https://thehill.com/opinion/energy-environment/569936-a-realistic-response-to-the-climate-wake-up-call

A realistic response to the climate wake-up call

BY JOSEPH ALDY AND RICHARD ZECKHAUSER, OPINION CONTRIBUTORS

Leaders across the world raised the alarm in response to the latest
assessment of climate change by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC). Christiana Figueres, the former executive secretary of the
UN Framework Convention on Climate Change said, “This is a massive wake-up
call that is sounding yet another alarm bell.”
<https://theglobalherald.com/news/climate-report-this-is-a-massive-wake-up-call/>
 Al Gore <https://thehill.com/people/al-gore> warned “There is no time left
to waste,”
<https://www.independent.co.uk/climate-change/news/al-gore-john-kerry-ipcc-report-2021-b1899471.html>
and
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said, “A code red for humanity.”
<https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/un-sounds-clarion-call-over-irreversible-climate-impacts-by-humans-2021-08-09/>


IPCC reports have often been labeled a “wake-up call” by leaders and
environmental advocates, such as in 2018
<https://news.un.org/en/story/2018/10/1022492>, 2014
<https://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/2014/apr/01/business-reactions-ipcc-climate-change-report-experts>
, 2007 <https://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0208/p25s01-sten.html> and 2001
<https://www.cnn.com/2001/TECH/science/07/12/global.warming/index.html>.
The critical question is how we should respond to such an alarm. Thus far,
hope has triumphed over experience. The usual response is to call to
redouble our efforts to cut greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, without noting
that prior calls have not been heeded.

An unprecedented, global emissions-cutting program is urgently needed; we
agree. But that would be far from sufficient. We must also confront some
exceedingly uncomfortable facts. While rhetoric has soared; the policy has
flopped. Since the nations of the world agreed on a climate change treaty
after the first IPCC report, global carbon dioxide emissions have increased
60 percent
<https://media.rff.org/documents/Three_Prongs_for_Prudent_Climate_Policy.pdf>.
The most ambitious emissions-cutting scenarios imaginable will be
insufficient to avoid extreme human suffering in the coming decades, and
beyond.

Meeting net-zero emission goals could avoid the worst consequences of
climate change, but massive losses to life, health and property would
persist. A realistic response to climate change, one that could
significantly curb consequences to human wellbeing, requires objective
assessment and a new policy direction. The world must get serious,
urgently, about solar geoengineering.

Solar geoengineering — such as the injection of aerosols in the
stratosphere to block sunlight and thereby cool the planet — first received
attention as a climate change strategy in a 1965 report
<https://legacy-assets.eenews.net/open_files/assets/2019/01/11/document_cw_01.pdf>
to
President Johnson. Since these aerosols typically fall back down to the
Earth’s surface over months to a year or so, the injections would have to
be repeated over a considerable period of time
<https://climatenetwork.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/CAN-SRM-position.pdf>.
It is not a prevention strategy, like cutting emissions. What solar
geoengineering does do is reduce warming for whatever level of GHGs has
accumulated in the atmosphere. Given that carbon dioxide and most other
GHGs decay significantly over centuries, solar geoengineering may be the
only feasible strategy for combatting the massive climate change losses
associated with the human-caused emissions that have already occurred.

Solar geoengineering has two major appeals. First, volcanic eruptions have
served as natural experiments
<https://www.annualreviews.org/doi/pdf/10.1146/annurev.energy.25.1.245>
enabling
scientists to learn how injecting small particles high in the atmosphere
cools global temperatures. Second, the development of specialized aircraft
to deliver particles into the atmosphere is feasible, and its costs would
be minimal
<https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/aae98d/meta> relative
to the damages of climate change.

For decades, some scientists, environmental advocates and policymakers have
opposed even considering research on solar geoengineering.  A common claim
<https://www.boell.de/sites/default/files/bigbadfix.pdf> is that solar
geoengineering would tilt the balance of nature and would represent an
experiment with the only planet we have. Unfortunately, humans have already
put that balance off tilt. The past century of fossil fuel combustion and
other human sources of greenhouse gases have already massively affected
what was the natural environment <https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg1/>.
Through acts of omission and commission, we will be managing planet Earth
for the foreseeable future.

That solar geoengineering deployment will bring unintended consequences is
a second basis for objection. The presence of any such risks is labeled a
decisive concern. This is the Delaney Clause
<https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8672873/> approach to food risk: no
substance, however small its risk, could be added to the food supply,
however great the benefits. The potential for unintended consequences is
significant, we agree. But we need research to better understand them.
Possibly, they can be controlled; possibly solar geoengineering should be
abandoned. But given the earth-shaking risks of climate change, a
significantly ameliorating technology deserves to be assessed on a
risk-reduced versus risk-created basis.

The third objection
<https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2016EF000445> to solar
geoengineering is the fear that it would diminish incentives to reduce GHG
emissions. The rather dismal record of cutting emissions — in the absence
of solar geoengineering — suggests that emission-cutting incentives are
already weak. Indeed, pursuing solar geoengineering might serve as an awful
action alert
<https://media.rff.org/documents/Three_Prongs_for_Prudent_Climate_Policy.pdf>
that
galvanizes the public’s attention to the seriousness of climate change. If
so, it would draw greater support for all strategies — reducing emissions,
investing in resilient infrastructure, deploying solar geoengineering — to
mitigate the immense risks posed by a changing climate.

Last year, Congress appropriated $4 million for research
<https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/01/us-geoengineering-research-gets-lift-4-million-congress>
on
solar geoengineering. The National Academies recently called for $100-$200
million in solar geoengineering research spending
<https://www.nationalacademies.org/news/2021/03/new-report-says-u-s-should-cautiously-pursue-solar-geoengineering-research-to-better-understand-options-for-responding-to-climate-change-risks>.
These are tip-toe steps toward a realistic response. Beyond an up ramp in
research and development spending, we need to begin conversations among
policymakers, stakeholders and the worldwide public about solar
geoengineering as a strategy worthy of investigation.

A changing climate will create immense losses. This year’s floods in
Europe, droughts in the Western U.S., intense cyclones in the Pacific and
unprecedented forest fires around the globe are modest precursors. Any tool
with the potential to mitigate these losses merits consideration. Solar
geoengineering would be a measure to tame these harms and buy time until we
approach a decarbonized world.

Time ticks, the planet warms and the losses mount. An ambitious research
program on solar geoengineering is an urgent priority. Realism requires
that we determine whether it should be implemented and if so how.

*Joseph Aldy is a professor of the Practice of Public Policy at the Harvard
Kennedy School. He served as the special assistant to the president for
Energy and the Environment over 2009-2010. Richard Zeckhauser is Ramsey
professor of Political Economy at the Harvard Kennedy School. *

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