https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/may/17/climate-geoengineering-must-be-regulated-says-former-wto-head

Climate geoengineering must be regulated, says former WTO head


Pascal Lamy to lead commission exploring how methods to tackle global
heating could be governed

Countries must urgently agree a way of controlling and regulating attempts
to geoengineer the climate, and consider whether to set a moratorium on
such efforts, as the danger of global heating exceeding the 1.5C threshold
increases
<https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/may/09/climate-limit-of-1-5-c-close-to-being-broken-scientists-warn>,
the former head of the World Trade Organisation has warned.

Pascal Lamy, a former director general of the WTO and a former EU trade
commissioner, now president of the Paris Peace Forum, said governments were
increasingly likely to explore the possibilities of geoengineering, as
efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions have so far been inadequate.

“Given where we are, we have to seriously consider the risk of overshooting
1.5C,” said Lamy. “That is a huge risk. All of the ways by which we can
alleviate this risk must be evaluated. I think a global effort on
geoengineering could work.”

At present, there is little to stop a government experimenting with
geoengineering. “There should be ways of stopping countries from doing this
alone,” Lamy told the Guardian. “We should look at all options, including a
moratorium.”

But Lamy said the likelihood of an individual billionaire, such as Elon Musk
<https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/25/elon-musk-climate-plan-reward-jeff-bezos-gates-investments>,
attempting to geoengineer the climate without government involvement
<https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2010/may/14/bill-gates-cloud-whitening-dangerous>
was
still remote. “I don’t think that is a danger. I think Elon Musk would need
some kind of authority [from governments],” he said. “I don’t think he
could try to do it alone. You need government clearance to send up a
rocket, even.”

Geoengineering
<https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/sep/30/geoengineering-by-gernot-wagner-review-a-stark-warning>
would
involve trying to change the temperature or climate on Earth through
methods such as whitening clouds, or injecting sulphur particles into the
atmosphere to reflect more sunlight, or spreading iron in the ocean to
absorb carbon dioxide. Ideas such as launching a giant sunshade into space
have also been suggested, along with more prosaic options including
painting roofs white.
None of these possibilities
<https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/aug/26/planet-earth-climate-crisis-geoengineering>
have
yet been tried, and some could be dangerous
<https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/mar/25/top-us-scientists-back-100m-geoengineering-research-proposal>:
for instance, spraying sulphur could cause acidification of the seas, cloud
whitening could change rainfall patterns and deflecting the sun’s rays could
cause crops to fail
<https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/aug/08/reflecting-suns-rays-would-cause-crops-to-fail-scientists-warn>
.

But Lamy said the world had to examine such methods
<https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2011/feb/18/geo-engineering>, as
countries were failing to cut greenhouse gases fast enough. “It is tragic
that we have to consider this [geoengineering]. Because we know we are not
on the right path to avoid overshooting 1.5C,” he said.

Scientists warned this month there was a 50:50 chance of global average
temperatures rising to more than 1.5C above pre-industrial levels
<https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/may/09/climate-limit-of-1-5-c-close-to-being-broken-scientists-warn>
within
the next five years. If the earth’s temperatures exceed 1.5C consistently,
drastic and in some cases irreversible changes to the climate will follow,
including melting of the ice caps, floods, droughts, heatwaves and sea
level rises.

Some methods of geoengineering could be cheap, Lamy added. “Some could be
economically rather cheap, whereas we know that carbon capture and storage
is something very costly.”

Lamy said the science behind geoengineering required careful investigation,
but his concern is directed towards how any such attempts would be governed
at an international level. Some forms of weather manipulation have already
been tried: for instance, cloud-seeding to provoke rainfall has been used
in China
<https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/dec/06/china-modified-the-weather-to-create-clear-skies-for-political-celebration-study>
.

Lamy, as president of the Paris Peace Forum thinktank, is leading a new
initiative to establish potential governance structures for geoengineering.
He has convened a panel of 16 global experts, called the Global Overshoot
Commission. They will consider recommendations on how geoengineering can be
governed, both within existing international structures such as the UN, and
the potential need for new governance bodies.

The commission will produce a report, probably consisting of a series of
principles to be observed, that will be presented to governments in 2023,
before the Cop28 UN climate summit. It will have no legal standing, but is
intended to inform government thinking.

As well as geoengineering, the commission will consider ways of helping
countries to adapt to the ravages of the climate crisis, the potential for
new technologies such as carbon capture and storage, and ways of
“repairing” the climate to reduce temperatures after they have breached the
1.5C limit.

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