*Poster's note: *Over the next three years, the *Co-CREATE project* will
examine the governance principles and guidelines for responsible Solar
Radiation Modification research. This will ultimately support decisions on
whether or not, and under which circumstances, SRM research and experiments
may be warranted from scientific and societal viewpoints.

The Co-CREATE Consortium includes a group of 14 institutions with
experience and expertise in SRM governance, responsible research and
innovation, co-creation and stakeholder dialogue.

https://medium.com/@honegger.matthias/toward-some-orientation-in-a-labyrinth-of-expectations-and-concerns-d4b80c864aa7

*By Matthias Honegger*

*30 April 2024*

*Whether and how to research or even conduct experiments on so-called solar
radiation modifications is a complex question. In this post, which is first
published on the **Co-CREATE website* <https://co-create-project.eu/>*, I
reflect on my personal motivation to pursue this project in the hopes of
co-developing helpful guidance.*

I have dedicated the first decade of my professional life to accelerating
policies to cut greenhouse gas emissions and remove CO2 already emitted
from the atmosphere to mitigate climate change. And while this
unequivocally must be the cornerstone of climate action — alongside efforts
to adapt to changes already occurring — I believe we also must pay careful
attention to additional developments for better or worse.

Despite the strong mitigation efforts and encouraging progress on clean
technologies, as well as climate friendly cultural change, we are far from
a trajectory to a safe climate future as governments consistently lag
behind their promises, which themselves remain inadequate. The policies
currently in place commit us to almost 3°C by the end of the century
<https://www.unep.org/resources/emissions-gap-report-2023>. This is
unacceptable and all hands need to be on deck to reach climate neutrality
swiftly and decisively.

Yet in the realm of research (barely on the radar of governments), the
theoretical potential of climate interventions is also becoming
increasingly relevant
<https://theconversation.com/why-dimming-the-sun-would-be-an-effective-tool-in-the-fight-against-climate-change-218670>.
This is indicative of growing desperation for what is to come as we see severe
climate impacts <https://climate.copernicus.eu/esotc/2023/key-events> at
the present warming level of 1.45°C in 2023
<https://wmo.int/publication-series/state-of-global-climate-2023>.

What is Solar Radiation Modification?

One prominent approach is through so-called Solar Radiation Modification
(SRM), which — under good conditions — theoretically holds significant
potential to reduce suffering and ecosystem degradation. Yet this relevance
is not simply a positive one: Ill conceived and intransparent research also
poses serious concerns and a potential threat.

Given the increasingly desperate state of the climate, however, the
powerful potential of SRM — for good and bad cannot be ignored. If
responsible research can remove some of the uncertainties and help
strengthen governance, then its pursuit is a must. One method
<https://www.overshootcommission.org/report> would — imperfectly —
counteract the heating and associated precipitation changes by dispersing
light-scattering aerosols in the upper atmosphere as also outlined by the the
UN Environment Program
<https://www.unep.org/resources/report/Solar-Radiation-Modification-research-deployment>.
No serious actor has yet attempted to do this. The theoretical
effectiveness is, however, fairly well understood based on the natural
analogue of volcano eruptions and from dedicated modelling studies
<https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-019-0398-8>. And a willing actor
might be able to pursue tests or even incremental deployment
<https://www.technologyreview.com/2024/02/05/1087587/solar-geoengineering-could-start-soon-if-it-starts-small/>
within
five years. Yet modelling has not been done systematically to answer
policy-relevant questions of feasibility and — more importantly —
desirability. And neither policymakers nor civil society have had time yet
to contemplate the stakes involved in such actions. In this situation,
deployment would be completely unacceptable.

(How) should we research solar radiation modification?

Whether and how to research the merits, risks, and broader implications of
climate interventions remains debated in environmental policy circles
<https://research-and-innovation.ec.europa.eu/system/files/2023-08/Scoping_paper_SRM.pdf>
. Some suggest
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nmwFPTu6950&ab_channel=HarvardCarrCenterforHumanRightsPolicy>
holding
off on research for fear that it distracts from mitigation or that it would
add to the risk of ungoverned deployment, which would undermine the
international order and risk rapid warming in case of an abrupt stop. While
concerns relating to the idea of SRM are understandable, holding back
research — and deliberation — may also come with risks: Worsening climate
impacts could bring SRM into the spotlight — including of actors willing to
use it unilaterally — before responsible research would have prepared the
ground for scientifically informed and carefully deliberated decisions at
the global level.

The Co-CREATE project seeks to develop some orientation in this landscape
of questions. Funded through the Horizon Europe
<https://cordis.europa.eu/programme/id/HORIZON_HORIZON-CL5-2023-D1-01-08>
research
programme it explores whether and under which conditions responsible
research including field experiments may be desirable. It aspires to
perhaps offer some orientation — in the form of decision-support tools,
guidelines and principles — that research funders may consider as they
navigate such decisions.

My engagement is grounded in the belief that together and with time we make
better decisions. Better — both for the quality of outcomes, as well as for
the legitimacy of the process. We humans have an amazing capacity of
jointly figure out vexing problems if we are willing to subject even the
most thorny issues to the forces of democracy.

I see democracy as a flow of passionate debate and dispassionate
deliberation, which must draw on scientific insight. The project —
Co-CREATE — is here to facilitate dispassionate deliberation and to
structure scientific insight to help answer whether and under which
conditions research and experiments on solar radiation modification may be
warranted from a scientific and societal viewpoint. The ultimate answers
will not come from the project consortium’s but that of the legitimate
European institutions as well as those of member states and other countries
in the European Research Area.

Conditions for Responsible Research of SRM — Analysis, Co-creation, and
Ethos

In my view, the project title offers more than a catchy acronym. It
outlines missing ingredients for the governance of SRM research.

The second part of the title alludes to specific contributions that I hope
the project can offer. It starts with an interdisciplinary analysis of
scientific, ethical, and regulatory dimensions of such conditions and
includes an examination of similar governance challenges. It also points to
the co-creation of potential guiding principles jointly with SRM
researchers and stakeholders — including in places where SRM experiments
could in principle offer important insights. And, finally, the project
should in my view advance the ethos of transparency and accountability
already upstream of policy decisions.

While I understand the mandate given to the project team to express an
expectation that it supports public policy, I am also aware of the
limitations of the teams’ authority: Our role is to produce ideas,
suggestions and even recommendations including to help separate meaningful
from problematic SRM research proposals. But it cannot take the place of
political decision-making. We may seek to empower the EU and its member
states to shape SRM research in Europe, but it is up to the officials to
consider and adopt, modify, or reject whatever set of principles Co-CREATE
will put forward.

Values, ethics and science

Why are ethics, norms, and values important when faced with the prospect of
solar radiation modification research and experimentation? To some, the
situation may seem clear — we must research this potentially life-saving
technology with urgency — they might say. Scientific areas as new and
impactful as SRM may seem to emerge in a norm-free space — as if there were
no applicable rules or established ways.

But this would be wrong: There are always existing norms and expectations —
for example regarding public participation, freedom of research, and
precaution — even if we have not yet figured out how exactly they apply.
Ignoring them would undermine otherwise well-meaning research efforts. This
is as true for climate interventions as it is for AI or biotech, where
public reaction is also indicative of a need for dedicated governance.

The Co-CREATE project is therefore set to proactively engage with diverse
views — in keeping with the academic notion of Responsible Research and
Innovation. I hope this will allow us to widen our anticipation of how
public opinion might come to view SRM experiments and under which
conditions those would be deemed legitimate. Responsible Research and
Innovation is widely viewed as an important opportunity for anticipating
more broadly the ethical and scientific dimensions of new technologies. For
SRM research this could mean to avoid unfair future outcomes should SRM be
used. It can also help reduce the ethical blindspots of an otherwise narrow
research community. Such dialogue between researcher and publics can
empower a form of dynamic governance, adapting as the flow of mutual
learning elevates some concerns and attenuates others.

Uncertainty of outcomes from action and inaction

On the one hand, there are concerns with SRM research including that it
elevates SRM prematurely to a policy option or that research is distracting
from decarbonization. On the other hand, there are also growing risks in
case of inaction: I hope that Co-CREATE can do justice to potential issues
associated with research and experiments as well as to the potential
consequences should responsible research be held back. Perhaps the call for
balance <https://www.call-for-balance.com/> can help explore this terrain.

The question before us — at least for now — is solely whether and how to
pursue certain forms of research including field experiments. But it is
important that we get this right as it will set the tone for the more
consequential question of whether or not to pursue such climate
interventions — a question that will affect everyone on this planet.

What is Governance and where does Co-CREATE fit in?

Early steps toward governance under the UN Convention on Biodiversity
<https://www.cbd.int/climate/geoengineering/> and attempts at
self-governance from within the academic community through voluntary codes
of conduct
<https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/1758-5899.12845> have
fallen short of effectively guiding researchers and research funders as
evidenced by the recent controversy over a potential experiment over Sweden
<https://grist.org/science/who-gets-to-decide-if-we-study-solar-geoengineering-after-the-scopex-project-canceled/>
leading
to its cancellation. I see Co-CREATE’s work as developing the basis for
justifiable and accountable decisions on the research into solar radiation
modification.

This may prove important beyond the realm of research itself: In its call
for proposals
<https://cordis.europa.eu/programme/id/HORIZON_HORIZON-CL5-2023-D1-01-08> the
EU Commission rightfully asks whether and how responsible research in
Europe may help discourage unregulated and undesirable deployment
elsewhere. The stunt of a haphazard American startup
<https://foreignpolicy.com/2023/05/23/solar-geoengineering-radiation-modification-srm-regulation-climate-change/>
selling
cooling credits comes to mind, but more powerful actors are the real worry.
I suspect that carefully designed international research cooperation,
global monitoring and assessment and science-diplomacy could become helpful
to advancing SRM governance overall. This question goes, however, beyond
the scope of the Co-CREATE project.

* Disclosure statement:
*This is a personal reflection on the motivations of the author on his
involvement in the Co-CREATE project. The project is funded by the European
Commission (Grant No. **GAP-101137642*
<https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101137642>*) and UK Research and
Innovation (Grant No. *10123643). *It does not represent the views of the
project consortium, the European Commission, or UKRI.*

*Source: Medium*

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