https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x
The Science and Politics of Climate Engineering—Social Science Perspectives

   - Youssef Ibrahim
   
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#auth-Youssef-Ibrahim>


*Minerva* <https://link.springer.com/journal/11024> (2023)


Cite this article

Ibrahim, Y. The Science and Politics of Climate Engineering—Social Science
Perspectives. *Minerva* (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x

Review of

Möller, Ina. 2023. *The Emergence of Geoengineering. How Knowledge Networks
Form Governance Objects*. Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, New Delhi,
Singapore: Cambridge University Press, 75 pp., ISBN 978-1-009-04895-8.


Oomen, Jeroen. 2021. *Imagining Climate Engineering. Dreaming of the
Designer Climate*. Abingdon, New York: Routledge, 232 pp., ISBN
978-0-367-76508-8.


Schubert, Julia. 2021. *Engineering the Climate. Science, Politics, and
Visions of Control*. Manchester: Mattering Press, 280 pp., ISBN
978-1-912729-26-5.

The history of the science and politics of climate change is rich with
unintended consequences, paradoxes and conflicting goals. Recently, *Science
Magazine* published an article titled “Cleaner air is adding to global
warming” (Voosen 2022
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR15>).
Its subject are health-damaging aerosols that are released through the
combustion of fossil fuels and account for countless deaths each year.
According to the article, since 2000, technological advances have
contributed to the reduction of the toxic substances by up to 30 percent
*and* to the increase in global temperature in the range of 15 to 50
percent. Indeed, the air is now ‘cleaner’ because harmful particles are
filtered out of the exhaust fumes of cars und airplanes. Yet, they can also
no longer pollute the atmosphere and thus reflect solar radiation back.
Since the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5°C is hard to reach given a
temperature increase of already 1.2°C, the well-known climate scientist
James Hansen proposes to turn the tables: “‘It will be necessary to take
temporary corrective measures,’ he says, ‘almost surely including temporary
purposeful use of aerosols to avoid catastrophic implications’” (Voosen 2022
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR15>:
354).

Three books have recently been published that analyse the scientific and
political debate around the deliberate modification of climate in order to
avert inadvertent global warming. Geoengineering or climate engineering
refers to a bundle of different technologies designed to address climate
change. Basically, two approaches can be distinguished. One strategy,
Carbon Dioxide Removal, aims at taking out emitted CO2 from the atmosphere.
This includes using ‘natural’ carbon sinks through afforestation and
reforestation or ‘artificial’ technologies that ‘suck’ CO2 out of the air.
The second strategy, Solar Radiation Management, seeks to increase the
reflectance of the atmosphere, for example, through the infusion of certain
aerosols to reduce solar radiation. The climate scientist quoted above
referred to this approach. There is now a widespread view that these more
controversial technologies should not be used as substitutes, but only in
combination with the conventional strategies mitigation and adaptation. In
particular, geoengineering has gained prominence due to the international
agreement reached in Paris in 2015. Upon the announcement of the target,
Steve Rayner, an anthropologist who has been involved in the geoengineering
debate for many years, commented that without massive investment in these
technologies, “the 1.5–2°C target is not merely magical thinking, but
profoundly flawed magical thinking” (Rayner 2016
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR11>: 2).

The three monographs now published and based on PhD projects, address this
debate along different lines: How has geoengineering been shaped into an
object of governance (Möller), which imaginaries underlie climate
engineering (Oomen), and how has climate modification become a reasonable
measure against climate change (Schubert)? By combining diverse strands of
literature, data, methodological approaches and theoretical frameworks, and
by taking different directions and placing distinct emphases, each work
develops its own perspective on geoengineering.

Ina Möller primarily draws on political science literature that emphasises
the role of science in shaping political problems. On the one hand, she
conceptualises geoengineering as a “governance object”. In doing so, she
directs attention to the social process of shaping and constructing objects
into politically relevant problems. On the other hand, to reconstruct
through which discourses, scientific communities and organisations the
governance object is created, carried and shaped, she borrows ideas from
research on “knowledge networks”. Taking both perspectives together, she
makes clear that governance objects and knowledge networks relate to each
other like “one co-evolving amalgam” (8). Geoengineering is constructed and
positioned as a political issue by the network, and conversely, it changes
the composition and discourse of the network. Following these preliminary
theoretical considerations, the author provides three chapters in which she
traces how geoengineering entered the scientific and political stage (Ch.
2), subsequently takes a closer look at the interplay between network and
object (Ch. 3), and finally contextualises her study with some reflections
on the historical and cultural context of geoengineering (Ch. 4).

Möller’s study stands out especially through the social network analysis
provided in chapter 3. Drawing on the programmes of 74 geoengineering
related events with over a thousand speakers between 2006 and 2018 and
interviews, she argues that the knowledge network is characterised by 1) a
sense of belonging (*social cohesion*) as well as 2) the capacity to link
different groups to each other (*brokerage*) and 3) a (in some respects)
high degree of heterogeneity in its composition (*diversity*). Following
political scientist Olaf Corry, she associates three corresponding
processes of constructing and shaping the governance object with the
network structure. First, she relates social cohesion to the construction
of a *distinct* object. By creating shared problem definitions, narratives
or causes, both the group and the object are delineated. Second, she
addresses the role of knowledge brokers for the *salience* of
geoengineering as a governance object. These provide bridges between
different (geoengineering) groups, increase salience through shared
narratives and framings, and raise attention within and outside of
academia. Third, Möller looks at how the degree of diversity in the
knowledge network interacts with the *malleability* of geoengineering as a
governance object. Here, she finds that while an “overrepresentation of
Western male perspectives” (47) proves relatively persistent, nevertheless,
through disciplinary and organisational diversity, the involvement of
non-academic actors and criticism by scientists and activists,
geoengineering has successively become a malleable and adaptable object.

While Möller’s work focuses on contexts, groups, mechanisms, and their
interaction with the object of governance, Jeroen Oomen is primarily
concerned with the production and circulation of perceptions, concerns and
hopes regarding geoengineering. To this end, he combines approaches from
Science and Technology Studies with contributions from the Environmental
Humanities. He conceptualises the forms of meaning-making around
geoengineering as “sociotechnical imaginaries” (Jasanoff), which are
defined as shared visions about the future through and in support of
science and technology. Oomen theorises that these are produced by and
underlie specific individually and collectively held “ways of seeing” (Ch.
1). These ways of seeing are subject of ongoing negotiations about what
geoengineering is, what its status is, and how it should be evaluated
technically, politically and normatively. Based on ethnographic field
studies at a privately funded U.S. geoengineering research group at Harvard
University with a high public profile, and a more sceptical ‘Priority
Programme’ funded by the German Research Foundation, he analyses the
geoengineers’ ways of seeing climate and climate engineering in three
chapters (Ch. 4-6).

First, he describes how perceptions about climate in general influence how
geoengineering is evaluated (Ch. 4). A key indicator of this way of seeing
is the degree of ‘climate knowledge optimism’ or ‘pessimism’ to which
climate engineers tend. The optimism, that is widespread in the Harvard
group, is also associated with an optimism about predicting the climate,
and this also means a certain techno-optimism that suggests the
controllability of the climate. The German research programme is much more
pessimistic. Uncertainty, limits to knowledge and a scepticism about the
scalability of geoengineering dominate their way of seeing the climate.
Second, Oomen highlights the challenges that climate engineers relate to
the climate policy discourse (Ch. 5). Among the widespread concerns are
that mitigation measures could be downscaled, that climate deniers could
hijack geoengineering or that the governability of the technology remains
unclear. Third, he addresses the question of how climate engineers view
technological control morally (Ch. 6). Here, the idea of a ‘Good
Anthropocene’ comes into play (mostly in the Harvard group), according to
which humans, if they have already changed nature to the negative, could
just as well perform a ‘stewardship’ by technologically navigating the
relationship between humans and nature. The German team tends to be
concerned about the risks of further human intervention, which they view
should only be considered if a catastrophe is unavoidable. The book
concludes in chapter 7 with an analytical and summarising typology of
climate engineers, including the ecomodernist, the pragmatist and the
disprover (see the table on 199).

In complement to Oomen who emphasises the different “ways of seeing”,
Schubert draws attention to the underlying “expert infrastructures”
(including advisory panels or expert organisations) as formalised and
institutionalised forms of linking science and politics and “expert modes
of observation” (such as theories, models and satellites), through which
sense is made of climate engineering (22 ff.). In doing so, she primarily
addresses a social science audience with a general interest in the
historical emergence of social phenomena, the sociology of expertise and
the relationship between science and politics. She tracks what she refers
to as a “career”, meaning the evolution of geoengineering “from curious
scientific idea to serious politics” (17) through the production of ever
new “science-state alliances”. Starting from the observation that a shift
occurred in the 2000s that turned the urgency to act into a choicelessness
to resort to climate engineering (Part I), she draws on a corpus of policy
documents from 1990 to 2020, expert interviews, and historiographic
literature to analyse how notions of climate change and climate control,
and relatedly the relationship between science and politics, have changed.

After being devoted to the long history of climate modification (Part II,
more detailed below), the book returns to the recent past (Part III). In
this period, the early 21st century and with it the transition from the
Bush to the Obama administration, climate research as a former
“problem-defining authority” took on the status of a “problem-addressing
authority”. Not only did it define what problems policymakers had to deal
with, but it also posed itself as a problem-solver – as a political tool to
deal with climate change. With this transition, Schubert observes that
geoengineering gained scientific and political traction (Ch. 5). For
example, 1) a ‘sceptical’ government began to take an interest in
geoengineering and framed it as a national enterprise, 2) experts in
congressional hearings were openly controversial, critical or supportive of
the possibilities and limitations of geoengineering, and 3) the business
sector began to express interest in the technologies as a solution to
looming economic risks from climate change mitigation. Finally, Schubert
focuses on the more recent period since the Obama administration took over
(Ch. 6). In this phase, it becomes apparent that, on the one hand,
geoengineering has become one of the tools of climate policy, incorporated
into the political bureaucracy and legitimised by plausibility indicators
such as natural analogies (e.g., volcanic eruptions) and computer
simulations, which are also common to conventional climate research. On the
other hand, geoengineering retains its controversial character insofar as
it is continuously problematised in expert hearings.

In sum, the analyses of the three monographs can thus be read as
complementary. Certainly, some overlap in content can be found. For
example, they share a consensus that geoengineering is a speculative and
controversial measure, and they also share the assumption that
geoengineering poses a distinct challenge to the relationship between
science and politics in particular and science and society in general. One
overlap, partly in content but mainly in concept, is particularly striking.
In their explorations of this very up-to-date debate, they take the view
that a look at the history of climate modification can inform an
understanding of the present. In doing so, however, they tend to develop
different readings.

For example, one might conclude that Schubert reads the history of climate
change as the history of climate engineering, while Oomen reads the history
of climate engineering as the history of climate change. In the case of the
latter, one reads how environmental destruction, the atomic bomb,
Chernobyl, and especially attempts at intentional modification of the
weather – in short, experimentation with planetary boundaries – led to a
rising environmental consciousness that increasingly and successively
delegitimised the intentional and unintentional manipulation of climate
(Ch. 2 & 3). In contrast, Schubert understands the early speculations about
the greenhouse effect as the first discovery of the prospect of modifying
the climate in favour of humans. In concern about an impending ice age at
the beginning of the 20th century, the possibility of manipulating the
climate by CO2 emissions seemed like good news, though not realistic in the
near future (Ch. 3 & 4).

Möller’s work also includes a historical, albeit brief, outline of the
prehistory of the current geoengineering discourse, focusing primarily on
the recent past from the mid-2000s onward (e.g., mainstreaming of
geoengineering with setting the 1.5–2°C target, rise of critical watchdog
organisations) (Ch. 2). In exchange, some historically informed
reflections, especially the reflections on “colonial legacies” are worth
highlighting here (Ch. 4). She points out a disproportion, which lies in
the fact that regions in which geoengineering is to be applied have at the
same time a colonial history behind them and/or have low emission levels,
while the former colonial states and high-emitters of the Global North hope
to get through climate change without profound changes.

As geoengineering is recently and incrementally moving from its status as
speculative and controversial technology to a policy tool that is
increasingly regarded as a necessary measure (cf. Schenuit et al. 2021
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR12>),
it is only welcome that the social sciences devote themselves to the
debate. However, it is noticeable that exactly this fact – that social
scientists contribute considerably to the debate around geoengineering – is
not, only marginally or implicitly addressed. This is all the more
surprising in view of their intended contribution: Möller hopes to draw the
attention of decision-makers to the “political, social, cultural, and
historical context” of geoengineering and to motivate them to “take this
into account when deciding how to engage with it” (6). Oomen concludes that
there is a need to “to reorient our ways of seeing away from the numerical
to the cultural and political” (206). And Schubert views her book as a
contribution to the question of “why and how it might be productive to
pluralise policy-relevant expert perspectives on climate change” (226).

In doing so, they echo what numerous social scientists are calling for: to
re-politicise the climate debate (Lövbrand et al. 2015
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR7>), to
reorient disciplinary focuses (Lever-Tracy 2008
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR6>), to
return society into future imaginations (Hulme 2011
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR5>) and
to re-socialise natural science knowledge (Stehr and von Storch 1995
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR13>).
In the context of geoengineering alone, there is now a vast amount of
social science research and stimulating debate, including analyses of
justificatory emergency framings (Markusson et al. 2014
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR8>), of
metaphors (Nerlich and Jaspal 2012
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR9>), of
the peacebuilding potentials of geoengineering (Buck 2022
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR2>), on
the social risks, controversies and preconditions for implementing
geoengineering (Zürn and Schäfer 2013
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR16>) or
on the entanglement of the Paris 1.5°C target and climate engineering (Beck
and Mahony 2018
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR1>). It
is not surprising, however, because the authors are not unaware of the
state of research and the ongoing discussions. On the contrary, they work
through the state of research, identify its gaps, and build on it. Yet,
they only marginally notice how their *subject is changing through social
science research*. The fact that they are dealing with a subject that has
been reactively shaped by the social sciences is not itself the object of
their analyses.

It has long since ceased to be the case that the social sciences observe
the climate debate unnoticed, in the background and at high altitude. They
are directly and indirectly involved. Indirectly, they contribute to
changing the debate through publications such as those cited above, which
diffuse throughout society and in which social scientists (subliminally)
communicate their stance, which is why Oomen advises readers that “my
analyses here should always be treated with skepticism” (22). Directly,
they add social science expertise to the debate by debating in newspapers,
Footnote1 <https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#Fn1> by
writing open letters,Footnote2
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#Fn2> and by
being involved in the expert infrastructure, as Schubert notes in “A note
on interdisciplinarity” (185 ff.). The increasing social science
involvement is most extensively addressed in Möller’s work (e.g. fn. 5, 32
f.). But even here it remains a remark (“heralds engagement”,
“questioning”, “25 per cent”, “motor”, 44 f.) on this circumstance instead
of analysing in-depth how social scientists shape the object of governance.

Little has been done in this direction so far, notably by Steve Rayner, who
has analysed the strategic use of ignorance in the social sciences (Rayner
2015 <https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR10>),
and examined the value systems that underlie social science attitudes
toward geoengineering (Heyward and Rayner 2018
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR4>), or
by Jack Stilgoe (2012
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR14>),
who has reflected in this journal on his involvement in projects on
geoengineering. The potential that geoengineering offers, to study the
multiple expert roles – scientists, specialists, advisors and commentators
(cf. Grundmann 2023
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11024-023-09488-x#ref-CR3>: Ch.
1) – as well as the self-understandings, values, worldviews and models that
underlie social science expertise as much as in case of the natural
sciences, is far from exhausted. Therefore, future work should take into
account the increasing participation of the social sciences and explore
their making of “governance objects” (Möller), their “ways of seeing”
(Oomen) and their “modes of observation” (Schubert) and how they contribute
to shaping the science and politics of geoengineering.
Notes

   1.


   
https://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/blog/climate-science-geoengineering-save-world
   2.

   https://www.solargeoeng.org/

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<http://scholar.google.com/scholar_lookup?&title=The%20paradox%20of%20climate%20engineering&journal=Global%20Policy&doi=10.1111%2Fgpol.12004&volume=4&issue=3&pages=266-277&publication_year=2013&author=Z%C3%BCrn%2CMichael&author=Sch%C3%A4fer%2CStefan>


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Funding

This work is funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German
Research Foundation) under Germany‘s Excellence Strategy – EXC 2037 ‘CLICCS
- Climate, Climatic Change, and Society’ – Project Number: 390683824,
contribution to the Center for Earth System Research and Sustainability
(CEN) of Universität Hamburg. Open Access funding enabled and organized by
Projekt DEAL.

*Source: SpringerLink*

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