https://www.wired.com/story/think-climate-change-is-messy-wait-until-geoengineering/

*Think Climate Change Is Messy? Wait Until Geoengineering*

Someone's bound to hack the atmosphere to cool the planet. So we urgently
need more research on the consequences, says climate scientist Kate Ricke

HERE’S THE THING about the stratosphere, the region between six and 31
miles up in the sky: If you really wanted to, you could turn it pink. Or
green. Or what have you. If you sprayed some colorant up there,
stratospheric winds would blow the material until it wrapped around the
globe. After a year or two, it would fade, and the sky would go back to
being blue. Neat little prank.

This is the idea behind a solar geoengineering technique
<https://www.wired.com/story/geoengineering-is-the-only-solution-to-our-climate-calamities/>
known
as stratospheric aerosol injection, only instead of a pigment, engineers
would spray a sulfate that bounces some of the sun’s radiation back into
space, an attempt at cooling the planet. It’s the same principle behind a
supervolcano loading the stratosphere with aerosols and blocking out the
sun. And it, too, would rely on those winds distributing the material
evenly. “If you do it in one place, it's going to affect the whole planet,”
says climate scientist Kate Ricke, who studies the intersection of
geoengineering, human behavior, and economics at Scripps Institution of
Oceanography. “Not just because you've cooled down and changed the global
energy balance, but because the particles spread out.”

While it’s not likely that someone will colorize the atmosphere anytime
soon, it's getting increasingly likely that someone will decide it’s time
for stratospheric aerosol injection. Emissions are not declining at
anywhere near the rate needed to keep global temperatures from rising 1.5
degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels, and the climate crisis is
worsening
<https://www.wired.com/story/its-time-to-delete-carbon-from-the-atmosphere-but-how/>
.

But the science isn’t ready
<https://www.wired.com/story/more-scientists-now-think-geoengineering-may-be-essential/>.
This anthropogenic geoengineering
<https://www.wired.com/story/geoengineering-climate-fine-print/> might
trigger unintended effects, like droughts in certain regions and massive
storms in others. Plus, if engineers abruptly stopped spraying aerosols in
the atmosphere, temperatures would swing back to where they started,
potentially imperiling crops and species
<https://www.wired.com/story/how-engineering-earths-climate-could-seriously-imperil-life/>
.

Still, stratospheric aerosol injection would be fairly cheap. And there’s
nothing stopping countries from unilaterally deciding to spray their
airspace, even though those materials would ultimately spread around the
globe. “I just have a hard time seeing with the economics of it how it
doesn't happen,” says Ricke. “To me, that means that it's really urgent to
do more research.”

WIRED sat down with Ricke to talk about the allure and potential pitfalls
of geoengineering <https://www.wired.com/story/lets-talk-geoengineering/>,
what makes it so politically perilous, and how scientists can make sense of
it—for the good of humanity and the planet. The conversation has been
condensed and edited for clarity.

*WIRED: Can you give me an idea of the scale that we'd be talking about
with solar geoengineering—both spatial scales and timescales?*

Kate Ricke: Let's say you want to start geoengineering today to stabilize
global temperatures where we are, or maybe bring it down a little bit. You
basically need a fleet of airplanes that can reach the stratosphere. We're
talking on the scale of maybe tens to hundreds of airplanes, and the
capability to spray aerosol precursors.

But the way that the stratosphere works is that once you get up there,
stratospheric winds take things around the planet relatively quickly in
bands of latitude. And then slowly over time, on the timescale of months,
things sort of migrate in general from equatorial regions up toward the
poles, and then particles fall out near the poles. So you wouldn't need to
be flying through the whole stratosphere spraying stuff. The stratosphere
does a lot of work to spread it out. And that's part of the reason why you
can't do stratospheric geoengineering over just one area.

*WIRED: Would we notice this? Visually, would we see anything?*

KR: Yes, on an absolute scale. It changes the ratio of direct and diffuse
radiation. So the idea is the sky would on average become a little bit
whiter, and, for example, sunsets would become a bit more vivid. It's
definitely much smaller than the difference between going from the desert
in California to the city. The white skies thing is also not, in my
opinion, probably the biggest problem.

*WIRED: What about any concerns about toxicology? Is this stuff benign to
living creatures on Earth?*

KR: It's not benign—it's the same stuff that comes out of power plants.
Large concentrations of it in one area makes people and crops sick. But, in
terms of the scale, the amount you need in the stratosphere is way, way
smaller than what we emit from power plants, and it's spread out over the
planet.

People have done some studies on this, too, and it seems like probably the
biggest risk from the particles would be to sort of sensitive high-latitude
ecosystems—so polar ecosystems that don't get very much exposure to urban
pollution right now, but would get more from this. Especially because the
particles move towards the poles, generally, before they precipitate out of
the stratosphere.

*WIRED: Say a country unilaterally says, ‘We're going to do this.’ They
want to cool down their own country by spraying the stratosphere, and it
doesn't matter if it's going to wrap around the planet.*

KR: Legally, it's complicated, because countries own their airspace up to
space, basically. It's a little ambiguous. So people could spray stuff over
their country, and it would go everywhere. And then [the particles] stay in
the atmosphere for on average about a year and a half. They spread out and
the radiative effects take effect immediately. That's why after a large
volcanic eruption, you see a dip in the global temperature immediately that
persists for about a year to two years and then drops off again. So you
wouldn't need to be spraying stuff every day, necessarily. If you stopped
doing it for two years, the effect would go away.

I'm having a hard time seeing how we're *not* going to do it at this point,
actually, because it's so inexpensive. Already the impacts of climate
change are looking to be so disruptive that I don't see in this world how
such a low-expense solution doesn't get implemented by someone. There's
just nothing else in the world that can cool the planet as quickly. Even if
we started rapidly decarbonizing and taking CO2 out of the atmosphere
<https://www.wired.com/story/its-time-to-delete-carbon-from-the-atmosphere-but-how/>,
it's still a decade timescale for consequences. Whereas blocking sunlight,
the climate response starts right away.

*WIRED: I've seen some modeling that if you were to suddenly stop solar
geoengineering, you'd have a problem with temperatures* *dramatically
climbing and imperiling species*
<https://www.wired.com/story/how-engineering-earths-climate-could-seriously-imperil-life/>
*.*

KR: If the program got disrupted, and we were blocking a lot of warming
with stratospheric geoengineering, you would get this really rapid warming
if someone stopped doing it. I mean, it would be catastrophic if we stopped
treating our drinking water too, right? There's things that humans do that
we need to keep doing, or it's catastrophic.

The technology's not so complicated that we would need just the person who
developed the technology to be the one to keep doing it. And so I'm a
little skeptical about that argument being the biggest issue, because we
already basically know how to do it. It's within the grasp of a
medium-sized country or something. The resources are substantial enough
that it would be hard for a single individual, or a very small country to
do it. But it's not like nuclear weapons or something like that.

*WIRED: Are we getting to the point where the science is sound enough that
we can begin to make these decisions? And is that even going to be
possible, given the general lack of cooperation on an international scale?*

KR: There might be some technical experts, like me or other people who have
worked on this, that would say: ‘Yes, I've seen enough to believe it.’ But
in order to have collective decision-making at the global scale, you need
science that's viewed as legitimate by everyone. Not *everyone*, but a lot
of people. And we're not there, by a longshot, with geoengineering.

But that's why we need more research. And we need more diversity of who's
doing research and where, because the results are going to need to be
viewed as legitimate by a much broader group of people. They're not right
now. That's definitely not true.

*WIRED: Why not?*

KR: Because it's been a small group of mostly elite university white dudes
in North America and Europe who've done all the research. And people just
don't automatically trust a small group of elites like that. It's actually
important that the ministry of the environment in Bangladesh has someone
who's Bangladeshi talking to them about geoengineering science. So that, I
think, is the biggest problem with the science right now. You can look at
certain areas of climate science and you see we're saying the same thing
over and over and over again. But there has been some value to that,
too—replication and repetition. It builds consensus, and it builds trust in
the science.

*WIRED: Country-scale commitments to reducing emissions* *are one thing*
<https://www.wired.com/story/its-time-to-delete-carbon-from-the-atmosphere-but-how/>*,
but this involves everybody simultaneously because we share one atmosphere.
Is there going to be agreement on that?*

KR: We're not there where we can have global consensus about
geoengineering, not by a longshot. But I would guess it's more likely that
this will happen *not* with a global consensus. Certainly, there are some
actors that, if they did it, would be constrained by more powerful actors.
But there are definitely other major actors in the world that already exist
that could do geoengineering and get away with it. Because the alternative
is: Is it bad enough for you that you're willing to go to war over it?

*WIRED: What about the moral hazard? Wouldn't geoengineering make it less
urgent to reduce emissions?*

KR: The moral hazard is a totally valid concern, and it's a big one. In
terms of the existing empirical research, the results are very mixed. It
doesn't seem like [for] individual humans, when you put them in behavioral
experiments, that a moral hazard around geoengineering exists. Telling
people about geoengineering in a controlled way tends to make people want
to mitigate greenhouse gases *more*, because people think geoengineering is
kind of nuts and scary. They see it as an indicator that climate change is
a big problem.

This is me editorializing about my fellow climate scientists, but I think
most climate scientists don't like the idea of geoengineering. And the
reason they still don't like it the most is because of the moral hazard.
They think we’ve got to tell people ‘This is a bad idea’ as long as
possible because of that. And they're probably right. But the risk is that
if things get bad enough with climate change, people are going to do
geoengineering anyway, and we're not going to be ready to do it.

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