https://thehill.com/opinion/energy-environment/576279-geoengineering-we-should-not-play-dice-with-the-planet


Geoengineering: We should not play dice with the planet
BY KIM COBB AND MICHAEL E. MANN, OPINION CONTRIBUTORS — 10/12/21 11:30 AM
EDT

The fate of the Biden administration’s agenda on climate remains uncertain,
captive to today’s toxic atmosphere in Washington, DC. But the headlines of
2021 leave little in the way of ambiguity — the era of dangerous climate
change is already upon us, in the form of wildfires, hurricanes, droughts
and flooding that have upended lives across America
<https://thehill.com/opinion/energy-environment/568462-july-was-a-frankenstein-month-created-by-the-fossil-fuel-industry?fbclid=IwAR2Rdf1G5AdhA46ncczhkTzTjMNLt2a9OTSwTbJh4viVTPGbYZeBKmAeWnM>.
A recent UN report
<https://thehill.com/policy/energy-environment/566801-climate-report-warns-temps-to-rise-15-degrees-celsius-over-preindustrial-levels>
on
climate is clear these impacts
<https://time.com/6088531/ipcc-climate-report-hockey-stick-curve/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=sfmc&utm_campaign=newsletter%20brief%20default%20ac&utm_content=%20%20%2020210809%20%20%20body&et_rid=165733989&fbclid=IwAR3QtjYZAaSH8N46YWz29CSNUPzg-bmvkZcdCp6S-tLPklrPm-gobG04g2Y>
will
worsen in the coming two decades if we fail to halt the continued
accumulation of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

To avert disaster, we must chart a different climate course, beginning this
year, to achieve steep emissions reductions this decade. Meeting this
moment demands an all hands-on-deck approach. And no stone should be left
unturned in our quest for meaningful options for decarbonizing our economy.

But while it is tempting to pin our hopes on future technology that might
reduce the scope of future climate damages, we must pursue such strategies
based on sound science, with a keen eye for potential false leads and dead
ends. And we must not allow ourselves to be distracted from the task at
hand — reducing fossil fuel emissions — by technofixes that at best, may
not pan out, and at worst, may open the door to potentially disastrous
unintended consequences.

So-called “geoengineering,” the intentional manipulation of our planetary
environment in a dubious effort to offset the warming from carbon
pollution, is the poster child
<https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/apr/22/climate-crisis-emergency-earth-day>
for
such potentially dangerous gambits. As the threat of climate change becomes
more apparent, an increasingly desperate public — and the policymakers that
represent them — seem to be willing to entertain geoengineering schemes.
And some prominent individuals, such as former Microsoft CEO Bill Gates,
have been willing to use them to advocate for this risky path forward
<https://www.newsweek.com/right-path-forward-climate-change-opinion-1571169>.


The New York Times recently injected momentum into the push for
geoengineering strategies with a recent op-ed
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/01/opinion/climate-change-geoengineering.html>
by
Harvard scientist and geoengineering advocate David Keith. Keith argues
that even in a world where emissions cuts are quick enough and large enough
to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius by 2050, we would face centuries of
elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations and global temperatures combined
with rising sea levels.

The solution proposed by geoengineering proponents? A combination of slow
but steady CO2 removal factories (including Keith’s own for-profit company
<https://keith.seas.harvard.edu/researchareas/direct-air-capture>) and a
quick-acting temperature fix — likened to a “band-aid” — delivered by a
fleet of airplanes dumping vast quantities of chemicals into the upper
atmosphere.

This latter scheme is sometimes called “solar geoengineering” or “solar
radiation management,” but that’s really a euphemism for efforts to inject
potentially harmful chemicals into the stratosphere with potentially disastrous
side effects
<https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/apr/22/climate-crisis-emergency-earth-day>,
including more widespread drought, reduced agricultural productivity
<https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-018-0417-3>, and unpredictable
shifts in regional climate patterns
<http://www.nature.com/doifinder/10.1038/ngeo915>. Solar geoengineering
does nothing to slow the pace of ocean acidification, which will increase
with emissions.

On top of that is the risk of “termination shock” (a scenario in which we
suffer the cumulative warming from decades of increasing emissions in a
matter of several years, should we abruptly end solar geoengineering
efforts). Herein lies the moral hazard of this scheme: It could well be
used to justify delays in reducing carbon emissions, addicting human
civilization writ large to these dangerous regular chemical injections into
the atmosphere.

While this is the time to apply bold, creative thinking to accelerate
progress toward climate stability, this is not the time to play fast and
loose with the planet, in service of any agenda, be it political or
scientific in nature. As the recent UN climate report
<https://thehill.com/policy/energy-environment/566801-climate-report-warns-temps-to-rise-15-degrees-celsius-over-preindustrial-levels>
makes
clear, any emissions trajectory consistent with peak warming of 1.5 degrees
Celsius by mid-century will pave the way for substantial drawdown of
atmospheric CO2 thereafter. Such drawdown prevents further increases
<https://apps.ipcc.ch/report/sr15/fig1/index.html> in surface temperatures
once net emissions decline to zero, followed by global-scale cooling
shortly after emissions go negative.

Natural carbon sinks — over land as well as the ocean — play a critical
role in this scenario. They have sequestered half of our historic CO2
emissions, and are projected to continue to do so in coming decades. Their
buffering capacity may be reduced with further warming, however, which is
yet another reason to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius this century.
But if we are to achieve negative emissions this century — manifest as
steady reductions of atmospheric CO2 concentrations — it will be because we
reduce emissions below the level of uptake by natural carbon sinks. So,
carbon removal technology trumpeted as a scalable solution to our emissions
challenge is unlikely to make a meaningful dent in atmospheric CO2
concentrations.

As to the issue of climate reversibility, it’s naïve to think that we could
reverse nearly two centuries of cumulative emissions and associated warming
in a matter of decades. Nonetheless, the latest science
<https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/jan/07/global-heating-stabilize-net-zero-emissions>
tells
us that surface warming responds immediately to reductions in carbon
emissions. Land responds the fastest, so we can expect a rapid halt to the
worsening of heatwaves, droughts, wildfires and floods once we reach
net-zero emissions. Climate impacts tied to the ocean, such as marine heat
waves and hurricanes, would respond somewhat more slowly. And the polar ice
sheets may continue to lose mass and contribute to sea-level rise for
centuries, but coastal communities can more easily adapt to sea-level rise
if warming is limited to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

While it’s appealing to think that a climate “band-aid” could protect us
from the worst climate impacts, solar geoengineering is more like risky
elective surgery than a preventative medicine. This supposed “climate fix”
might very well be worse than the disease, drying the continents and
reducing crop yields, and having potentially other unforeseen negative
consequences. The notion that such an intervention might somehow aid the
plight of the global poor seems misguided at best.

When considering how to advance climate justice in the world, it is
critical to ask, “Who wins — and who loses?” in a geoengineered future. If
the winners are petrostates and large corporations who, if history is any
guide, will likely be granted preferred access to the planetary thermostat,
and the losers are the global poor — who already suffer disproportionately
from dirty fossil fuels and climate impacts — then we might simply be
adding insult to injury.

To be clear, the world should continue to invest in research and
development of science and technology that might hasten societal
decarbonization and climate stabilization, and eventually the return to a
cooler climate. But those technologies must be measured, in both efficacy
and safety, against the least risky and most surefire path to a net-zero
world: the path from a fossil fuel-driven to a clean energy-driven society.

*Kim Cobb <https://thehill.com/person/kim-cobb> is the director of the
Global Change Program at the Georgia Institute of Technology and professor
in the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences. She was a lead author on
the recent UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Sixth
Assessment Report <https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg1/>. **Follow her on
Twitter: @coralsncaves <https://twitter.com/coralsncaves>*

*Michael E. Mann <https://thehill.com/person/michael-e-mann> is
distinguished professor of atmospheric science and director of the Earth
System Science Center at Penn State University. He is author of **the
recently released book, “The New Climate War
<https://www.publicaffairsbooks.com/titles/michael-e-mann/the-new-climate-war/9781541758223/>**:
The Fight to Take Back our Planet.” **Follow him on Twitter: @MichaelEMann
<https://twitter.com/MichaelEMann>*

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