https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10584-025-04039-7

*Authors*: Leonie N. Bossert

*14 October 2025*

*Abstract*
Anthropogenic climate change profoundly impacts nonhuman animals, leading
to habitat destruction, resource scarcity, and extreme weather events.
Despite these consequences, ethical discussions on climate change,
including the debate on geoengineering, remain predominantly
anthropocentric. Geoengineering, defined as the deliberate, large-scale
manipulation of Earth's climate to counteract climate change, also has
significant implications for nonhuman animals. This article advocates a
non-anthropocentric perspective on geoengineering, emphasizing the need for
ethical consideration of nonhuman animals within justice debates. It
identifies key research gaps, including ethical justifications for
broadening geoengineering debates to nonhuman animals, comparative analyses
of animal well-being under geoengineered and non-geoengineered climates,
and political representation of nonhuman animal interests. In the last
part, the article briefly reflects on the research gaps that exist for a
theory of interspecies justice in the context of marine cloud brightening.
By doing so, the article calls for integrating animals' interests into the
broader climate ethics discourse and urges further ethical and
interdisciplinary research to assess the implications of climate
interventions, such as the various geoengineering methods, on nonhuman
animals.

*Source: Springer Link *

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