https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2022-02-01/a-ban-on-solar-geoengineering-would-limit-our-climate-options

Solar Geoengineering Research Is a Risk Worth Taking

In the fight against climate change, the world can’t afford to limit its
options.


Clara Ferreira Marques


Apocalyptic scenes open “The Ministry for the Future,”
<https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/kim-stanley-robinson/the-ministry-for-the-future/9780316300162/>
the
latest novel by science fiction writer Kim Stanley Robinson. India is hit
with a calamitous heatwave — one so sweltering, with humidity so high, that
bodies struggle to sweat, and therefore to survive. Thousands die in the
sun-heated waters of a lake where they had sought refuge. In the end, 20
million perish.

Grappling with the upheaval and fury that follow, India breaks an
international agreement governing climate engineering and injects vast
quantities of sulfur particles into the atmosphere in a desperate attempt
to cool the subcontinent. “Everyone knows, but no one acts,” an official
says. “So we are taking matters into our own hands.”

Robinson’s tale is fictional. But it is set only a few years into the
future, and the climate disaster he describes, along with the technology
and diplomatic conundrum, are not made up. Those are all too
real. Insufficient understanding and the underdeveloped governance of such
options means the world is no better prepared in reality than in fiction
when it comes to radical interventions, in particular when it comes to the
contentious question of solar geoengineering.

But does that mean, as a group of scientists have argued in an article
published last month
<https://wires.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/wcc.754>, that we should
effectively ban the nascent technique now?

Solar geoengineering covers a range of proposals to cool the earth by
reflecting some sunlight back into space, including with stratospheric
aerosol injection as in Robinson’s novel. It’s fast-acting, in climate
terms, but does not tackle the underlying cause of the global warming
problem and is high-risk if it goes awry. It’s an option no one wishes to
see in action.

We need to see the world as it is, not as it should be. As Jesse Reynolds,
senior policy officer at the Global Commission on Governing Risks from
Climate Overshoot at the Paris Peace Forum, put it to me,
solar geoengineering is a risk-risk trade off, and must be understood in
that context: There is no low-risk path forward. Still, the idea of a
non-use agreement that effectively halts support for research and
development, as advocated by this coalition of academics, should give
us pause. Given the gravity of our climate predicament, and the likelihood
the world will overshoot its global warming limit or hit tipping points,
this option is simply not yet one we can discard —  at least not before
understanding it further. For now, it’s terrifying and terrible in the way
that chemotherapy is: We don’t want it, but can we deny ourselves the
possibility? It’s no substitute for dramatic carbon reduction, but do we
know enough today to refuse it?

The arguments against solar geoengineering are to some extent familiar. The
most common posits that this sort of technology is at best wishful thinking
and at worst a distraction, when the world should be concentrating on
dramatic reductions of carbon emissions to limit global temperature rise
to 1.5 degrees Celsius, the ambition laid out in the Paris Agreement
<https://unfccc.int/process-and-meetings/the-paris-agreement/the-paris-agreement>.
Certainly that climate goal is clear, and governments like Australia’s,
hiding carbon inaction behind future technological miracles
<https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/nov/19/a-farce-experts-dismiss-government-claims-a-controversial-and-unproven-technology-will-cut-emissions-by-15>,
should be called out.

The second, related, argument is that discussing and researching solar
radiation management risks normalizing it, creating a technological
slippery slope that locks humanity in. It’s not clear this would happen
with a technology that is not in private hands, and it worryingly implies
knowledge alone is toxic. Dismissing what we do not understand is an even
bigger wager than a bet on limited and controlled research. What happens
if, as in the novel, it is deployed unilaterally? Not to mention that, as
Daniel Bodansky and Susan Biniaz point out in a 2020 article
<https://www.ourenergypolicy.org/resources/climate-intervention-the-case-for-research/>,
research into climate intervention can actually help bring governments’
“magical thinking” on technology down to earth.

Then there’s the idea, raised by the scientists arguing for a ban, that the
technology is impossible to govern in an inclusive and just manner. That,
they argue, would require “effective and enforceable political control by
the Global South.” The governance challenge is enormous, but does that make
it impossible? Even research? Or is the standard here simply impossibly
high?

To be clear, solar radiation management in most of its forms — bar,
perhaps, painting roofs white —  does come with peril. Uneven
application could cool one region but alter vital rain patterns
elsewhere. Understanding
the already changing planet
<https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-02-09/we-won-t-know-if-solar-geoengineering-is-working>
could
become harder. A sudden stop to it for reasons of human error,
financing, even politics or war would be devastating, an idea known as
termination
shock
<https://www.researchgate.net/publication/323693605_The_Risk_of_Termination_Shock_From_Solar_Geoengineering>.
If we ever get that far, the question of who deploys it, where and to what
degree, is even more fraught. Because the engineering costs are relatively
modest and the technology powerful, overkill is a possibility.

But the debate is not yet at whether we should pull that lever. Indeed, the
world can credibly put in place a moratorium on the deployment of solar
geoengineering. But research, responsibly managed, is vital and not
impossible to imagine.

First, support research with public funds. Guide and regulate. Provide an
agreed code of conduct that could be based on the existing Oxford Principles
<http://www.geoengineering.ox.ac.uk/www.geoengineering.ox.ac.uk/oxford-principles/principles/>
that
includes local permitting, transparency requirements and a stakeholder
process which puts in place public consultation. Full disclosure and
information sharing in particular will be crucial.

Then, begin to tackle the governance gap. Climate intervention is not
without rules — a plethora of treaties already exist, covering air
pollution, biological diversity, marine waste. The duty to do no harm is a
widely recognized principle of customary international law.  Yet troubling
empty spaces still abound.

Who would eventually authorize the technology or oversee it, should it ever
be used? How would any cross-border disputes be regulated? Who decides what
side effects are permissible, or not? How can all parties, even those must
vulnerable, be included? The scientists are right to raise these issues,
but a ban does not solve representation. As Janos Pasztor, executive
director of the Carnegie Climate Governance Initiative, put it to me, it
isn’t viable to shut down the conversation yet, or to allow a small group
to do so. Indeed, a ban requires a truly inclusive discussion.

Governance would be imperfect — so much of our governance is — but the
United Nations provides structures that can and must be adapted to
consider more complex climate decisions, giving a louder voice to the most
vulnerable. That is already long overdue. We manage the global macroeconomy
without an overarching body; this, too, can be done if interests are
aligned.

The world’s nations may yet decide to permanently ban solar geoengineering.
In Robinson’s novel, naysayers will be glad to hear, a raft of
other techniques come into play. But it’s too soon to veto what we barely
understand — and may yet need.

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