Why
geoengineering suits Russia's carbon agenda
Russia's
call to include geoengineering in the UN's climate report makes
sense, given the country's fossil fuel strategy.
24
September, 2013
News
that Russia is calling for geoengineering be considered by the IPCC
as a possible response to global warming makes a perverse kind of
sense.
No
government, not even those of Canada and Australia, has been more
eager to open up new sources of fossil energy than Russia’s. By
offsetting the effects of global warming – by, for example, coating
the Earth with a layer of sulphate particles to reduce the amount of
sunlight – geoengineering promises to allow the world to have its
carbon cake and eat it.
The
contradictions of geoengineering appear most starkly in the Arctic.
Melting summer sea ice has made the Arctic global warming’s canary
in the coal-mine, the place that most keeps climate scientists awake
at night.
Yet
the Arctic, a large portion of which is controlled or claimed by
Russia, is a new carbon El Dorado, holding up to a quarter of the
globe’s undiscovered oil and gas reserves. According to one energy
industry insider: "Climate change is opening up one of the last
frontiers for hydrocarbons on our planet. The Arctic … could be set
for rapid change and development as exploration, production and
infrastructure will have an inevitable, irreversible impact."
In
a provocative move, in 2007 a Russian submarine managed to plant the
national flag on the seabed under the North Pole, and a year later
the Russian president, Dmitry Medvedev, declared: "Our first and
main task is to turn the Arctic into Russia’s resource base of the
21st century."
He
was not talking about solar collectors. The Russian government’s
determination to prevent obstacles to get in the way of Arctic
exploitation was demonstrated last week when commandos boarded a
Greenpeace ship and pointed guns at the activists’ heads.
Russia’s
control over exports of gas and oil to Europe is its biggest
strategic bargaining chip. Its bullying of former Soviet satellite
states is well known, but even Germany’s dependence on Russia for
over a third of its oil and gas supplies is enough to lead a
military-linked thinktank to urge the Merkel government to soft-pedal
in its diplomatic dealings with its eastern neighbour.
Global
efforts to reverse the world’s dependence on fossil fuels threaten
Russia’s plans for its economic and strategic future. Challenging
IPCC science would marginalise it from the global negotiations, so
carrying the torch for geoengineering – it would be the first
nation to do so – has a kind of logic to it.
In
2010, Russia joined with Japan in an attempt to water down a
resolution to restrict research into geoengineering at a meeting of
the Convention on Biological Diversity.
In
pursuing the climate engineering agenda, a Russian government is
likely to face fewer domestic constraints than more developed
democracies. Pro-geoengineering analysts writing for a US
conservative thinktank have argued that nations with weak
environmental lobbies (meaning China and Russia) will be able to
deploy "solar radiation management" with muted internal
opposition.
This,
they wrote, is one of its advantages. If true, solar radiation
management is the dictator’s technology of choice. China,
increasingly fearful of environmental catastrophe, has recently
included geoengineering among its earth sciences research priorities.
There
is a long history of attempted weather modification in Russia,
especially as part of the cold war arms race. In 1960, in a book
titled Man versus Climate, two Russian meteorologists matched
American technological hubris when they wrote:
"Today
we are merely on the threshold of the conquest of nature. But if …
the reader is convinced that man can really be the master of this
planet and that the future is in his hands, then the authors will
consider that they have fulfilled their purpose."
The
world’s most vigorous proponent of geoengineering is the Russian
scientist Yuri Izrael. As director of the Research Institute of
Global Climate and Ecology at the Russian Academy of Sciences in
Moscow, he was the first to carry out tests of aerosol spraying,
albeit at low altitudes from helicopters, to gather data on the
optical characteristics of various particles.
Izrael
is said to have been close to President Putin. Although an IPCC
vice-chair until 2008, Izrael at times gives the impression of being
a climate science denier. He invited the guru of American deniers,
Richard Lindzen, to a conference of the Russian Academy of Science in
2004 and himself featured at a 2008 conference of the Heartland
Institute, which was excoriated last year after it compared climate
scientists to the Unabomber.
Izrael
has variously claimed that warming will not be harmful, that the
Kyoto protocol has ‘no scientific basis’, and that it would be
cheaper to resettle Bangladeshis threatened by sea-level rise. And he
argues for geoengineering instead of emission cuts. Other scientists
in Russia seem embarrassed by his antics and describe him as a
"fossil communist", but he remains influential.
Izrael
has frequently collaborated with Andrei Illarionov, once President
Putin’s top economic adviser. Invoking nationalist resentments
Illarionov described the Kyoto protocol as war against Russia. In the
Moscow Times he wrote that it was killing off the world economy like
an "international Auschwitz".
There
are some more reasonable Russian voices talking about geoengineering,
including a handful of scientists modeling the impacts of sulphate
aerosol spraying. However, they argue that geoengineering is
inevitable because carbon emissions are growing by more than the
IPCC’s most pessimistic projections: "Therefore, humankind
will be forced to apply geoengineering to counter the unwanted
consequences of global warming."
It’s
an argument echoed in the text now being put forward by Russia to
modify the summary of the latest IPCC report.
In
2009 I met a Siberian meteorologist at a conference. She told me that
many people in Siberia would welcome a couple of degrees of warming.
She knew enough about how the Earth system works to understand that
any benefits from warming would be fleeting, as the Earth is unlikely
to call a convenient halt once it reaches that threshold, and
certainly not once the Arctic has thawed. But that is a piece of
science many have yet to learn.
•
Clive Hamilton is the
author of Earthmasters: The Dawn of the Age of Climate Engineering
(Yale University Press 2013).
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