https://www.cfr.org/report/reflecting-sunlight-reduce-climate-risk

“For too long, the topic of sunlight reflection has been a third rail of
climate change discourse, limiting both basic research and diplomatic
discussion. That situation is starting to change as the devastating
implications of a fast-warming planet become impossible to ignore,” asserts
Senior Fellow Stewart M. Patrick in a new Council Special Report,
Reflecting Sunlight to Reduce Climate Risk: Priorities for Research and
International Cooperation.

Stewart M. PatrickStewart M. Patrick
James H. Binger Senior Fellow in Global Governance and Director of the
International Institutions and Global Governance Program

Sunlight reflection, also known as solar geoengineering, involves
reflecting sunlight back into space to reduce rising temperatures on Earth.
The simplest and most cost-effective methods are either dispersing aerosols
in the stratosphere (mimicking the effects of volcanic eruptions that have
periodically blocked sunlight and cooled the planet) or using ocean salt
crystals to make low-lying clouds brighter and more reflective—a process
called marine cloud brightening.

Patrick—senior fellow in global governance and director of the
International Institutions and Global Governance program at the Council on
Foreign Relations—warns that “the long-predicted climate emergency is now,”
and “the approaches currently being pursued to prevent catastrophic warming
and mute its implications are not being enacted fast enough.”

There are three main approaches to managing risks from the changing
climate: reducing emissions; removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere;
and adapting to build resilience and minimize the effects of a warming
planet. Patrick finds that “although efforts to decarbonize have begun in
many countries, global emissions continue to rise. The shift to renewable
energy . . . is happening far too slowly to prevent significant warming by
midcentury, and adaptation has its own limitations.”
The author acknowledges that sunlight reflection is untested,
under-researched, and involves the use of techniques that are susceptible
to human error and unintended consequences. At best, it would be an
imperfect and partial response to climate change. Nevertheless, he says,
its risks and possibilities should be investigated, analyzed, and weighed
against the known dangers of climate change, given the escalating threat to
both social and natural systems posed by rising temperatures.

To this end, the author calls for the creation of a well-funded and
effectively organized U.S. national research program, grounded in close
international cooperation, to carefully consider the deployment of sunlight
reflection as a tool in the climate change arsenal.

He further recommends the United States strive for international agreement
on the norms and rules that govern any actual application of sunlight
reflection techniques. Without strong international cooperation, he warns,
there is a growing danger that individual governments may take matters into
their own hands, with potentially negative geopolitical consequences.

“It would be vastly preferable for the world to make progress on the
science of sunlight reflection and to discuss its national and
international governance openly today, so that policymakers are prepared to
make informed decisions on its potential deployment tomorrow, rather than
being forced to act out of ignorance on the fly when all other options have
failed,” Patrick concludes.

Source: Council on Foreign Relations

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