https://eartharxiv.org/repository/view/5412/

Authors

Curtis M Bell, Patrick W Keys


*Published: **2023-05-22 *
DOI

https://doi.org/10.31223/X52T09
Abstract

Climate change and unabated greenhouse gas emissions are increasing the
possibility that the world will turn to climate intervention to curb
ever-increasing global temperatures. To date, most work on this topic has
imagined that an international organization like the United Nations or an
international coalition of states will synchronize their efforts to deploy
climate intervention at ideal latitudes to maximize global effect. Nearly
all climate model simulations run-to-date have assumed this. Thus, our
understanding of the science of climate intervention is largely based on an
ideal of perfect geopolitical coordination. However, geopolitical
uncertainties make this scenario unlikely and the costs of climate
intervention are sufficiently low that many states could comfortably
finance a climate intervention program that could have global consequences.
This paper uses game theory to elucidate the conditions that might make a
state more or less likely to begin unilateral climate intervention (UCI).
We solve this game for several specific scientific, economic, and
climatological conditions that change the likelihood of a government
starting its own climate intervention program without the participation of
the broader international community. Specifically, we demonstrate that the
plausibility of UCI is linked to our scientific understanding of three key
elements: (1) the effectiveness of climate intervention strategies, (2) the
sensitivity of specific governments to punishment by other states, and (3)
satisfaction with climate and weather in the present. We conclude by
discussing how this formal game theory model informs the design of future
earth system model simulations of UCI, international agreements related to
climate intervention, and the development of solar climate intervention
technologies.
Subjects

Atmospheric Sciences, Climate, International and Area Studies, Other
Statistics and Probability, Risk Analysis
Keywords

climate change, geoengineering, climate intervention, stratospheric
aerosol, international security, Game theory, political economy
Source: earthArXiv

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