Geoengineering
the Earth's climate sends policy debate down a curious rabbit hole
Many
of the world’s major scientific establishments are discussing the
concept of modifying the Earth’s climate to offset global warming
4
August, 2014
There’s
a bit in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland where things get
“curiouser and curiouser” as the heroine tries to reach a garden
at the end of a rat-hole sized corridor that she’s just way too big
for.
She
drinks a potion and eats a cake with no real clue what the
consequences might be. She grows to nine feet tall, shrinks to ten
inches high and cries literal floods of frustrated tears.
I
spent a couple of days at a symposium
in Sydney last
week that looked at the moral and ethical issues around the concept
of geoengineering the Earth’s climate as a “response” to global
warming.
No
metaphor is ever quite perfect (climate impacts are no ‘wonderland’),
but Alice’s curious experiences down the rabbit hole seem to fit
the idea of medicating the globe out of a possible catastrophe.
And
yes, the fact that in some quarters geoengineering is now on the
table shows how the debate over climate change policy is itself
becoming “curiouser and curiouser” still.
It’s
tempting too to dismiss ideas like pumping sulphate particles into
the atmosphere or making clouds whiter as some sort of surrealist
science fiction.
But
beyond the curiosity lies actions being countenanced and discussed by
some of the world’s leading scientific institutions.
What is geoengineering?
Geoengineering
– also known as climate engineering or climate modification - comes
in as many flavours as might have been on offer at the Mad Hatter’s
Tea Party.
Professor
Jim Falk, of the Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute at the
University of Melbourne, has a list of more than 40 different
techniques that have been suggested.
They
generally take two approaches.
Carbon
Dioxide Reduction (CDR) is pretty self explanatory. Think tree
planting, algae farming, increasing the carbon in soils, fertilising
the oceans or capturing emissions from power stations. Anything that
cuts the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere.
Solar
Radiation Management (SRM) techniques are concepts to try and reduce
the amount of solar energy reaching the earth. Think pumping sulphate
particles into the atmosphere (this mimics major
volcanic eruptions that have a cooling effect on the planet),
trying to whiten clouds or more benign ideas like painting roofs
white.
Geoengineering on the table
In
2008 an Australian Government–backed research group issued a report
on the state-of-play of ocean
fertilisation,
recording there had been 12 experiments carried out of various kinds
with limited to zero evidence of “success”.
This
priming of the “biological pump” as its known, promotes the
growth of organisms (phytoplankton) that store carbon and then sink
to the bottom of the ocean.
The
report raised the prospect that larger scale experiments could
interfere with the oceanic food chain, create oxygen-depleted “dead
zones” (no fish folks), impact on corals and plants and various
other unknowns.
The Royal
Society –
the world’s oldest scientific institution – released a report in
2009, also reviewing various geoengineering technologies.
In
2011, Australian scientists gathered at a geoengineering
symposium organised by the Australian Academy of Science and
the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering.
The
London Protocol – a maritime convention relating to dumping at sea
– was amended
last year to try and regulate attempts at “ocean fertilisation” –
where substances, usually iron, are dumped into the ocean to
artificially raise the uptake of carbon dioxide.
The
latest major United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
also addressed the geoengineering issue in several chapters of its
latest report. The IPCC summarised geoengineering this way.
CDR methods have biogeochemical and technological limitations to their potential on a global scale. There is insufficient knowledge to quantify how much CO2 emissions could be partially offset by CDR on a century timescale. Modelling indicates that SRM methods, if realizable, have the potential to substantially offset a global temperature rise, but they would also modify the global water cycle, and would not reduce ocean acidification. If SRM were terminated for any reason, there is high confidence that global surface temperatures would rise very rapidly to values consistent with the greenhouse gas forcing. CDR and SRM methods carry side effects and long-term consequences on a global scale.
Towards
the end of this year, the US National Academy of Sciences will be
publishing a major report on the “technical feasibility” of some
geoengineering techniques.
Fighting Fire With Fire
The symposium
in Sydney was
co-hosted by the University of New South Wales and the Sydney
Environment Institute at the University of Sydney (for full
disclosure here, they paid my travel costs and one night stay).
Dr
Matthew Kearnes, one of the organisers of the workshop from UNSW,
told me there was “nervousness among many people about even
thinking or talking about geoengineering.” He said:
I would not want to dismiss that nervousness, but this is an agenda that’s now out there and it seems to be gathering steam and credibility in some elite establishments.
Internationally geoengineering tends to be framed pretty narrowly as just a case of technical feasibility, cost and efficacy. Could it be done? What would it cost? How quickly would it work?
We wanted to get a way from the arguments about the pros and cons and instead think much more carefully about what this tells us about the climate change debate more generally.
The
symposium covered a range of frankly exhausting philosophical, social
and political considerations – each of them jumbo-sized cans full
of worms ready to open.
Professor
Stephen Gardiner, of the University of Washington, Seattle,pushed
for the wider community to think about the ethical and moral
consequences of geoengineering.
He drew a parallel between the way, he said, that current fossil fuel
combustion takes benefits now at the expense of impacts on future
generations. Geoengineering risked making the same mistake.
Clive
Hamilton’s book Earthmasters notes “in practice any realistic
assessment of how the world works must conclude that geoengineering
research is virtually certain to reduce incentives to pursue emission
reductions”.
Odd advocates
Curiouser
still, is that some of the world’s think tanks who shout the
loudest that human-caused climate change might not even be a thing,
or at least a thing not worth worrying about, are happy to
countenance geoengineering as a solution to the problem they think is
overblown.
For
example, in January this year the Copenhagen Consensus Center, a
US-based think tank founded by Danish political scientist Bjorn
Lomborg,
issued a submission to an Australian Senate inquiry looking at
overseas aid and development.
Lomborg’s
center has for many years argued that cutting greenhouse gas
emissions is too expensive and that action on climate change should
have a low-priority compared to other issues around the world.
Lomborg
himself says human-caused climate change will not turn into an
economic negative until near the end of this century.
Yet
Lomborg’s submission
told the Australian Senate suggested
that every dollar spent on “investigat[ing] the feasibility of
planetary cooling through geoengineering technologies” could yield
“$1000 of benefits” although this, Lomborg wrote, was a “rough
estimate”.
But
these investigations, Lomborg submitted, “would serve to better
understand risks, costs, and benefits, but also act as an important
potential insurance against global warming”.
Engineering another excuse
Several
academics I’ve spoken with have voiced fears that the idea of
unproven and potentially disastrous geoengineering technologies being
an option to shield societies from the impacts of climate change
could be used to distract policy makers and the public from
addressing the core of the climate change issue – that is, curbing
emissions in the first place.
But
if the idea of some future nation, or group of nations, or even
corporations, some embarking on a major project to modify the Earth’s
climate systems leaves you feeling like you’ve fallen down a
surreal rabbit hole, then perhaps we should also ask ourselves this.
Since
the year 1750, the
world has added something in the region of 1,339,000,000,000 tonnes
of carbon dioxide (that’s
1.34 trillion tonnes) to the atmosphere from fossil fuel and cement
production.
Raising
the level of CO2 in the atmosphere by 40 per cent could be seen as
accidental geoengineering.
Time
to crawl out of the rabbit hole?
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