By Claudia Wieners, Ben Hofbauer, Iris de Vries, Matthias Honegger, Daniele Visioni, Herman Russchenberg, and Tyler Felgenhauer.
As highlighted again by the most recent IPCC report [IPCC AR6], climate change is an unprecedented threat. With every day of continued emissions and with every tenth of a degree of additional warming, more harm is done to people and ecosystems, and the risk of hitting tipping points is growing. Climate change affects people in all regions of the world, and is impeding progress towards all UN sustainable development goals, including eradication of poverty, inequality, and injustice.
Eliminating emissions and removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere (together “mitigation”), and reducing damage through adaptation to climate risks and impacts, are currently accepted tools for addressing global warming and its consequences. But despite significant efforts and progress, there is no guarantee that these strategies will be sufficiently effective to keep global warming below 1.5 or even 2C (see below). This realisation has led to increasing interest in additional tools to reduce global warming and its impacts, such as solar radiation modification (SRM).
SRM aims to limit warming by reflecting a fraction of the incoming solar radiation, for example by introducing a thin aerosol layer in the higher atmosphere or by brightening clouds. Modelling studies available to date suggest that SRM could deliver rapid cooling to help limit peak global warming to 1.5C until emission reductions and carbon dioxide removal reduce greenhouse gas concentrations to tolerable levels. Models also indicate that using SRM to partially offset the assumed future warming could limit change across relevant climate variables, not just temperature, in most world regions.
SRM might provide an auxiliary tool to help reduce climate risk, limit suffering, lessen ecosystem degradation and improve the chances of sustainable development, but SRM is far from perfect. It does not address the root cause of global warming and is expected to come with its own set of societal and environmental risks and problems. Because of this, SRM is highly controversial. Here we argue that nonetheless, thorough and critical research on SRM is a safer path than wilfully neglecting it.
THREE CONCERNS
Mitigation is humanity’s safest and most powerful means of fighting global warming, and the only way to address its root cause. SRM can at best complement mitigation and adaptation. However, even if humanity implements ambitious efforts in mitigation and adaptation, this may not suffice to prevent severe climate impacts and suffering. We have the following three concerns:
- Removal of CO2 from the atmosphere may not be achieved at sufficient scale and speed. Recent IPCC scenarios compatible with the Paris Agreement goal of limiting warming to 1.5C rely on future technologies to remove CO2 from the atmosphere, achieving global net-negative emissions by 2060. As the necessary techniques are still under development, it is uncertain whether they can be deployed in time and with sufficient intensity.
- The climate may react more strongly to greenhouse gases than expected. There is persisting uncertainty about the amount of warming resulting from greenhouse gases (“climate sensitivity”). Even the most ambitious IPCC scenario mentioned above will lead to more than 1.5C warming if climate sensitivity is on the high end of current estimates.
- Limiting global warming to 1.5C may not be enough to prevent serious damage. There is no certainty that severe impacts can be avoided even at this moderate warming level. Adaptation may not suffice to prevent losses and suffering, especially if ecosystems or parts of the climate system cross tipping points. But every tenth of a degree of warming we prevent, reduces the probability of disastrous outcomes.
All three concerns have considerable probability, hence the world must be prepared for the possibility that one or more of them prove true. If so, even ambitious decarbonisation can not prevent devastating climate impacts, which would disproportionately affect developing countries, induce injustice, and instigate unprecedented governance challenges. And if the implementation of mitigation strategies lags behind the ambitious IPCC scenarios, climate risks will increase even more.
Hence, while SRM is risky, so is rejecting it. Ignoring either type of risk would distort judgment. We therefore recommend a “Golden Rule” of assessing SRM: The risks of researching, developing and possibly implementing SRM must be balanced against the climate risks SRM would attenuate [C2G 2022, Sovacool et al. 2022]. Given the severe risks of climate change, disregarding SRM may have strong repercussions for future generations. Rejecting SRM is therefore not the obvious default option, but a choice which needs to be scrutinised both scientifically and ethically, in the same way as pursuing SRM needs scrutiny.
RESEARCH AND TRANSPARENT ASSESSEMENT NEEDED
If one or more of the aforementioned concerns materialises, there is a significant chance that a decision on the use of SRM has to be made in the future, especially if the (perceived) pressure from climate impact calls for fast and drastic action. Should such a situation arise, ignorance would add to the risk of misguided decisions and compromise the legitimacy of the decision-making process.
Pursuing SRM in spite of lack of knowledge bears a risk of ineffective or harmful implementation strategies. Rejecting SRM a priori would deprive humanity of a potential auxiliary tool against climate change impacts. Rejecting SRM is the correct decision if no beneficial SRM implementation strategy exists, but it might be difficult to uphold this decision under pressure without sufficient evidence for the harmfulness of SRM. Hence, regardless of whether SRM is beneficial or detrimental, ignorance jeopardises rational, balanced, justifiable decision making.
Currently, humanity is not well prepared for a possible decision on SRM. Only 0.05% of the annual climate research funding is presently spent on research on SRM, and grave knowledge gaps remain. Our generation has the chance and capability to perform responsible and critical SRM research in time to gain the knowledge needed for sound decision making. These research efforts should include thorough, impartial, interdisciplinary, and internationally legitimised assessment by international bodies such as the IPCC.
SRM RESEARCH AND ETHICS
Besides the environmental risks associated with SRM deployment, SRM research is also not without risks, especially on an ethical, societal and political level. Three main fears are raised against SRM.
- Delayed decarbonisation. The fear that development of SRM, or even simply knowing that SRM is being considered, will lead to less ambitious mitigation efforts.
- Sleepwalking into implementation. The fear that researching and discussing SRM will almost inevitably lead to development and eventually implementation, e.g. by shifting value judgment or establishing interest groups.
- Undemocratic decision-making and governance. The fear that powerful actors, such as rich and influential nations, might impose decisions on SRM in the rest of the world. This would violate procedural justice and, given the global effects of SRM, raises concerns that groups excluded from the decision-making process would be subject to unfavourable outcomes.
These are important concerns, but they may not be inevitable. More importantly, these risks are not avoided by rejecting SRM research and, in our view, do not justify ignoring the potential of SRM. In particular, rejecting SRM research will not necessarily prevent future non-inclusive decision-making or unjustified reliance on technological solutions. Instead, SRM research should be conducted in a way that minimises risks induced by the research itself.
Following a number of scholars who have worked on moral frameworks for SRM [Rayner et al. 2013, NAS report 2021], we propose the following broad principles:
- Mitigation (including removals) and adaptation need to be the focus of any climate policy. SRM should at most serve as an addition to reducing greenhouse gas concentrations.
- Knowledge and implementation of SRM must be administered in the public interest. This entails that the provision of SRM is organised by a globally legitimised body, and not based on private interests.
- Legitimate governance processes must be adhered to, and societal values such as justice and equality must be central when considering the role SRM research can play in lessening the threat of climate change.
- Any decision about deployment must be taken on the basis of broad public participation. Special emphasis should be placed on underrepresented and vulnerable communities, such as the so-called “Global South” and Indigenous Peoples.
- The research process should be transparent, reflective, and cooperative (also on the international level), and provide ample space for off-ramps, in case certain findings point towards undesirable outcomes of SRM deployment.
- SRM research must aim to create a comprehensive body of knowledge covering environmental, technical, political, societal and ethical sciences and properly linking and combining these domains.
- A solid framework for the governance of SRM should be in place before implementation is seriously considered. This entails engaging in research and consultations on governance parallel to studying the environmental and technological aspects of SRM.
While there exists no complete framework yet to ensure adherence to these principles, the (US) National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine have recently published a collection of recommendations for scientists, states and the international community to promote fair and balanced SRM research.
The above principles are not intended to be the last word on the ethics of SRM research and deployment. Any ongoing ethical deliberation requires an open mind for criticism, debate and amendment. This is particularly important since the discussion around SRM research has thus far not been sufficiently representative nor global. However, this lack of representation only underscores the need for more inclusive thorough and systematic research into SRM and its impacts. By calling for ethical SRM research, we recognise that ethics has to be a central part of the research process itself.
CONCLUSION
Given the most recent projections of the IPCC, immediate and decisive action is necessary to reduce the threats of climate change. Rapid emission reduction and carbon dioxide removal are essential to keep and stabilise the climate system in a liveable state, and any further delay will increase climate-induced risks. Meanwhile, Solar Radiation Modification might help to meaningfully reduce climate-induced risks, but it may also introduce new ones. When assessing SRM, all these risks must be fairly balanced. However, knowledge on SRM is as yet insufficient to achieve this.
Given the severity of the climate crisis, there is a significant chance that humanity will eventually have to take a decision in favour or against the use of SRM, and this possibility will not vanish if we now choose to ignore the issue or prohibit SRM research and assessment. If a choice on the use of SRM has to be made, ignorance increases the risk of inadequate decisions. We believe that society has a moral obligation to engage in SRM research – and to set up this process in such a way as to minimise potential risks stemming from the research itself. We therefore call for international, inclusive, transparent, reflective and comprehensive research efforts to enable balanced assessment of SRM.
*The full open letter with end note definitions and resource links can be found here
**Some 50 of the world’s leading climate scientists and policy experts, including authors of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports, heads of research institutes, and policy scholars, have signed the open letter at time of press.
Any opinions published in this commentary reflect the views of the author and not of Carbon Pulse.
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