“The crux is that Morton does not believe pathways without geoengineering can 
avoid climate harms without causing other serious social or economic harms.”

Isn’t that patently obvious at this point?  That of course is not an argument 
for deploying solar geoengineering, simply an argument in favour of not taking 
it off the table. 

 

d

 

 

From: geoengineering@googlegroups.com [mailto:geoengineering@googlegroups.com] 
On Behalf Of Andrew Lockley
Sent: Monday, November 09, 2015 6:31 PM
To: geoengineering <geoengineering@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [geo] The Planet Remade: Reviewed – Duncan McLaren

 

http://dcgeoconsortium.org/2015/11/09/planet-remade-reviewed/

The Forum for Climate Engineering Assessment: Unpacking the social and 
political implications of climate engineering

The Planet Remade: Reviewed – Duncan McLaren

In this ambitious book Oliver Morton attempts a tricky task: simultaneously 
introducing and examining the scope of climate geoengineering; and also 
imagining its utopian application (not just technologically utopian, but also 
politically and socially). The book’s strength is that it largely achieves 
these two potentially contradictory tasks. Morton delivers a utopian scenario 
for climate engineering while still giving enough attention to its possible 
pitfalls and missteps to reveal just how difficult such a path would be to 
craft in reality. Time and again he emphasizes the need for care, compassion 
and justice in in both the purposes and design of a climate geoengineering 
intervention.

Morton’s utopian scenario is one in which a stratospheric aerosol injection 
(SAI) is deployed to give society ‘breathing space’ to ramp down carbon 
emissions and develop carbon removal techniques.  It’s deployment would be led 
by a ‘club’ of low-emission nations, and used as negotiated leverage to incite 
elevated mitigation by others (Morton acknowledges that the linkage here might 
be hard to achieve, and that others might rather slack off their efforts). In 
what might be a nod to Iain Banks’ ‘Concern’ (2009), Morton’s climate club is 
dubbed ‘The Concert’. It begins in secret with little power, but with high 
leverage approaches plays a critical role in changing how humanity sees its 
role on the planet and relationship with nature.

Morton claims only that he has constructed a plausible pathway for a beneficial 
deployment of SAI – for which his alias of ‘veil making’, used ostensibly to 
avoid technical language, softens the idea, making it more palatable as well as 
more accessible. He is, however, at pains to acknowledge alternative, more 
damaging routes: which may in reality be more likely in the face of real-world 
irrationality. He treats the ‘moral hazard’ – that critical actors might reduce 
mitigation efforts if geoengineering is available – seriously, and neatly 
encapsulates one scary variant as the ‘superfreak pivot’ (that climate deniers 
will shift to support geoengineering as yet another reason to do nothing about 
emissions).

The crux is that Morton does not believe pathways without geoengineering can 
avoid climate harms without causing other serious social or economic harms. He 
sees a need for high leverage interventions (with strong governance 
foundations) because economic and climate inertia mean mitigation is now too 
late or slow. So he is forced to seek out a ‘good’ geoengineering pathway, 
however difficult it is to construct.

The Planet Remade covers all the main proposed geoengineering techniques – (not 
just SAI, but also ocean iron fertilization (OIF), marine cloud brightening 
(MCB), bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS) and direct air capture 
(DAC)), outlining their history, the current state of knowledge, and expected 
risks and benefits (and impressively, without descending into the alphabet soup 
of all these acronyms). But – thankfully – it is more than a popular science 
book about new technologies: it raises important philosophical, ethical and 
political questions. It successfully pushes the reader beyond current 
assumptions about what geoengineering might be, and why it might be done – to 
recognize other possibilities both tempting and concerning.

The Planet Remade: How Geoengineering Could Change the World by Oliver Morton.

But while Morton does well to offer contrary views on the science and 
technologies involved, he is less successful in breaking out of the pervasive 
framings of geoengineering. In posing two questions in his introduction (do you 
believe climate risk to merit serious action? Do you think it will be very hard 
to reduce carbon dioxide emissions to near zero?), he already reproduces the 
most sticky frames: that unabated climate change is a huge (even catastrophic) 
problem; that political approaches to resolving the challenge have largely 
failed (and cannot now be expected to work); and that novel technological 
responses are the most likely possibilities now – as ways to ameliorate climate 
impacts without deep changes in society. Elsewhere he rows back from most of 
these framings at least a little, exploring questions of politics and justice, 
and actively rejecting climate emergency arguments, but in terms of 
establishing a setting in which geoengineering appears rational, unavoidable 
and even desirable, the horse has already bolted.

Morton though clearly disagrees with those who categorically reject 
geoengineering – for example on grounds of hubris, or because it might prevent 
desirable deep changes in society (see for example, Clive Hamilton (2013) and 
Mike Hulme (2014)). He recognizes that climate geoengineering could embody a 
nuclear weapon-like “Dr Strangelove sensibility and an 
I-am-become-death-the-destroyer-of-worlds hubris” (311) but asserts that “If I 
thought this was a necessary truth at the heart of climate geoengineering I 
would not have written this book” (312). He concentrates instead on whether it 
is practical, and how it could be done well, transparently governed and justly 
distributed.

Here Morton’s technological optimism is at its strongest: arguments that 
geoengineering could not be controlled – even those backed by scientific 
experimentation – are pushed aside, if favor of the implicit utopian belief 
that SAI could be fine-tuned to minimize harms (even though the effects are 
almost impossible to attribute – especially over short time scales). This 
though remains an argument on Morton’s terms: a largely utilitarian assessment 
of net costs and benefits. Those who think geoengineering is categorically 
unjustified are unlikely to be convinced by arguments like this on either side. 
Morton offers less to such readers than to those ready to consider the 
possibility that the world is past the point at which practical accelerated 
mitigation and adaptation action can adequately ameliorate the growing impacts 
of climate change.

The crux is that Morton does not believe pathways without geoengineering can 
avoid climate harms without causing other serious social or economic harms.

The book is rich in history and Morton finds lessons in wealth of different 
contexts: from weather-making to nuclear dreams (and nightmares) and even 
asteroid impact detection. Morton does not subscribe to the ‘exceptionalist’ 
doctrine that climate geoengineering is entirely unprecedented and demanding of 
novel responses. However, the book’s least convincing passages are those where 
he seeks to persuade the reader that past human interventions in the nitrogen 
cycle represent geoengineering in practice, and offer helpful lessons for 
future geo-engineering. A more grounded reading suggests that – like fossil 
fuel exploitation – human activities to fix nitrogen (for explosives and 
fertilizers) are – at most – ‘unintentional’ geoengineering, and the responses 
Morton praises in the management of nitrogen have much more in common with 
carbon mitigation than they do with climate geoengineering.

The Planet Remade is not just about geoengineering, but also about the trendy 
idea of the Anthropocene: the suggestion that human impact on the planet is so 
great that we have, collectively become not just a geological force but the 
dominant one in the modern age, and that our impacts will be seen in the 
geological record for eons to come. Despite his memorable description of the 
worst outcomes of the Anthropocene as “a Frankenstein planet stitched together 
by geological resurrection men,” (258) Morton’s sympathies lie closer to the 
Promethean scientists of the unavoidable Anthropocene, than with 
environmentalists who use the term more as a cautionary warning – a reason to 
pull back and lessen our interference. Indeed on more than one occasion 
environmentalists are too easily equated with racists and eugenicists of 
history. This is not to say there are no misguided advocates of population 
control at any cost left today, but to smear – however implicitly and 
unintentionally – mainstream environmentalists concerned to avoid crossing 
scientifically identified ‘planetary boundaries’ with such associations is 
unhelpful.

In the end I may disagree on the desirability of the particular society and 
engineered earth-system that Morton portrays (both in his utopian scenario, and 
in the frames he reproduces), but I can celebrate the excellent job he has done 
of making the reader consider and envisage alternative futures in which both 
technology and society are transformed. The most valuable role of 
geoengineering is not necessarily how it might act on the physical world, but 
how its consideration can help us change our mental and social worlds for the 
better. Discussing it, as Morton does, with open reference to the moral hazards 
involved and the potential justice implications is a positive step forward in 
developing responsible discourses of climate futures.

Oliver Morton, The Planet Remade: How Geoengineering could change the world, 
Princeton, 2015. 428pp, $20.

References
Iain Banks, Transition, Little, Brown, 2009
Clive Hamilton, Earthmasters: The Dawn of the Age of Climate Engineering, Yale 
University Press, 2013.
Mike Hulme, Can Science Fix Climate Change? Polity Press, 2014

Duncan McLaren is a part time PhD student at Lancaster, UK. Alongside his PhD 
studies, on the justice implications of geoengineering, he consults and advises 
in a range of sustainable development, energy and climate change issues. 
Amongst other roles he served on the UK Research Councils’ stage-gate panel for 
the Stratospheric Particle Injection for Climate Engineering (SPICE) project 
review and is a member of the Integrated Assessment of Geoengineering Potential 
(IAGP) project advisory group.  Duncan’s blog can be found here.

 

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