely shit hit the fan, we have to get out of this,
otherwise we’re all gonna die type rationale, then I could see SRM being
deployed.”

Some critics of geoengineering, including Fuhr of the Heinrich Böll
Foundation, would prefer to ban SRM altogether.

"It’s an untestable and ungovernable technology that is much too risky,"
said Fuhr. At the same time, existing regulation governing other techniques
needs to be “defended and expanded," she said.

Fuhr thinks finding a consensus will be challenging but noted that nearly
200 members of the CBD did manage to agree to halt geoengineering. “You can
criticize that it doesn’t have teeth — the U.S. aren’t part of it — but
it’s a consensus,” she said.

Switzerland, meanwhile, thinks it’s worth trying again.

“The topic is not less but if anything more relevant than two years ago,”
said Wertli. “So at the moment, we are considering ... whether to resubmit
a resolution together with other partners. It’s an ongoing discussion. But
it’s very clear that the topic is not off the table.”

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