https://peteirvine.substack.com/p/the-results-are-in-discussing-solar?utm_source=%2Finbox&utm_medium=reader2


Plan A+

The results are in: discussing solar geoengineering doesn't undermine
emissions cuts
There have been over a dozen public perception studies on solar
geoengineering, and they are clear: the fear that motivated the taboo on
solar geoengineering research was unfounded.

Pete Irvine
7 hr ago
About a year after I started my PhD in 2009, I was invited to be an expert
at a public dialogue on carbon dioxide removal and solar geoengineering.
The UK was considering launching a research effort and wanted to know what
the public thought about it [1].

Experiment Earth?
Figure 1. The logo for NERC’s “Experiment Earth?” public dialogue

The participants were given an overview of all the various ideas and then
asked to discuss them with the help of a moderator. Generally, the more
"natural" a proposal seemed, the more supportive the public was:
afforestation was very popular, stratospheric aerosol geoengineering was
not. But, while the participants were concerned about many of the ideas,
they were very supportive of research.

Something that stuck with me was that an older guy took me aside and asked:
"Are scientists seriously thinking about this? Wow, climate change must be
worse than I thought." I got the sense then that this was a widespread
feeling.

Breaking the taboo
The Royal Society had recently published a report recommending that a major
research effort into carbon dioxide removal and solar geoengineering begin
and the UK’s research councils wanted to check that the public would
support this research. They concluded that they did and so they launched
the world's first nationally-funded research effort.

These ideas hadn't just occurred to scientists in the late 00’s, many of
them had been around for decades, but they had been suppressed for fear of
distracting the public and policymakers from cutting CO2 emissions [2]. It
took the intervention of Paul Crutzen, winner of the Nobel Prize for his
work on the ozone layer, to break this taboo [3].

16 years on from Crutzen's intervention it seems clear that the fear that
motivated this taboo on solar geoengineering research was unfounded.

Moral hazard
Many reasonable people oppose solar geoengineering on the grounds that it
might undermine mitigation efforts, delaying the date that we achieve
desirable cuts in emissions. This potential delay is known as the moral
hazard effect or mitigation deterrence effect of solar geoengineering.

There’s a lot to say about this idea, but I think a useful place to start
is to distinguish a strong and a weak moral hazard objection to solar
geoengineering research:

Strong: "Discussion of solar geoengineering will lead to a reduction in
emissions cuts"

Weak: "Implementation of solar geoengineering will lead to a reduction in
emission cuts"

While it's obviously too early to know much about the effects of
implementing solar geoengineering on climate policy, we're now in a
position to dismiss the strong moral hazard objection to solar
geoengineering research.

The results are in
So far there have been 13 social science studies that can shine a light on
this issue (see the Appendix). Only one study, Raimi et al. (2019) found a
reduction in support for emissions policies after telling their
participants about solar geoengineering, and they only got that result when
solar geoengineering was 'described as a "great" solution to climate
change, one in which "we wouldn't have to do much more to stop the worst
effects of climate change."' In their other 2 framings of solar
geoengineering, they found no statistically significant effect on support
for emissions policies.

For the other studies, 7 found either no significant effect or no evidence
for a moral hazard effect, and 5 found an inverse moral hazard effect,
i.e., exposing people to the idea for solar geoengineering increased their
apparent willingness to cut emissions. Merk et al. (2016) was the first
study to document this inverse moral hazard. For their study, they gave 650
German participants 10 euros each, gave them some reading, surveyed them,
and then offered them the option to buy subsidised carbon offsets. Some
were told about stratospheric aerosol geoengineering and others weren't.
Those who were spent 15% more on carbon offsets than those who weren't.
This wasn't simply virtue signalling, they spent real money.

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