https://www.grid.news/story/climate/2022/04/04/is-there-a-moral-imperative-to-consider-solar-geoengineering/

Could solar geoengineering reduce human suffering?

A contentious climate change idea might benefit from reframing a somewhat
stale debate.

Dave Levitan <https://www.grid.news/author/dave-levitan/>

Solar geoengineering is in drastic need of rebranding.

The impacts of climate change continue to grow clearer and more dire, while
countries backslide on plans to wean off fossil fuels and cut greenhouse
gas emissions to prevent the worst effects of warming. All that has raised
the profile of solar geoengineering: the controversial, and still
theoretical, method of cooling the planet by injecting tiny aerosol
particles into the stratosphere to reflect more of the sun’s energy back
into space.

The technology is often discussed in the public and the media in terms of
its most obvious effect: a modest but immediate reduction in global average
temperature, which could help limit climate damage while humanity works to
zero out its greenhouse gas emissions. But that common framing often fails
to make clear that this temporary technofix — which depends on adding more
unnatural pollution to the skies — could also reduce human suffering as the
world seeks to stabilize the climate.

Call it the world’s biggest trolley problem.
<https://theconversation.com/the-trolley-dilemma-would-you-kill-one-person-to-save-five-57111>
The
benefits would almost certainly be spread unevenly around the planet, and
solar geoengineering could worsen conditions in some places even if it cuts
down on suffering overall. But steering that stale conversation over
geoengineering directly into this ethical hornets’ nest may provide some
more clarity to a field that has been rehashing the same arguments for two
decades.

“Reframing it as a humanitarian intervention would certainly change the
debate,” said New York University professor and climate economist Gernot
Wagner <https://gwagner.com/> during a recent Harvard University seminar
<https://bioethics.hms.harvard.edu/events/weekly-consortia/ethics-research-and-biotechnology>
on
the ethics of geoengineering. “Yes, of course this is about being a
humanitarian, in the all-encompassing sense of the term.”

Think of it this way: Between now and 2050, or 2070, or 2100, there is some
total amount of human suffering in the form of hunger and illness and
premature death. We’ll call that amount X. If the world deployed solar
geoengineering, it would likely lower global temperatures, shift
precipitation and disaster patterns, alter crop yields, and do other things
to produce a different total — call it Y. If Y is less than X, there is an
obvious moral imperative to choose the path with less suffering.
Emissions cuts are not enough

“The main motivation behind it would be dealing with short-term suffering
that can’t be mitigated through any other means,” said Kate Ricke
<https://gps.ucsd.edu/faculty-directory/kate-ricke.html>, a climate
scientist at the University of California, San Diego, who has been involved
with geoengineering modeling research. “Climate change is already causing a
lot of damages and suffering, and there’s just no way to reduce the climate
change that’s already happening as quickly as solar geoengineering might be
able to.”

Governments can throw money at climate adaptation, but that simply won’t
protect everyone from increasingly devastating heat waves, crop losses and
more, especially in the poorer parts of the world. Every new climate report
<https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/28/climate/climate-change-ipcc-un-report.html>
makes
it more and more clear: The impacts are here, now, and getting worse with
every ton of CO2 humans send skyward.

The climate system’s inertia adds another wrinkle. Let’s say humanity
really did manage to stop emitting greenhouse gases by 2050, which the U.N.
says would give humanity the best chance of avoiding severe and
irreversible climate impacts
<https://www.ipcc.ch/2018/10/08/summary-for-policymakers-of-ipcc-special-report-on-global-warming-of-1-5c-approved-by-governments/#:~:text=Global%20net%20human%2Dcaused%20emissions,removing%20CO2%20from%20the%20air.>
over
the long term. But zeroing out climate-change-causing emissions themselves
is not enough to eliminate the suffering that would result from the
heat-trapping gases produced up until 2050. Carbon dioxide stays in the
atmosphere for centuries, and much warming — and associated sea level rise,
weather changes and more — are baked into the system for far beyond any
point where we would entirely abandon fossil fuels.

A recent U.N. climate report, released in late February, highlighted
the additional
problem of “overshoot”
<https://www.grid.news/story/climate/2022/02/28/climate-scientists-to-world-there-are-no-do-overs/>
—
if the temperature soars past the threshold of 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7
degrees Fahrenheit) over preindustrial levels, some of the impacts are
permanent. Even if the heat is turned back down in subsequent years, you
can’t get back some of the ice sheets, coral reefs and other ecosystems
humans depend on.

“If you want to absolutely reduce the amount of suffering from climate
[change], you have to do something beyond emissions cuts,” said David
Keith, a Harvard physics professor who has for more than a decade been the
most publicly prominent solar geoengineering researcher and is among those
trying to navigate a rocky path toward the first physical experiments
<https://www.keutschgroup.com/scopex> of the technology.

The potential to prevent suffering, disease and death on an unknown but
potentially wide scale in the face of those inertial problems, some experts
say, makes it worth considering and researching — and talking about — solar
geoengineering’s potential as quickly as possible.
Winners and losers

Of course, using this framework for decision-making requires that we can
reliably quantify the amount of climate-change-related suffering with and
without solar geoengineering. One of the criticisms of the technology —
which is also known as solar radiation management or SRM — is that there
are too many “unknown unknowns,” potential unforeseen problems with
theoretically catastrophic consequences given the approach’s necessarily
global scope.

As the science historian James Fleming has written
<https://www.amazon.com/Fixing-Sky-Checkered-Columbia-International/dp/023114413X?asin=0231144121&revisionId=&format=4&depth=1>,
“Global climate engineering is untested and untestable, and dangerous
beyond belief.” It may be technically “untestable” because an actual test
would be equivalent to deployment at global scale, but computer modeling
studies have started to make serious dents in the issue, and major
institutions such as the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and
Medicine have issued calls
<https://nap.nationalacademies.org/catalog/25762/reflecting-sunlight-recommendations-for-solar-geoengineering-research-and-research-governance>
to
expand and formalize such research programs.

“I don’t think there’s a single equation” for suffering, Ricke said. But
there is plenty of modeling research, which in principle is quite similar
to that done for climate change itself, to try teasing out impacts in a
geoengineered world versus a non-geoengineered world. In both cases, models
are tasked with projecting how adding pollution to the atmosphere alters
the temperature of Earth’s atmosphere, oceans and land.

A study published last summer showed that SRM would offer increased global
yields <https://www.nature.com/articles/s43016-021-00278-w> of corn, wheat,
rice and three other staple crops when compared with only emissions
reductions. Another from 2019 found increased rice yields
<https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2018EF001094>
specifically
in China with SRM and a middle-of-the-road warming scenario.

But a crucial point is that there are likely to be winners and losers, just
as there are with climate change. For example, a 2016 modeling study showed a
20 percent decrease <https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28190903/> in yields
of ground nuts in India with SRM. There are also hints that geoengineering
might shift some disease patterns around the world. And another paper
<https://keith.seas.harvard.edu/publications/quantifying-impact-sulfate-geoengineering-mortality-air-quality-and-uv-b-exposure>
has
found that SRM would cause around 26,000 excess deaths each year starting
in 2040 through various changes to air quality and other effects — but
unchecked global warming itself would likely cause far more mortality,
though shifted in the geographic details. This sort of research raises the
thorny ethical quandary of whether to proactively harm certain people in
order to help potentially more numerous others.

Other approaches dispense with such drilled-down specifics and try to offer
reasonable approximations for overall well-being. A 2020 study
<https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-13957-x> led by then-Georgia
Tech and U.C. San Diego graduate student Anthony Harding used economic
models coupled with temperature and precipitation modeling to examine the
effects of solar geoengineering and various climate change scenarios
through 2100. He and his colleagues found that overall, lowering the global
temperature with SRM “mitigates the economic harms of warming-associated
climate change,” raising the global gross domestic product. But, more
strikingly, they found that while climate change itself will exacerbate
income inequality between countries — the rich get richer, the poor get
poorer — geoengineering would reduce that inequality dramatically.

“It basically makes the poor countries better off compared to the rich
countries,” Keith said. (Harding, the lead author of the paper in question,
is now a postdoctoral fellow in Keith’s group
<https://keith.seas.harvard.edu/people>, though Keith was not a co-author
on that bit of research; geoengineering remains a fairly cloistered corner
of the scientific world.) Keith said the magnitude of the result suggests
it is likely a reliable outcome: “I think the underlying direction is very
robust.”

Using income inequality between countries as a proxy for suffering
certainly takes some of the difficulty out of determining more detailed
numbers for hunger, or flooding, or fire, but as Harding and his colleagues
readily admit, the idealized SRM scenario they model is not likely how it
would go in the real world. What if most of the world’s nations
collectively give the go-ahead for a geoengineering program, but a few
resist, and a war breaks out as a result? That messy but very human sort of
left turn isn’t trivial to work into a forward-looking computer model, but
it could very easily change the calculus on suffering.
A slippery slope?

Another long-standing feature of the geoengineering debate is the concept
of moral hazard, where the act of deploying SRM — or even doing the
modeling research, let alone physical experiments like Harvard’s postponed
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/02/climate/solar-geoengineering-block-sunlight.html>
 Scopex <https://www.keutschgroup.com/scopex> — could hinder the world’s
efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions. The general idea is that an
artificial way to cool the planet would give bad actors such as oil
companies and petrostates an angle to lobby for slowed mitigation efforts.

Though it is difficult to prove this sort of possibility would come to pass
— and the world isn’t exactly charging full steam ahead to fix climate
change even without this supposed extra negative incentive — for the
purposes of the net-suffering discussion, the concept does need to be
considered. After all, a single year of burning coal, oil and gas causes
millions of premature deaths
<https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/feb/09/fossil-fuels-pollution-deaths-research>,
so any slowed progress away from these energy sources is highly meaningful
from a human suffering perspective. How does this factor in?

Another common argument against SRM centers on governance. “It’s completely
ungovernable — there’s absolutely no way that we would be able, as a
collective global society, to agree on how to implement a solar
geoengineering program,” said Jennie Stephens
<https://cssh.northeastern.edu/faculty/jennie-stephens/>, director of
Northeastern University’s School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs. She
was one of several dozen academics and policy experts who recently put
forth a so-called International Non-Use Agreement
<https://www.uu.nl/en/news/call-for-non-use-agreement-solar-geoengineering> on
SRM, essentially proposing to ban not only deployment of solar
geoengineering but even some research and public funding for that research.
(It is worth noting that the technology required to implement SRM,
specifically planes capable of hauling the aerosols up past the point where
similar aircraft can generally fly, does not yet exist. Experts agree,
however, that it would not take all that much time or money to move past
that obstacle.)

Scientists involved with SRM pushed back against this initiative and
essentially pointed out that the arguments surrounding governance ignore
the details of human suffering. “We clearly botched worldwide Covid vaccine
governance, and yet we wouldn’t have been better off without vaccines
rollout at all,” said Cornell University researcher Daniele Visioni on
Twitter <https://twitter.com/DanVisioni/status/1484206854926639106>. An
imperfect way to improve the totality of human existence is better than
abandoning the project entirely.
View from the Global South

Holly Jean Buck
<https://arts-sciences.buffalo.edu/environment-sustainability/faculty/faculty-directory/holly-buck.html>,
a scientist at the University of Buffalo focused on social and policy
issues related to climate change and geoengineering, said that a reframing
of the solar geoengineering conversation around its humanitarian potential
could have concrete effects on what research is done, by changing the
questions scientists seek to answer. “It would potentially … center
vulnerable people, their needs, their concerns, their questions,” she said.
She told a story of how she and some colleagues spoke with people
<https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0016718518300551>
living
in the far north of Finland about their questions and concerns on SRM;
those concerns led to some modeling analysis of how deploying the
technology could affect winter conditions and more that provided meaningful
answers. “The vulnerable people are the ones who stand the most to lose and
the most benefit from some of these interventions,” Buck said.

There is a push to broaden the circle of scientists studying solar
geoengineering to include more participants from the Global South, where
climate change’s effects will be most pronounced. For example, a project
called the Decimals Fund <https://www.degrees.ngo/decimals-fund/> has
awarded almost $1 million to scientists in developing countries. They will
study things like SRM’s effects on hydro-climatic extremes in Indonesia,
agriculture in Jamaica and health in Bangladesh. If the people who did not
cause but stand to be most affected by climate change, and potentially gain
the most from SRM, took the lead, that would certainly change the ethical
parameters of the equation.

“It’s hard to see places like the U.S. having a legitimate basis to object
to a solar geoengineering program that’s led by the Global South,” Ricke
said. “We don’t really have a leg to stand on.”

In the end, the world may elect to forego solar geoengineering because it
cannot agree on the particulars or the research actually says Y (suffering
with geoengineering) is *greater* than X (suffering without it). Or maybe
the ethical thorniness of the SRM trolley problem proves too much for the
U.N. or other international collectives to overcome. But ignoring any
intervention’s potential to make life better for more people seems, from an
ethical standpoint, impossibly misguided.

“At stake is a moral dilemma,” wrote Pablo Suarez and Maarten van Alst, of
the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Center, in a 2016 paper
<https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/2016EF000464> on
the humanitarian angle to solar engineering. “In the current climate,
everybody has no choice but to be immersed in an experiment of planetary
proportions. With or without geoengineering, we are all lab rats in the
greenhouse.”

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