https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211467X22002255

*Authors*
Benjamin K. Sovacool, Chad Baum, Sean Lowa

*14 December 2022*

*Highlights*
•Deployment of negative emissions and solar geoengineering technologies
gives rise to geopolitical applications.

•Some options have military applications.

•Other options have potential weaponization, misuse, and miscalculation
risks.

•We examine such existing and prospective security risks using a novel
conceptual framework.

*Abstract*
The impacts of global climate change on international security and
geopolitics could be of historic proportion, challenging those of previous
global threats such as nuclear weapons proliferation, the Great Depression,
and terrorism. But while the evidence surrounding the security impacts of
climate change is fairly well-understood and improving, less is known about
the security risks to climate-technology deployment. In this study, we
focus on the geopolitical, security, and military risks facing negative
emissions and solar geoengineering options. Although controversial, these
options could become the future backbone of a low-carbon or net-zero
society, given that they avoid the need for coordinated or global action
(and can be deployed by a smaller group of actors, even non-state actors),
and that they can “buy time” for mitigation and other options to be scaled
up. We utilize a large and diverse expert-interview exercise (N = 125) to
critically examine the security risks associated with ten negative emission
options (or greenhouse gas removal technologies) and ten solar
geoengineering options (or solar radiation management technologies). We
ask: What geopolitical considerations does deployment give rise to? What
particular military applications exist? What risks do these options entail
in terms of weaponization, misuse, and miscalculation? We examine such
existing and prospective security risks across a novel conceptual framework
envisioning their use as (i) diplomatic or military negotiating tools, (ii)
objectives for building capacity, control, or deterrence, (iii) targets in
ongoing conflicts, and (iv) causes of new conflicts. This enables us to
capture a far broader spectrum of security concerns than those which exist
in the extant literature and to go well beyond insights derived from
climate modelling or game theory by drawing on a novel, rich, and original
dataset of expert perceptions.

*Keywords*
Climate engineering, Carbon dioxide removal, Negative emissions
technologies, Solar radiation management, Greenhouse gas removal, Energy
and geopolitics, Climate change and international relations

*Source*: ScienceDirect

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