This paper includes the following valuable principles that inform how to 
advocate for SRM.  My comments are in red.

 

Following a number of scholars who have worked on moral frameworks for SRM (17; 
14), we propose the following broad principles: _ 

1.      Mitigation (including removals) and adaptation need to be the primary 
focus of climate policy. True for the long term but not for the short term.  
Also, the use of ‘mitigation’ as a synonym for emission reduction is 
scientifically incorrect and should be discouraged.  SRM will do much more to 
mitigate climate change than decarbonisation will.
2.      SRM should at most serve as an addition to reducing greenhouse gas 
concentrations. SRM will be useful for long term regulation and management of 
the climate.  As well, SRM will be needed well before GHGs start to go down.  
The phrase “at most serve as an addition” downplays the central climate role of 
albedo and its position as the most tractable lever to deliver cooling.
3.      Knowledge and implementation of SRM must be administered in the public 
interest. This entails that the provision of SRM is organised by a globally 
legitimised body, and not based on private interests. _  The Bretton Woods 
Institutions, the IMF and World Bank, provide a useful model for establishing 
an international climate organisation tasked to increase albedo.
4.      Legitimate governance processes must be adhered to, and societal values 
such as justice and equality must be central when considering the role SRM 
research can play in lessening the threat of climate change. _ Societal values 
such as justice and equality must be important, but political perceptions in 
these areas carry high risk of derailing a rigorous technical focus on albedo 
enhancement. An international agency tasked to manage SRM can require justice 
and equality in its sphere of operation, but not beyond it.
5.      Any decision about deployment should be taken on the basis of broad 
public participation. Special emphasis should be placed on underrepresented and 
vulnerable communities, such as the Global South and Indigenous Peoples. _ This 
is correct.  I believe public opinion can readily be swayed to support solar 
geoengineering in light of the impossibility of the IPCC’s latest call in the 
AR6 Synthesis Report to nearly halve emissions by 2030.
6.      The research process should be transparent, reflective, and cooperative 
(also on the international level), and provide ample space for offramps, in 
case certain findings point towards undesirable outcomes of SRM deployment. _ 
Mention of offramps is important, but the reality is that benefits of solar 
geoengineering, implemented with sound governance, should vastly overwhelm 
possible risks.  Incremental deployment beginning at small scale and volume can 
quantify risks and benefits.
7.      SRM research must aim to create a comprehensive body of knowledge 
covering environmental, technical, political, societal and ethical sciences and 
properly linking and combining these domains. _ Knowledge management is 
essential but easily neglected.
8.      A solid framework for the governance of SRM should be in place before 
implementation is seriously considered. This entails engaging in research and 
consultations on governance parallel to studying the environmental and 
technological aspects of SRM. The Bretton Woods Institutions offer governance 
models that could be studied for international management of SRM. More than 
consultation, advocacy is needed to rapidly establish governance systems for 
SRM.

 

Regards

 

Robert Tulip

 

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On 
Behalf Of Geoengineering News
Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2023 11:49 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [geo] Solar Radiation Modification is risky, but so is rejecting it: A 
call for balanced research

 

https://academic.oup.com/oocc/advance-article/doi/10.1093/oxfclm/kgad002/7081048?searchresult=1
 
<https://academic.oup.com/oocc/advance-article/doi/10.1093/oxfclm/kgad002/7081048?searchresult=1&login=false>
 &login=false

 

Authors 

Claudia E Wieners, Ben P Hofbauer, Iris E de Vries, Matthias Honegger,Daniele 
Visioni, Herman Russchenberg, Tyler Felgenhauer

Oxford Open Climate Change, kgad002,  <https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfclm/kgad002> 
https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfclm/kgad002

 

20 March 2023 

 


Abstract


As it is increasingly uncertain whether humanity can limit global warming to 
1.5 degrees, Solar Radiation Modification (SRM) has been suggested as a 
potential temporary complement to mitigation. While no replacement for 
mitigation, evidence to date suggests that some SRM methods could contribute to 
reducing climate risks and would be technically feasible. But such 
interventions would also pose environmental risks and unprecedented governance 
challenges. The risks of SRM must be carefully weighed against those of climate 
change without SRM. Currently, both types of risks are not sufficiently 
understood to assess whether SRM could be largely beneficial. Given the already 
serious impacts of climate change and the possibility that pressure from their 
increasing severity will trigger rash decisions, we argue that timely, careful 
investigation and deliberation on SRM is a safer path than wilful ignorance. A 
framework of ethical guidelines and regulation can help limit potential risks 
from SRM research.

Solar Radiation Modification, Climate Intervention, Climate Change, Governance 

Source: Oxford Open Climate Change

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