https://www.sustainability-times.com/sustainable-business/geoengineering-and-the-support-for-global-south-scientists/

Geoengineering and the support for Global South scientists

There are reasons, good reasons, for why discussions about meeting the
challenges of climate change through geoengineering
<https://www.sustainability-times.com/expert-opinions/geoengineering-projects-will-need-broad-public-support/>
will
spark controversy.

The truth is that scientists still don’t know what will happen if the
planet starts to practice solar radiation management (SRM) or other
techniques at scale. It’s also true that hoping to “fix” the climate does
little to move humans urgently toward climate action and away from fossil
fuels.

But one of the biggest objections always has been that wealthy,
scientifically advanced nations will be making all the decisions.
Scientists in the Global South, rightly wary of solutions coming from the
same countries that caused so many climate problems, have argued in recent
years
<https://media.nature.com/original/magazine-assets/d41586-018-03917-8/d41586-018-03917-8.pdf>
that
they must have a voice in how any such technologies are developed and
deployed.

Which is why it’s so important that at the just-concluded Paris Peace Forum
<https://parispeaceforum.org/news/decouvrir-les-10-projets-accompagnes-en-2022/>,
one of the 10 international projects selected for ongoing support is The
DECIMALS Fund. It’s a program of The Degrees Initiative
<https://www.srmgi.org/about/> (formerly SRMGI) that exists to ensure that
scientists in the developing world have their own funding and other support
for SRM research.

“Degrees is neutral on SRM and does not take a position on how any research
should be governed or on whether SRM geoengineering should ever be used,”
the London-based organization explains. “Instead, we believe that
broadening the international conversation, in particular by bringing in
more voices from the Global South, will strengthen humanity’s ability to
handle the issue prudently and equitably.”

So far, at least 11 research teams have been awarded more than US$900,000
in grants. They’re all paired with experts in climate modeling and
geoengineering from other countries, adding to the goal of international
collaboration. Last year, a funded scientist from Benin published the first
SRM paper to come from a least-developed country.

At the University of the Philippines Los Baños, scientists led by Dr.
Patricia Ann Jaranilla-Sanchez are looking at what happens to agriculture
if SRM is used. Will it affect rainfall? Temperature? Rice and corn crop
yields?

Kenya’s questions are different—and that’s very much the point of The
Decimals Fund, and its commitment to ensuring that voices beyond the United
States and Europe are heard. Kenyans are looking at extreme rainfall and
urban flooding, with models that consider the climate impacts both with and
without SRM deployment.

“Climate extremes impact urban areas the most since they are home to a
major portion of the global population,” says the team, based at the
University of Nairobi and led by Dr. Franklin J. Opijah. “Changes in
extreme climate events witnessed globally are already impacting East
Africa, and extreme climate events are projected to intensify with climate
change which could be catastrophic for vulnerable populations.”

Argentinian researchers are investigating the potential SRM impacts on
freshwater resources in the La Plata basin, home to 160 million people.
Bangladesh wants to model how using SRM would impact public health,
including the spread of malaria, cholera and other infectious diseases.

For many climate scientists, the inevitable use of SRM
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11948-020-00258-6> or similar
solutions is a matter of when not if. Research into SRM is taking place in
India too, where a report released to coincide with the COP26 talks
stressed the need to ensure that the Global South is on an equal footing.

“The geoengineering methods and technologies could further widen the
North-South divide, by dividing the world into haves and have-nots or
winners and losers,” writes Dr. Dhanasree Jayaram
<https://www.orfonline.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/ORF_SpecialReport_165_Expectations-COP26.pdf>,
an international relations professor and the co-coordinator of the Centre
for Climate Studies at India’s Manipal Academy of Higher Education.

The potential for even more climate inequity is reduced by ensuring that
the developing world has access to its own geoengineering knowledge and
expertise. That’s exactly what The Degrees Initiative seeks to achieve.

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