https://www.triplepundit.com/story/2022/reflecting-sunlight-climate-change/744521

Reflecting Sunlight Could Ensure Human Safety on a Warming Planet

Words by Stewart Patrick and Kelly Wanser

Earth has a 50-50 chance of warming 1.5 degrees Celsius above
pre-industrial levels in the next five years, according to a new report
<https://mcusercontent.com/e35fa2254c2a4394f75d43308/files/c739c482-e277-fc7c-12ea-c9e368e10b88/WMO_GADCU_2022_2026.pdf>
from
the World Meteorological Organization. Climate change has reached a
dangerous place. The climate is on track to warm 2.7 to 3 degrees Celsius
(4.9 to 5.4 degrees Fahrenheit) from pre-industrial times, with devastating
consequences for human safety and well-being. Around the world, communities
will suffer more frequent and intense heatwaves, droughts, wildfires,
storms, flooding and other calamities. The changes are already being felt,
with the frequency of such (not-so-natural) disasters quadrupling since
2000. As always, the world’s poor will suffer most.

More alarming still is the growing risk that warming will trigger abrupt,
catastrophic shifts in Earth’s natural systems. Such potential tipping
points <https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-03595-0> include an
accelerated melting of permafrost and a rapid collapse of the Amazon
rainforest.

It’s easy to be frightened about the future we are facing with global
warming. Fortunately, there may be a lifeline, albeit an unorthodox one. It
is called sunlight reflection, or solar climate intervention (SCI), and it
involves slightly increasing the reflection of sunlight from clouds and
particles in the atmosphere to reduce climate warming. Society needs to
explore this option because climate change poses a catastrophic threat now.
That is the central message of a report
<https://www.cfr.org/report/reflecting-sunlight-reduce-climate-risk> from
the Council on Foreign Relations, for which we served as author and
advisor, respectively.

The world currently has three main strategies to manage climate risk:
emissions reductions, carbon removal, and adaptation. Unfortunately, the
changing climate is now outpacing these efforts. Emissions must decline 50
percent by 2030 to meet the 1.5°C target, but are on pace to rise 16.3
percent instead. New technologies to capture and permanently store
atmospheric carbon could take decades to scale. Efforts to build resilience
against warming and its impacts are expensive, underfunded, and inherently
limited. Most local measures will be overrun by warming effects in the
interconnected climate system.

How much worse it will become depends on how warm it gets. Given this
predicament, the world cannot afford to ignore a potentially rapid climate
response that could keep people safe and natural systems stable while
humanity transforms the global economy and reduces the amount of carbon we
release into the atmosphere.

Increasing sunlight reflection to cool the climate could be accomplished in
various ways. The most promising options are based on naturally occurring
events. One approach would involve dispersing aerosols in the upper
atmosphere (or stratosphere), likely from aircraft. This would be a safer
version of the cooling effect of particles emitted during volcanic
eruptions, such as that of Mount Pinatubo in 1991, which reduced global
temperatures by about 0.5°C (1.1°F) over the ensuing fifteen months.
Another approach involves spraying a mist of sea salt from ships (or ocean
platforms) to brighten low-lying marine clouds. This approach would be a
cleaner version of the global cooling effect of current particulate
pollution, estimated at 0.5-1.2°C.

Despite these precedents, the idea of sunlight reflection has been
controversial, though that is starting to change as the risks of warming
intensify. Critics worry that climate interventions could carry large,
uncertain risks and will give governments, corporations, and citizens a
perceived pass to continue polluting. These warrant careful consideration.
They need to be weighed not in isolation, but against the rising safety
risks of an already warming the planet. The key question is: Can increasing
the reflection of sunlight from the atmosphere reduce the dangers posed by
global warming?

Unfortunately, we don’t know the answer because our understanding of the
relevant atmospheric processes and their impacts on natural systems is too
low. This leaves policymakers flying blind, unsure of the feasibility
of—and unable to make informed decisions about—reflecting sunlight to cool
the climate. Complicating matters, the world lacks monitoring systems and
specific agreements to govern the implementation of such approaches. This
increases the threat, as the National Intelligence Council has warned, that
a single country could launch a unilateral program sometime soon, with
global effects and geopolitical ramifications.

To ensure the world has the information it needs to evaluate these
approaches, the Biden administration and Congress must launch an ambitious,
well-funded national research program on reflecting sunlight to reduce
climate risk. Such an initiative would build on recommendations issued last
year by the U.S. National Academies, as well as direction already given to
U.S. science agencies by Congress in the FY22 funding bill to develop a
5-year plan for research to support an assessment of near-term climate
risks and solar climate intervention.

This U.S.-led effort must be grounded in international cooperation. The
United States should promote mechanisms for scientific collaboration,
multilateral monitoring and assessment, and joint decision-making on any
deployment of these techniques. The Montreal Protocol for Protection of the
Ozone Layer, which is already reviewing the implications of sunlight in the
stratosphere as part of its next Ozone Assessment, is a promising place to
start. That convention’s universal membership and commitment to
science-based decision-making have helped make it history’s most successful
environmental treaty.

Although current global tensions will complicate diplomacy, we believe that
a mutual vulnerability to climate change could create opportunities for
collaboration that cut across traditional geopolitical and ideological
lines, including between the United States and China and between advanced
economies and developing ones.

The ultimate solution to climate change is ending carbon emissions and
removing carbon from the atmosphere. The dilemma for humanity is how to
survive, much less thrive, during this transition. Sunlight reflection
could be a bridge that offers safe passage to a sustainable future. To
protect people and natural systems, we need to do the work to find out.
Stewart Patrick is a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and
the author of the recent report Reflecting Sunlight to Reduce Climate Risk:
Priorities for Research and International Cooperation.

Kelly Wanser is an innovator committed to pursuing near-term options for
ensuring a safe climate. As Executive Director of SilverLining, she
oversees the organization's efforts to promote scientific research,
science-based policy, and effective international cooperation in rapid
responses to climate change.

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