https://carnegieendowment.org/research/2025/07/geoengineering-assessing-risks-in-the-era-of-planetary-security?locale=en&token=eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJpZCI6IjY2MjE5Mjk3ZjE5ZTlkODgzMjY2MzViMyIsImNvbGxlY3Rpb24iOiJ1c2VycyIsImVtYWlsIjoibWF0dGlhLmJhZ2hlcmluaUBjZWlwLm9yZyIsImlhdCI6MTcyNjgxODM3MCwiZXhwIjoxNzU4MzU0MzcwfQ.CRhM0Kp3Th9V3IV_eHR7v-rH6n_akyCav1L11atH2qQ&lang=en

As the effects of climate change intensify, interest in geoengineering
approaches is ramping up. But these methods risk creating new ecological
and security threats, undermining urgent systemic transitions.

*Authors*
Olivia Lazard,  Mandi Bissett, and James Dyke

Published on *July 16, 2025*

*Summary*
The 1.5° Celsius global warming threshold that climate scientists have
warned against for decades has been breached for several consecutive months
over the last two years. This page-turning moment marks humanity’s entry
into climate overshoot. At the same time, a set of radical solutions known
as geoengineering is increasingly presented as a potential emergency remedy
to climate breakdown. Geoengineering technologies are intentional
interventions in the Earth system that aim to lessen the impacts of climate
change and even reverse increases in global temperatures. These
technologies represent a significant shift in approach to both climate
action and global security.

Planetary Interventions with Long-Term Implications
Geoengineering encompasses two primary approaches: carbon dioxide removal
(CDR) and solar radiation management (SRM). CDR methods aim to extract
carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere or the ocean, while SRM techniques
seek to artificially cool the planet. Current CDR capacity is minimal,
achieving approximately 2.2 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide (GtCO2)
per year. This is primarily through afforestation, although significant
resources are now being directed toward increasing ocean-based
sequestration and engineered systems, such as direct air capture. SRM
proposals include controversial strategies, such as stratospheric aerosol
injection, which could provide rapid temperature reductions but with the
potential to cause considerable damage to regional climates.

Geoengineering approaches are often discussed simply in relation to their
potential to reduce CO2 emissions or shave off peak temperatures, without
reference to the broader systems they take from and impact: human,
ecological, international, and planetary security. As such, the inputs
these approaches require and the varied categories of risk they produce are
often unexplored or examined in silos.

In fact, what lies behind the potential deployment of geoengineering is a
series of risks across several domains. The individual and collective
impacts of these risks will change not only the logic of climate action but
also, more broadly, the security paradigms in which the international
community has operated for decades, if not centuries. For the first time in
history, humankind is contemplating the deliberate deployment of
Earth-system interventions at a planetary scale with implications that
could span centuries. These interventions, intended to control the planet’s
climate, will, at best, reduce—or, at worst, undermine—the natural building
blocks that provide ecosystem services well beyond climate regulation.

*Individual and Collective Risks*
This paper is a primer for policymakers, particularly in Europe. It
introduces a novel framework through which to view the risks associated
with the individual and combined effects of various geoengineering
approaches.

Any individual geoengineering method may carry one or more of three
distinct risks:

It does not work: The method does little or nothing to stop climate change
impacts or even increases emissions or temperatures.
It causes harm: The method damages and destabilizes already-fragile
biophysical and social systems.
It exacerbates international tensions: The method erodes global peace,
security, and cooperation, given the existing political context and the
lack of any international governance framework for CDR or SRM.
Taken as a whole, meanwhile, geoengineering poses three forms of global
catastrophic risk:

Termination shock: Global temperatures increase rapidly if SRM is deployed
but then stopped suddenly without significant emissions reductions having
taken place.
Systemic destabilization: Geoengineering compounds existing risks and
vulnerabilities as cascading failures create the potential for large,
possibly nonlinear, and hard-to-reverse ecosystem and societal changes.
Overshoot risks: Geoengineering leads to irreversible changes in Earth
systems, as reliance on CDR and SRM delays rapid emissions reductions and
undermines the effectiveness of mitigation.
The world has effectively entered the age of planetary security, albeit
with no guiding analytical, governance, or legal compass to conceptualize
and organize it. In this era, security considerations must increasingly
guide the development of frameworks to govern the safety, boundaries, and
integrity of both the biosphere and the technosphere. Such frameworks must
also regulate the geostrategic competition that is taking place in both
domains at the expense of human, ecological, and collective security.

*Source: CARNEGIE EUROPE*

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