https://kencaldeira.wordpress.com/2022/01/21/a-ban-on-solar-geoengineering-research/

A BAN ON SOLAR-GEOENGINEERING RESEARCH?

Ken Caldera

A colleague asked me about whether I would sign on to an effort that would
effectively ban most research on solar geoengineering.
<https://wires.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/wcc.754> Here is a
lightly edited response.

A few points:

*1. The main problem with this letter is that it is an assault on freedom
of research that is in-itself benign. *

I don’t see that banning outdoor research on solar geoengineering is
different in kind from the Catholic Church banning Galileo from dropping
balls off the leaning tower of Pisa.

There should be a presumption that if an experiment is expected to lead to
negligible direct harm, that the experiment can go forward unless it would
lead to an expectation of imminent harm that could not easily be averted by
other means.

*2. I am increasing critical about people *sig*ning onto policy
positions *w*here
it is not entirely clear whether the person has special expertise related
to the issues contained therein.*

If I sign a letter saying Trump should be prosecuted for his crimes, nobody
will think that I have special insights into Trump’s crimes or appropriate
legal processes.

But if I sign onto a letter like this, a reader might reasonably assume
that I have special expertise on policy measures that would lead to
international risk reduction. In fact, I have no such expertise.

I try to avoid signing anything that is in this grey zone, where it would
not be clear to readers whether I was signing as a domain-area expert or
merely as a concerned citizen with no special expertise.

*3. As a matter of public policy, a no first use ban may or may not be
effective at banning first use. I am not expert in the efficacy of such
bans.*

We can see how successful various international constraints were at
stopping Russia from taking Crimea. Maybe having countries declare that
they won’t do bad things helps to prevent bad things from happening, but
maybe not.

Were it clear that I was signing as a citizen, and not as someone with
special expertise, I would probably sign onto a “no first use” ban.

*4. As a practical matter, defining what is or is not solar geoengineering
research will be very difficult as the definitions are based on
establishing intent. *

Bad actors can still go ahead and study stratospheric chemistry, aerosol
distribution techniques, effects of changes in diffuse radiation on
ecosystems, climate effects of stratospheric aerosol loading, etc. They
just need to do this without the intent of producing a system that would
geoengineer the planet.

These sorts of bans will stop good actors and force bad actors to be less
forthcoming about intent.

I recall with the iron fertilization experiments, many of the scientists
could care less about iron fertilization as a climate mitigation tool, but
they just saw the experiments as a chance to learn more about how marine
ecosystems respond to nutrient additions. I think we can assume there are
stratospheric chemists who might feel the same way about stratospheric
aerosol release experiments.

Politicians can fund these programs thinking of solar-geo as the use case
with the scientists engaged in the study as pure science.

How are such cases to be adjudicated?  What are the proposed procedures if
you do an experiment and I think your intent is really to learn about solar
geoengineering?  <https://www.nature.com/articles/nclimate2036>Do I take my
charges to some sort of inquisition so that they can determine what is
truly in your heart of hearts?

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