https://legal-planet.org/2023/07/21/comparing-the-risks-of-climate-change-and-geoengineering/

*Author*
Duncan Maclaren

*21July 2023*

<https://legal-planet.org/>
Comparing the Risks of Climate Change and GeoengineeringThe OSTP has
adopted a ‘risk-risk’ framing in its report on geoengineering research:
will this help or hinder sound climate policy?

Last month’s report on solar geoengineering research
<https://www.whitehouse.gov/ostp/news-updates/2023/06/30/congressionally-mandated-report-on-solar-radiation-modification/>
from
the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) consolidated
a shift in the discourse on this controversial technology. Over recent
years advocates for more research have increasingly adopted a ‘risk-risk’
framing. As Gernot Wagner puts it in ‘Geoengineering: the Gamble
<https://gwagner.com/books/geoengineering-the-gamble/>’: “The decision is
all about risk-risk tradeoffs”. He urges us to put the risks of potentially
pursuing solar geoengineering against “the risks of unmitigated climate
change.”

The National Academy of Sciences adopted a ’risk-risk’ framing in its 2021
report
<https://nap.nationalacademies.org/catalog/25762/reflecting-sunlight-recommendations-for-solar-geoengineering-research-and-research-governance>.
So too did the UN Environment Programme
<https://wedocs.unep.org/bitstream/handle/20.500.11822/41903/one_atmosphere.pdf?sequence=3&isAllowed=y>
earlier
this year. And the same framing now features centrally in the OSTP report.
Here it is often linked to a concern that continued climate change might
trigger irreversible tipping points in the climate system. In the abstract,
one might think it simple common sense to assess a poorly understood and
potentially risky technology in the context of the risks it hopes to
mitigate. But the risk-risk framing forms part of an increasingly polarised
solar geoengineering debate. A proposal for a non-use agreement
<https://www.solargeoeng.org/> has provided a lightning rod for dispute.
Advocates of research and opponents of deployment each accuse the other of
bad faith interventions.
Contending over geoengineering risks

In this setting advocates arguing for more research use the risk-risk
framing  much more than opponents. Intentionally or not, this move rejects
concerns that the risks of solar geoengineering might be so great as to
remove it from consideration. Moreover, emphasizing ‘risk-risk’ tradeoffs
implies that opponents either overestimate the risks of geoengineering or
underestimate the risks of climate change, or both.

At an extreme, invoking existential risks from climate change, and a
possibility to mitigate them with solar geoengineering, such advocacy
implies only one conclusion. Considering, or even actively pursuing,
geoengineering might seem especially reasonable if the climate risks in
the  ‘risk-risk’ tradeoff include tipping point concerns (as in the OSTP
report). But it remains hugely uncertain whether tipping points could
really be avoided through geoengineering
<https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9780203485262-8/emergency-geoengineering-really-prevent-climate-tipping-points-timothy-lenton>.
Moreover there are also plausible scenarios in which pursuit of geoengineering
itself could underlie catastrophic risks
<https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fclim.2021.720312/full>, for
instance as a trigger for nuclear conflict. This makes such a conclusion
much less clear cut.

Give the polarised nature of geoengineering debate, we should carefully
interrogate the adoption of a ‘risk-risk’ assessment approach using a
climate change context. A more conventional ‘risk-benefit’ analysis of
geoengineering – such as that by the Royal Society back in 2009
<https://royalsociety.org/topics-policy/publications/2009/geoengineering-climate/>
–
already attends to climate risks, insofar as they are affected by
geoengineering. So what’s new? The risk-risk framing perhaps helpfully
emphasizes climate change risks, which have long seemed under-estimated in
policy responses. But what more does the move from risk-benefit to
risk-risk do? And does that make it a positive shift, or raise different
concerns?
[image: C19 French Roberval Balance]Balancing risks is trickyImplications
of the new ‘risk-risk’ framing

I see two particularly worrying implications. First the risk-risk frame
tends to imply that the *only alternative* to climate harms is solar
geoengineering. This would be a false duality, despite the rapidly
depleting carbon budget for 1.5°C.
<https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-018-0091-3> Some advocates argue that solar
geoengineering is essential to hold temperature rises to 1.5°C. But such a
conclusion depends on debatable presumptions about the feasibility of rapid
social change, carbon removal techniques and the acceptability of temporary
temperature overshoot. We should not exclude alternative pathways to 1.5°C
from assessment, even if they might involve other risks and harms. Worse,
some but not all of the risk-risk framings (like Wagner’s) suggest (perhaps
unintentionally) that the alternative to solar geoengineering is
*unmitigated* climate change, as if no further emissions reduction or
adaptation can be foreseen.

Second, the risk-risk framing, setting assessment in terms of climate
risks, *excludes other logics for geoengineering*. In other words it
ignores the prospect that countries might deploy or avoid solar
geoengineering for reasons other than seeking to reduce climate change. To
research advocates, steeped in climate science, it might appear obvious
that climate change would be the logic.

But to security experts, and students of political science, geoengineering
appears as a hybrid, dual-use security technology
<https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/european-journal-of-international-security/article/considering-stratospheric-aerosol-injections-beyond-an-environmental-frame-the-intelligible-emergency-technofix-and-preemptive-security/BFB9E427CE5035EB3BBE9D1AA7FEF61>.
Its deployment might involve *climate-related* goals, but that could merely
mean masking impacts enough to justify continued exploitation of fossil
fuels for geopolitical reasons. The risk equation in a world of high
continued emissions, masked by solar geoengineering, could look very
different from one where an idealized intervention
<https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-019-0398-8> helps ‘shave the peak’ of
emissions related temperature rises. The implications of geoengineering
initiated, or manipulated as a security intervention for relative national
advantage might look very different again
Broader concerns about ‘risk’ as a key measure

The risk-risk framing further consolidates a discourse that presumes the
key is ‘risk’ rather than ‘uncertainty’. This too can be problematic.
‘Risk’ is understood as exposure to danger or loss – an inherently
undesirable thing. But it also implies a level of knowability and
calculability that might simply not exist in this space. Conventional
approaches calculate *risk* as the product of *likelihood*, *exposure* and
*impact*, but for many climate and geoengineering outcomes, all of these
factors can be deeply uncertain. The dangers inherent in treating something
as a *calculable* risk can fall in either direction. Analysts might
overlook entirely plausible, yet unquantifiable impacts. Or false
confidence in the scale of the threat might justify undemocratic, and
inequitable responses, as seen in many national responses to threats of
terrorism.

Risk framings also suggest particular approaches to climate justice. They
demand consideration of exposure, and often also vulnerability
<https://www.ipcc.ch/site/assets/uploads/2021/02/Risk-guidance-FINAL_15Feb2021.pdf>.
But they focus on the aggregate numbers exposed to the hazard, and tend to
treat these conditions as natural circumstances rather than a consequence
of social or economic factors. Thus a risk framing can help policy makers
better consider who is exposed and vulnerable to climate impacts. But it
might also distract their attention away from the processes by which
vulnerability and exposure are generated – for example through building on
floodplains, or through economic processes generating precarity.
Making “risk-risk” useful

Given these problems, and the polarised context, can we rescue risk-risk
analysis and make it productive for climate policy? Or should we be
objecting to its dominance in the debate? The answer will probably depend
on whether advocates for risk-risk analysis can separate themselves from
deliberate efforts to distort debate, and recognise and correct the
possible unintended distortions arising in the risk-risk framing.

If we assume good faith desire to avoid dangerous climate change in line
with social justice (claims seen on both sides of the debate), then there
is no inherent reason why a risk-risk analysis would be inappropriate. But
it would have to address the problems described above.

The analysis should start from a clear definition, and identify exactly
which additional climate risks might be plausibly averted by
geoengineering. It should consider the risk that attention given to
geoengineering might itself distract from effective timely mitigation. It
would need to consider a broad range of risks, including geopolitical
ones.  And an equally broad range of scenarios including competing
deployments, not just idealised (and impractical) designs that minimise the
impacts of climate change.

In this context the analysis would need to examine the distribution of the
risks on both sides of the ledger. It should take account of whether those
facing the worst of the risks have most say in whether those risks are
acceptable. And it should consider the extent to which the scenarios
involved might increase vulnerability, or build resilience.
Risk-risk in the OSTP report

How does the OSTP report stand in relation to these challenges? It puts
environmental justice to the fore, with reference to both domestic and
international distribution of risks and benefits. However it does rather
falls into the trap of treating vulnerability as an exogenous factor.
Similarly it emphasizes the need for a broad range of scenarios. But it
puts more emphasis on diverse climate responses than on the social and
political context. Nonetheless it includes more than climate risks,
stressing the moral and ethical dimensions of decision making on solar
geoengineering. But despite highlighting geopolitical risks it merely
encourages, rather than demanding international cooperation and suitable
research governance.

The report avoids the worst of the false duality, urging comparison of
risks and benefits in “scenarios involving the use of SRM” with those
“associated with plausible trajectories of ongoing climate change not
involving SRM.” Unfortunately, it doesn’t specify those ‘plausible
trajectories’ at this point. Although it asserts the primacy of emissions
reduction, it fails to address the risks of mitigation deterrence in any
detail. In discussing environmental justice the report mentions a concern
that “the potential benefits to frontline communities of SRM could be
reduced if it is used as a substitute for, or reduces, mitigation through
emission reductions,” but not the need for risk assessment and scenarios to
include the possibility of such substitution.
Conclusions

I could say much more about the challenges of designing  a just and
meaningful risk-risk assessment. But in conclusion I want to note some
contrasts between the OSTP report and another recent government
announcement. In a statement on climate security
<https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_23_3492> the
European Commission highlights the risks of geoengineering. It indicates a
need for international assessment of the possible implications for
security. But the Commission does not deploy ‘risk-risk’ language. Its
approach rather reflects the European risk culture and its often
precautionary stance. The context of climate security brings its own
problems, but to support wise judgement, such an assessment would need to
address a broad range of risks and scenarios. The US helped defeat
proposals for an inclusive and collaborative assessment of geoengineering
at the UN Environment Assembly <https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-019-0483-7> in
2019. It would be a shame if differences in framing led to an another such
failure  today.
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 Climate Change <https://legal-planet.org/tag/climate-change/>, Risk
Management <https://legal-planet.org/tag/risk-management/>, science policy
<https://legal-planet.org/tag/science-policy/>, solar geoengineering
<https://legal-planet.org/tag/solar-geoengineering/>
Source: Berkeley Law (UCLA Law)–Legal Planet

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