https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/02/22/geoengineering-research-flights-federal-investment
/

Can solar geoengineering help solve anthropogenic climate change? We don’t
know, and we need to start finding out.



*By Gernot Wagner *


*22 February 2023*

Attempting to shield Earth from the sun’s rays in what’s often described as
a last-ditch effort to cool average global temperatures is controversial
for good reason. It might work and do a lot of good, but there are ample
risks. Most importantly, it is no replacement for cutting greenhouse gases.
Researchers who study the approach most closely are the first to say just
that. Using solar geoengineering as the latest excuse not to slash carbon
and other pollution would be a mistake. But research we must.


That’s why it is notable to see first-of-their-kind federal research flights
<https://www.science.org/content/article/could-solar-geoengineering-cool-planet-u-s-gets-serious-about-finding-out>
take
off from Houston into the stratosphere this week. They’ll only collect
baseline data, but that is in part <https://csl.noaa.gov/projects/sabre/> “to
inform policy decisions related to … potential of injection of material
into the stratosphere to combat global warming.” This is a significant step
forward in government-sponsored solar geoengineering science. The emphasis
here is on “research <https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-00413-6>.”


It is the opposite to prematurely deploying the technology. That’s what
happened in April 2022 when an enterprising and deliberately provocative
entrepreneur launched at least two balloons in the Mexican state of Baja
California that may have released reflective sulfur particles in the
stratosphere, a fact only revealed
<https://www.technologyreview.com/2022/12/24/1066041/a-startup-says-its-begun-releasing-particles-into-the-atmosphere-in-an-effort-to-tweak-the-climate/>
late
last year. Its founder told James Temple of MIT Technology Review: “We joke
slash not joke that this is partly a company and partly a cult.” Solar
geoengineering research needs neither.

Raising around $750,000 in venture capital to sell “cooling credits” for
these balloon flights, as his start-up has done, was a horrible idea. I say
that as someone who posited such a scheme as “technically possible” and
“economically feasible” in a 2019 paper
<https://gwagner.com/decentralized/> with
geoengineering governance scholar Jesse Reynolds. We argued that it would
be only a matter of time before someone somewhere would attempt it.


The outcome was predictable. Mexico has halted
<https://www.technologyreview.com/2023/01/20/1067146/what-mexicos-planned-geoengineering-restrictions-mean-for-the-future-of-the-field/>all
such solar geoengineering attempts. Sadly, that won’t stop this
entrepreneur or others elsewhere from attempting similar stunts. Equally
sadly, it may well deter legitimate, much-needed research. That’s
particularly true in a country and world on edge about spy balloons.


Fortunately, the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has
been pressing ahead with around $10 million
<https://www.science.org/content/article/could-solar-geoengineering-cool-planet-u-s-gets-serious-about-finding-out>
each
year in “Earth’s radiation budget <https://csl.noaa.gov/research/erb/>.”
That figure falls short of the $200 million over five years recommended
<https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.372.6537.19> by the National
Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine in a 2021 report, as part
of a coordinated federal effort. It is, however, a departure from privately
funded programs, including one that I co-founded at Harvard University.

When Harvard’s Solar Geoengineering Research Program
<https://geoengineering.environment.harvard.edu/> launched in 2017 with a
budget over $10 million, private philanthropy money seemed to us the only
option.

We feared then that courting federal cash would be hopeless and help create
what environmentalists call green moral hazards
<https://gwagner.com/greenmh>. We could picture the president tweeting:
“Found solution to climate change! Told you there was no need to tax
carbon!” As far back as 2008, former speaker of the House Newt Gingrich
called for the use of solar geoengineering
<https://web.archive.org/web/20180217124420/https:/humanevents.com/2008/06/03/stop-the-green-pig-defeat-the-boxerwarnerlieberman-green-pork-bill-capping-american-jobs-and-trading-americas-future/>
to
stop an emissions trading bill.

Which I now see only underlines the need for legitimate, federally funded
research, and NOAA’s program is just that. Since 2020, the agency has
been flying
research balloons
<https://www.science.org/content/article/could-solar-geoengineering-cool-planet-u-s-gets-serious-about-finding-out>
into
the stratosphere to study particles already there. This week it adds
flights with a NASA WB-57 research jet. The 1960s-era B-57 bomber is
retrofitted with over a dozen scientific instruments to measure
“stratospheric aerosol processes, budget and radiative effects,” hence the
project’s name: Sabre <https://csl.noaa.gov/projects/sabre/>.

The most important point: It’s just regular science, including detailed
research hypotheses, fancy instruments, years of lead-time, months of
subsequent data analysis, and nerdy acronyms. The flights hope to study how
sulfate particles behave throughout their life span in the second layer of
the atmosphere and how they react with soot and other human and natural
elements already there.

Some will say that this research pushes us ever further down the “slippery
slope <https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/japp.12345>” toward
large-scale deployment. In reality, it might do the opposite: lead to more
research by showing just how complex and potentially risky a solar
geoengineering intervention might be.

It helps that all of this is happening in the context of the global
clean-energy race <http://www.gwagner.com/clean-energy-race> jump-started
by passage of the Inflation Reduction Act. It would take a jaded view to
believe that a $10 million solar geoengineering research program, itself
part of a $3 billion
<https://www.globalchange.gov/browse/reports/our-changing-planet-FY-2022>
federal
climate research program, would detract from hundreds of billions of
dollars in investments in cleaner, safer technologies that help cut carbon
pollution in the first place.

Yes, it is so late in the climate fight that some solar geoengineering may
well be a good idea. We won’t know, unless scientists are able to do the
hard work to find out.


*Source: Washington Post*

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