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The Science and Politics of Geoengineering with Ted Parson | TGS 200

 <https://www.youtube.com/@thegreatsimplification> 

Nate Hagens <https://www.youtube.com/@thegreatsimplification> 

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5,203 views Nov 13, 2025 The Great Simplification - with Nate Hagens
<https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLdc087VsWiC4Nwh42Sm5hHpu2OGgi-Ez1> 

(Conversation recorded on September 25th, 2025) Global heating continues,
despite the increased use of renewable energy sources and international
policies attempting otherwise. Even as emissions reduction efforts continue,
our world faces more extreme weather, sea level rise, and human health
impacts, all of which are projected to accelerate in the coming decades.
This raises an important but controversial question: at what point might
more drastic interventions, like geoengineering, become necessary in order
to cool the planet? In this episode, Nate interviews Professor Ted Parson
about solar geoengineering (specifically stratospheric aerosol injection) as
a potential response to severe climate risks. They explore why humanity may
need to consider deliberately cooling Earth by spraying reflective particles
in the upper atmosphere, how the technology would work, as well as the risks
and enormous governance challenges involved. Ted emphasizes the importance
of having these difficult conversations now, so that we're prepared for the
wide range of climate possibilities in the future. How does stratospheric
aerosol injection actually work? What is the likelihood that a major nation
(or rogue billionaire) might employ this approach in the next thirty years?
What ethical, moral, and biophysical concerns should we consider as we weigh
the costs and benefits of further altering Earth's planetary balance? 

 

About Ted Parson: Edward A. (Ted) Parson is Dan and Rae Emmett Professor of
Environmental Law and Faculty Director of the Emmett Institute on Climate
Change and the Environment at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Parson studies international environmental law and policy, the societal
impacts and governance of disruptive technologies including geoengineering
and artificial intelligence, and the political economy of regulation. His
most recent books are The Science and Politics of Global Climate Change
(with Andrew Dessler), and A Subtle Balance: Evidence, Expertise, and
Democracy in Public Policy and Governance, 1970-2010. His 2003 book,
Protecting the Ozone Layer: Science and Strategy, won the Sprout Award of
the International Studies Association and is widely recognized as the
authoritative account of the development of international cooperation to
protect the ozone layer. In addition to his academic positions, Parson has
worked and consulted for the White House Office of Science and Technology
Policy, the Office of Technology Assessment of the U.S. Congress, the Privy
Council Office of the Government of Canada, and the International Institute
for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA). 

 

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