https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/the-increasing-research-into-stopping-climate-change/

Earth’s last rays of hope?

*Emissions and temperatures continue to rise, leading to increasingly
radical research into limiting climate change. But are they safe?*

Parched birds falling from merciless skies; glaciers melting and creating
thousands of lakes; more than a billion people at risk of heat-related
illnesses; scores of heatstroke deaths; endless power cuts. It’s the stuff
of nightmares. Or, reality for millions in India and Pakistan these past
weeks.

The heatwave suffocating south Asia is a terrifying reminder of a dystopian
future that many believe is now too close for comfort. Scientists have
blamed the scorching conditions in India and Pakistan on climate change. So
what do we do?

World leaders have committed to cutting carbon dioxide emissions, but
action lags pledges, and we are not going fast enough to limit the rise in
global temperatures to below 2C, never mind to keep it under 1.5C, as
agreed in the 2015 Paris climate agreement. In fact, scientists recently
warned that there is a 50:50 chance of global average temperatures rising
to more than 1.5C above pre-industrial levels within the next five years.

And for those reading this article and thinking this is all happening “over
there”, remember last summer: wildfires raging from Athens in Greece to
Marmaris in Turkey; temperatures hitting 48.8C on the island of Sicily;
floods killing hundreds of people in Germany.

As the question of how to rein in climate change becomes more urgent, the
answers become more radical.

For many researchers, the most controversial form of solar geoengineering –
stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI), or dimming the sun by creating a
barrier in the stratosphere using aerosol particles – is a do-or-die roll
of the dice that would cool the planet and, crucially, buy more time to cut
emissions.

Everyone agrees that SAI is risky and that we don’t know what the
consequences of such climate manipulation would be. What divides people is
the question of whether or not we should even study the idea.

Advocates say the risk is worth it. Opponents counter that it will set the
world on a slippery slope to the unknown. The argument itself is blocking
serious attempts to find out the answer and the clock is ticking.

“My biggest fear is that we slither into solar geoengineering unwittingly,
without having done the hard work, and that could play out in various
different ways,” said Gernot Wagner, a climate economist at Columbia
Business School and author of *Geoengineering: the Gamble*. “One scenario
might be basically to not do the research … and then somebody somewhere is
going to pull the trigger… Say we have yet another heat storm above a
subcontinent of a billion people – like we literally had these past weeks
with a tenth of humanity … What else would it take? Would it take
two-tenths of humanity? Does it have to affect India and China?”

Geoengineering, or the use of new technologies and strategies to
intentionally manipulate the planet’s environment, is not just about
dimming the sun. Within this broad category, there are two main types of
interventions – removing CO2 from the air and solar geoengineering,
reflecting sunlight away from the earth.

Carbon dioxide removal is seen as the more reasonable option – even if the
various techniques used today are generally small-scale, energy-intensive
and expensive. Solar geoengineering is regarded as more speculative.
However, deflecting the sun’s rays doesn’t have to be high-tech – in Peru,
scientists painted a mountain white to reflect more heat and protect
glaciers, and buildings have been covered with special paint for the same
reason. Other ideas being considered include installing mirrors in space,
growing crops genetically modified to be brighter, spraying clouds with sea
salt to make them brighter and putting mirrors in deserts.

But the idea that has aroused the most controversy is SAI. On the face of
it, it’s relatively straightforward – a fleet of specially adapted planes
or rockets would spray compounds like sulphur dioxide or calcium carbonate
into the air to reflect the sun’s rays back into space. It could be a quick
fix: temperatures could come down within months and years, but the problem
is that although some research is being done, it is fragmented and efforts
to carry out real-world experiments can face intense opposition.

It’s not so much that we have to test the theory. We already know the
underlying premise is sound: when Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines erupted
in 1991, it expelled millions of tons of sulphur dioxide into the
stratosphere, cooling global temperatures by around 0.5C for almost two
years.

It’s the longer-term side-effects that are the great unknown.

The idea of injecting particles into the stratosphere edged into the
mainstream when Nobel Prize-winning atmospheric chemist Paul Crutzen wrote
a landmark essay on SAI in 2006 that broke the taboo many felt existed
around the subject.

But although Crutzen wrote that the idea should not be considered lightly,
he faced a backlash from colleagues who worried the idea might distract
from efforts to cut emissions.

It is this concept of moral hazard – the idea that even the potential of a
quick-fix solution will hamper efforts to cut emissions – that still
concerns opponents of solar geoengineering.

“The looming possibility of future solar geoengineering could become a
powerful argument for energy companies and oil-dependent countries to
further delay decarbonisation policies,” wrote a coalition of around 60
academics in an open letter that appeared in the WIREs (Wiley
Interdisciplinary Reviews) Climate Change online publication in January.

The scientists called for a ban on outdoor experiments, implementation,
patents, public funding and support from international institutions like
the United Nations. They argued that artificial cooling of the planet could
affect regional weather patterns, agriculture and supplies of food and
water, and would be impossible to govern fairly and effectively.

“Solar geoengineering is not necessary. Neither is it desirable, ethical,
or politically governable in the current context. With the normalisation of
solar geoengineering research moving on with rapid speed, a strong
political message to block these technologies is needed. And this message
must come soon,” the letter concluded.

Some scientists have also suggested that solar geoengineering could reduce
the effectiveness of solar panels, which offer an alternative to some of
our dirtiest energy sources.

Solar power now accounts for around 3% of the world’s energy supply and
there are two main types: photovoltaic, which uses solar panels, and
concentrated solar power, which uses mirrors to concentrate solar energy
from a large area, creating intense heat for industrial processes or
generating electricity – as at the molten-salt concentrated solar plant in
Dunhuang in China, the leading country for solar power.

Despite all these fears, Wagner says the idea that you can quash all future
research is just wishful thinking. “Yes, solar geoengineering is a scary
technology …It’s not something to joke about or take lightly, but none of
that means we shouldn’t be doing the research,” he says.

“It’s about weighing the risks of unmitigated climate change – the world we
are heading towards – against the risks of a world that also considers
solar geoengineering.”

Opponents argue that if the SAI interventions went ahead but were stopped
suddenly for any reason, the earth could face termination shock – a sudden,
devastating temperature rise. A 2018 Yale study, published in *Nature
Ecology & Evolution*, said global temperatures could soar three times
faster than climate change in such a scenario.

It’s a scary prospect, but is the alternative – that we don’t manage to
slow global warming until it’s too late – any less scary?

Dr Rob Bellamy, presidential fellow in climate and society in the geography
department at the University of Manchester, says that banning or defunding
research risks pushing it underground and increasing the possibility that a
rogue leader may one day rush to use an untested technology – the very
scenario that so frightens critics.

“One of the key governance principles behind doing something like this is
to treat it like a public good. It needs public investment, transparency,
all those things that are much easier to get when it comes through public
funding. If it’s done privately, you start to lose those things and it
becomes, ironically, more likely to be the sort of thing that people who
want to ban it are concerned about,” he said.

Bellamy also notes that research doesn’t equal approval.

“I’ve been very critical of the slippery slope argument. It rests on two
key premises: first of all that by researching something you are inevitably
going to do it, and secondly, if you do do it, the impacts will be bad,” he
says. “Through research we may well find ways of counteracting potential
problems, changing the trajectory of the innovation by taking into account
these concerns that people have. So it’s definitely not a foregone
conclusion.”

Bellamy concedes that carbon capture and storage technologies – the
friendlier face of geoengineering – are the better bet right now. That
doesn’t, however, mean the world shouldn’t have “a kind of emergency
backstop” in case temperatures spiral higher.

“At the end of the day, I think it is very, very unlikely that we would do
this, even with the research, but I think we need to do the research just
in case,” he said.

In its* Mitigation of Climate Change* report, released in April, the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC, said solar
geoengineering is at best a supplement to achieving sustained net-zero
emissions. It also noted that it could affect the spread of infectious
diseases, alter food security, deplete the ozone layer, and even threaten
international cooperation and peace.

On removing CO2 from the atmosphere, the IPCC concluded that this would now
be “unavoidable”, given how hard it would be to cut emissions in sectors
such as aviation, agriculture and some industrial processes.

Some companies are already involved in direct air capture, or sucking CO2
out of the atmosphere. In Iceland, for example, Swiss-based Climeworks
opened the world’s largest direct-air-capture plant last year to extract
4,000 tonnes of CO2 annually. The captured carbon is then pumped
underground, where it is turned into stone.

Bellamy, who is a member of a nationwide scientific hub looking at CO2
removal in the UK, says these techniques have to be considered, even if
they do face the same “moral hazard” argument as solar geoengineering.

Nonetheless, carbon capture techniques do not seem to inspire the same
level of visceral fear among members of the scientific community.

But what of the public? Their consent is also needed for experiments and
that can be an issue when it comes to researching ways to dim the sun.

Last year, the world’s leading solar geoengineering research unit at
Harvard University had to cancel an outdoor test of the grandly named
Stratospheric Controlled Perturbation Experiment, or SCoPEx, in Sweden
because of opposition from leaders of the indigenous Saami people, who live
in the area. The plan was to fly a balloon high into the sky, but without
releasing any particles this time.

Wagner, who was the founding executive director of Harvard’s Solar
Geoengineering Research Programme, says the experiment would have had no
direct environmental impact.

Even if they had released sulphur dioxide, he says the direct impact would
have been less than that caused by a commercial airliner during one minute
of flight. “Which is another way of saying that none of this was ever about
the environmental impact. It’s about the symbolism.”
------------------------------

In a clear sign of the urgency and complexity of the issue, a new body –
the Global Commission on Governing Risks from Climate Overshoot – has been
formed to explore how to cut risks to people and nature if the world
breaches the 1.5C limit.

Led by the former director-general of the World Trade Organization and
president of the Paris Peace Forum, Pascal Lamy, the commission is composed
of 16 former government leaders who will study various options for tackling
climate change, including CO2 removal and solar geoengineering. They will
then present an integrated strategy on how these technologies could be
governed before the UN Climate Change Summit in 2023.

“All of us would prefer not to confront the consequences of insufficient
action,” Lamy said as the commission was launched. “Importantly, we will
continue to work towards achieving the world’s climate goals as best we
can. But we also have an overriding responsibility to be prepared, in case
we do not succeed.”

The bleak reality is that the body’s creation is a clear indication that
the world is ever more likely to miss the 1.5C target.

“Countries’ pledges to date put us on track for 2.7C warming by the end of
this century. It is high time to brace ourselves for this worst
eventuality,” said Hina Rabbani Khar, minister of state for foreign affairs
of Pakistan and a member of the commission.

The new body will try to determine what information is needed to take
rigorous and science-based decisions on whether to deploy such
technologies, said Adrien Abécassis, executive director of policy at the
Paris Peace Forum, which will host the commission.

“They will not be looking for some kind of Plan B, or emergency solution,
or emergency brake. That’s not the point. The question is: have we really
considered all the possible combinations of options? It’s a kind of moral
duty to be sure we do all we can to minimise the risks,” Abécassis said.

The commission stresses that harmful emissions still need to be cut. Wagner
agrees and believes tech must be part of the solution.

“It’s like teaching your six-year-old to turn off the water while she
brushes her teeth – because it’s the right thing to do. Acting immorally is
bad. Do the right thing, but believing that behavioural change alone is
going to fix (climate change)? No. How do you decarbonise your apartment?
With new technology, with good insulation, triple-glazed windows, heat
pump, solar pump, battery storage, the induction stove – all these elements
are fantastic new tech for behavioural change.”

In the end, Bellamy says, technology will be key. “The distinction between
technological, social or natural solutions is pretty arbitrary. Anything we
do involves a form of technology, even if it’s a standardised procedure…
Technology will be at the core of tackling climate change.

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