https://www.agu.org/Share-and-Advocate/Share/Policymakers/Position-Statements/Climate-Intervention-Requirements


*Adopted by AGU in January 2018; revised and reaffirmed in April 2023.
Based on an earlier statement adopted by AGU in December 2009 in
collaboration with the American Meteorological Society (as adopted by the
AMS Council in July 2009) which was revised and reaffirmed February 2012.*

*Given the likelihood that the world will overshoot global average
temperature targets, Climate Intervention (CI) measures such as carbon
dioxide removal and solar radiation management may be part of a
comprehensive risk-management strategy. CI measures cannot substitute for
deep cuts in emissions or adaptation. That said, research aimed at
understanding the benefits and impacts of CI measures is necessary and must
consider global transparency, ethical, and inclusion practices and be
subject to robust governance and oversight structures. CI research must be
part of a broader climate solutions package that, given the urgency of
addressing climate change, should be funded at a level matching the
enormous scale of the space programs of an earlier era**.*

*The Urgency of Action*

Human activities are changing the Earth’s climate in ways that have and
will continue to cause increasingly disruptive societal and ecological
impacts as well as human suffering.[i]
<https://www.agu.org/Share-and-Advocate/Share/Policymakers/Position-Statements/Climate-Intervention-Requirements#_edn1>
Deep
reductions in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions as well as global adaptation
must be central to any policy response to the dangers of climate change.
The likelihood that global average temperatures will overshoot the targets
agreed to by the world’s nations (1.5 – 2.0 degrees C) has led the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to consider Climate
Intervention (CI) in its assessment as a potential pathway to reduce,
remove, or offset some of the effects of climate change, with risks and
trade-offs that need to be better understood.[ii]
<https://www.agu.org/Share-and-Advocate/Share/Policymakers/Position-Statements/Climate-Intervention-Requirements#_edn2>

With CI approaches beginning to proliferate, substantial research and
evaluation efforts are urgently needed to determine the effectiveness,
risks, and opportunities of CI and inform societal decisions about possible
implementation. It is imperative that the research community and
policymakers consider and address the ethical implications of CI globally
and fully engage communities in the decision-making process.[iii]
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Finally,
there is a need for effective and inclusive national and global governance
structures that can manage all these considerations.

*Climate Intervention Approaches*

CI is any “deliberate intervention in the planetary environment of a nature
and scale intended to counteract anthropogenic climate change and its
impacts.”[iv]
<https://www.agu.org/Share-and-Advocate/Share/Policymakers/Position-Statements/Climate-Intervention-Requirements#_edn4>
Such
approaches can be large in scale or take the form of cumulative local
interventions. *The most plausible approaches to CI fall into two distinct
categories: carbon dioxide removal (CDR) and solar radiation modification
(SRM).*

CDR, which involves the removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere,[v]
<https://www.agu.org/Share-and-Advocate/Share/Policymakers/Position-Statements/Climate-Intervention-Requirements#_edn5>
includes
both terrestrial and ocean-based approaches, such as large-scale
afforestation, direct air capture, and direct ocean capture, among others.
[vi]
<https://www.agu.org/Share-and-Advocate/Share/Policymakers/Position-Statements/Climate-Intervention-Requirements#_edn6>
These could be deployed at a range of scales and currently vary widely in
their scientific and market readiness. SRM, which involves a deliberate
alteration to the Earth’s surface or atmosphere, has mostly focused on the
addition of reflective particles into the upper atmosphere or seeding
clouds in the lower atmosphere.[vii]
<https://www.agu.org/Share-and-Advocate/Share/Policymakers/Position-Statements/Climate-Intervention-Requirements#_edn7>
Localized
surface albedo modification, while less studied, may also be included in
this category. A third category of CI, methane removal, seeks to address
the serious climate risks posed by this highly potent GHG, but is at an
earlier stage of research and thus requires additional focus and funding.

*Opportunities and Challenges*

As climate change accelerates and causes increasingly unacceptable damage
to lives, property, and ecosystems, GHG emissions reductions and adaptation
actions have been insufficient. Even stopping GHG emissions now could leave
Earth at levels of warming that could have devastating impacts.[viii]
<https://www.agu.org/Share-and-Advocate/Share/Policymakers/Position-Statements/Climate-Intervention-Requirements#_edn8>
CI
approaches could cool the climate quickly, helping to mitigate some harms
while societies decarbonize. CI approaches must be researched and tested to
augment emissions reductions and adaptation. Legitimate concerns exist
about the scalability and side effects of some CI approaches, but such
concerns do not negate the present need for research, which would shed
light on the impacts of and ultimately inform decisions about any possible
deployment.

*Needed Actions*

AGU recommends funding agencies create substantial CI research programs and
foster international cooperation. Such programs should be embedded, where
possible, in existing initiatives on climate science to ensure that the
knowledge gleaned will improve understanding of the changing climate
system. CI research should be interdisciplinary and integrated into efforts
to understand socio-economic and environmental trade-offs, ethical and
environmental justice considerations, and governance structures and needs.
Funding from the philanthropic, public, and private sectors is essential to
ensure an adequate level of research support. Regardless of funding source,
all CI research must be transparent and adhere to ethical principles such
as those that could be part of a research code of conduct.

Each technique will have unique research needs and may raise issues that
involve different norms of transparency, peer review or intellectual
property ownership, and there may be overlap between large-scale
experiments and small-scale deployments. The scientific community should
contribute to the development of appropriate national and international
norms around CI research. Such norms should adhere to ethical scientific
principles, including transparency around activities and data, and the
development of a governance framework to advance safe, fair, inclusive, and
equitable action.

While in many cases, much can be learned from laboratory and modelling
research, robust CI research programs require controlled field experiments.
All field experiments should be pursued transparently and include an
assessment of potential biological and environmental impacts, including
transboundary impacts. Decisions about where and how to conduct such field
experiments should be made with the participation of potentially affected
stakeholders, with particular attention to vulnerable populations,
including Indigenous Peoples and peoples of the Global South.[ix]
<https://www.agu.org/Share-and-Advocate/Share/Policymakers/Position-Statements/Climate-Intervention-Requirements#_edn9>
Effective
and timely governance of CI field experiments will be necessary to avoid
potential long-term social and environmental impacts and promote public
trust.

Adequate governance frameworks do not yet exist. AGU recommends that
governments and international bodies adopt governance frameworks prior to
large-scale CI field experimentation, especially in light of the current
differentiated – and hopefully future equitable– distribution of impacts
and benefits.

*Source: AGU Advancing Earth and Space Sciences *

*More information here* ⬇️

https://www.agu.org/EthicalFramework

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