https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-981-19-0767-8_2

The Problems with Tech Fixes

Patrick Moriarty & Damon Honnery

Abstract

Technical fixes are highly favoured by most decision-makers because they
involve the least disruption to existing social and economic order.
However, in today’s ‘full world’ they often meet with unintended
consequences. In this chapter, we examine a number of these in the context
of mitigating climate change: nuclear power; energy-efficient improvement;
various technologies for carbon dioxide removal (CDR); and geoengineering
in the form of solar radiation management (SRM). Nuclear energy is losing
market share, and even the nuclear industry does not predict share
recovery. Reductions in energy intensity have not prevented global energy
growth, because of unmet demand in presently low-energy countries. CDR in
the form of forestation has been implemented in some places, but net loss
in global forest biomass is still occurring. Other forms of CDR are still
unproven at the very large scales needed. SRM is likewise unproven, and
like CDR technologies, would eventually face FF depletion.

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