https://www.politics-dz.com/opportunities-and-risks-solar-geoengineering-scenarios-for-climate-change-mitigation-by-2050/

*07 September 2024*

With warnings of rising planetary temperatures and the international
community’s failure to implement preventative policies to combat climate
change, the importance of developing technological solutions like solar
geoengineering has increased. Solar geoengineering aims to reduce global
temperatures by modifying solar radiation (SRM) or by decreasing
atmospheric carbon dioxide through capture and storage in oceans or on land
(CDR). In the absence of a genuine commitment to reducing emissions,
scientists propose solar geoengineering as a last-ditch effort to tackle
global warming.

In this context, a recent report by the French Defense and Climate
Observatory highlighted the developments in the widespread deployment of
solar geoengineering technologies in the coming decades, the associated
natural and human risks, key actors, and the role of major powers in this
field. The report also presented potential scenarios and recommendations
for deploying these technologies by 2050.
*Nature of Technologies and Risks:*

Solar geoengineering, or solar radiation management (SRM), involves
techniques designed to reflect sunlight to cool the Earth through
large-scale, deliberate intervention in the Earth’s climate system to
mitigate the harmful effects of global warming. However, using these
techniques involves both human and natural risks. Several types of SRM
technologies are designed, including:

*Local Solar Geoengineering:* Two local techniques have been developed:
marine cloud brightening (MCB) and cloud thinning (CCT). Marine cloud
brightening involves injecting tiny droplets into marine clouds to make
them brighter and more reflective by spraying sea salt into low marine
clouds. Brighter clouds help reduce the amount of solar radiation reaching
the Earth’s surface, thereby lowering atmospheric and ocean temperatures.

*Planetary Solar Geoengineering:* This involves injecting aerosols into the
stratosphere (SAI) on a planetary scale. This method disperses reflective
particles via aircraft or balloons in the stratosphere, targeting the
release of sulfate particles to reduce the amount of sunlight reaching the
Earth and the heat trapped in the atmosphere. This approach aims to create
cooling conditions similar to those following major volcanic eruptions.
While this technique is the most studied for modifying radiative balance,
it is also the most controversial due to its planetary scope and associated
scientific uncertainties.

*Space-Based Solar Geoengineering:* Some solar geoengineering projects plan
to deploy reflective devices (mirrors) in outer space to reflect about 2%
of sunlight. This technique is less advanced and less studied due to its
complexity and high costs, estimated in billions of dollars. Mirrors would
need to be launched by rocket and positioned about 1,500,000 kilometers
from Earth at the “Lagrange L1” point, where Earth’s gravity
counterbalances the Sun’s gravity, allowing objects to be stable in orbit.

According to a 2023 United Nations report on solar geoengineering, the
mirrors would last about 20 years. Currently, there is only one space-based
geoengineering project, titled “Space Bubbles,” being carried out by a team
from MIT, aimed at dispersing some sunlight away from Earth. However, it
remains theoretical.

There are several natural risks associated with the three solar
geoengineering techniques, including: persistent effects related to
increased carbon dioxide levels, reduced photosynthesis affecting humidity,
rainfall, and local oxygen concentrations (e.g., drought in South America,
increased tropical rainfall), ozone layer degradation, increased
hurricanes, and extreme climate changes with severe impacts on temperatures
and ecosystems due to solar radiation.

Human risks include: reduced agricultural yields, decreased primary
productivity in the Amazon, slight increases in rainfall disruption in
Africa, health risks associated with temperature changes, declining air
quality, and loss of ecosystem services (e.g., decreased photosynthesis).


Additionally, there is a common risk known as “social and technical
lock-in,” where developed technologies become entrenched due to economic
and political interests, making it difficult to reverse their deployment
even if they prove ineffective or harmful, leading to what is known as
“terminal shock.” This risk is particularly relevant for space mirrors,
which might become targets in military conflicts, potentially causing an
immediate increase in global temperatures. This risk also applies to
geoengineering operations requiring ongoing chemical interventions.
*Network of Actors:*

The actors in the field of solar geoengineering vary between major
countries, the scientific community, as well as the private sector,
international bodies, and non-governmental organizations. However, major
powers remain the most influential actors in the solar geoengineering
network. Key players include:

*United States:* The country is the most advanced in solar geoengineering,
dominating the sector through several major projects (such as Harvard, the
University of California, Cornell). The Department of Defense is
significantly involved, and the private sector has increasingly financed
research, granting around $20 million from 2008 to 2018 for solar
geoengineering initiatives and projects.

*China:* Active in solar geoengineering research, as evidenced by a
publicly funded Chinese research project from 2015 to 2019. This project
aims to study the climate impacts of solar geoengineering and explore
related governance issues. In August 2020, China conducted a local solar
geoengineering experiment on the Dagu Glacier in Sichuan to reduce glacier
melting during summer.

*Russia:* Does not have a research program in solar geoengineering based on
available information. However, the former Soviet Union had laid the
groundwork for aerosol injection into the stratosphere, a proposal by
researcher Budyko in the late 1970s. Moscow’s official stance appears
supportive of solar geoengineering, as evidenced by its request to include
a section on it as a potential climate change solution in the 2013
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report and its acknowledgment of
ongoing developments in geoengineering techniques.
*Expected Scenarios:*

Several scenarios are proposed for the future of solar geoengineering by
2050:

*Scenario One: Unilateral Deployment by the United States:* This scenario
assumes that by 2047, the global average temperature will rise by +2.5°C
compared to pre-industrial levels, with greenhouse gas emissions not
sufficiently reduced and the international community failing to meet Paris
Agreement goals. All countries will experience widespread natural disasters
annually, resulting in thousands of casualties and displaced people,
weakening the economic situation globally. In the U.S., political tensions
rise, and the country becomes the world’s second superpower after China,
starting from 2039. Additionally, drought and water scarcity severely
impact agriculture, making cotton and corn cultivation impossible, and
soybean and wheat yields drop by about 40% starting in 2025.

In this context, public criticism of the U.S. government increases for not
adequately anticipating climate change impacts and delaying adaptation
efforts. Consequently, in 2047, the U.S. officially announces the
deployment of stratospheric aerosol injection, while it has not ratified
the 2035 Solar Geoengineering Convention that prohibits unilateral
technology deployment. This unilateral decision entrenches international
polarization. With the UN and Security Council failing to resolve the
crisis, Russia and China, along with a few partners, launch a diplomatic
campaign condemning the “selfish” actions of the U.S., threatening military
intervention, and initiating discussions within the alliance about
counter-solar geoengineering operations.

*Scenario Two: China and the “ArcticX” Project:* This scenario posits that
by 2050, global warming will reach +2.6°C compared to pre-industrial times.
This will lead to the collapse of the Greenland ice sheet, the complete
disappearance of winter ice in the Barents Sea, and the melting of summer
ice in the Arctic, causing a two-meter rise in average sea levels,
submerging thousands of homes, and leaving entire communities without
habitable land. Biodiversity will also face consecutive extinctions, with
thousands of plant and animal species disappearing since 2020.
Additionally, conflicts over water and food resources, as well as social
and environmental conflicts, will intensify.

In this context, an alliance of countries will form to deploy solar
geoengineering technologies, with the U.S., China, and India leading,
aiming to mitigate climate change impacts and calm rising social
disturbances. After several proposals for deployment are rejected by the
UN, China proposes a regional solar geoengineering initiative to protect
the Arctic, announcing the “ArcticX” project in 2050, which aims to enhance
the reflectivity of marine clouds over the Arctic.

This regional deployment receives support from all allied countries and
most regional nations (such as Canada, Norway, Denmark, and Iceland),
interested in protecting the poles. However, it faces opposition from
Moscow, as melting ice caps in Greenland and the Barents Sea would allow
Russia to use the Arctic as a commercial shipping route, rich in oil,
natural gas, and minerals, and crucial fish resources. Consequently, Russia
threatens to militarily attack the ships deployed by China.

*Scenario Three: Solar Geoengineering as a New Consumer Commodity:* In the
first half of the 21st century, the Amazon rainforest gradually transforms
into savanna, releasing increasing amounts of carbon dioxide into the
atmosphere, surpassing an irreparable tipping point, resulting in a rise in
the global average temperature to +3°C by 2037 compared to pre-industrial
levels. Agricultural losses will affect 40% of global production.
Consequently, technological advancements in carbon extraction from the
atmosphere will face commercial and political failure due to ineffective
technologies and social and environmental conflicts.

In this context, several countries (including the U.S., the U.K., Gulf
States, Russia, and Maghreb countries), supported by oil lobby groups, will
move towards deploying solar geoengineering. Europe will be divided, with
Sweden, Norway, and Spain opposing any solar geoengineering deployment and
implementing an emergency mitigation plan, while countries like France,
Germany, and Italy will emphasize the need for urgent cooling measures. In
2037, oil lobby groups, backed by the U.S. and Gulf States, will develop a
strategy to promote solar geoengineering to individual consumers, creating
a new commercial market by promoting a new form of individual climate
commitment. Meanwhile, several G77 countries, led by China, will strongly
oppose these moves.

In conclusion, the French Ministry of Defense recommended integrating solar
geoengineering as a political, geostrategic, and military tool, enhancing
information exchange in this field, particularly through raising the issue
in strategic bilateral dialogues, strengthening partnerships with
atmospheric science research institutes (such as MétéoFrance), and
integrating research on climate change impacts on natural systems and
potential effects of solar geoengineering. The ministry also recommended
establishing a scientific, technological, and geostrategic monitoring body
to oversee the development of solar geoengineering projects and anticipate
the ability of various actors to maintain technological leadership enabling
unilateral large-scale deployment.

*Source: Politics_DZ*

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