http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/future_tense/2016/01/geoengineering_might_give_people_an_excuse_to_ignore_climate_change_s_causes.single.html

JAN. 15 2016 7:15 AM
FROM SLATE, NEW AMERICA, AND ASU

Geoengineering’s Moral Hazard Problem
Would treating the symptoms of climate change give people permission to
ignore the causes?

By George Collins

Geoengineering could curb the symptoms of climate change, like sea level
rise—but what if it makes people complacent about the causes?

For more than a quarter-century, policymakers worldwide have puzzled over
how to deal with climate change. If nothing else, these negotiations have
served as a productive greenhouse environment for jargon. In particular,
two modest-sounding words—mitigation and adaptation—have grown to occupy a
special position, together including all possible responses to climate
change. Mitigation attempts to reduce the atmospheric concentration of
greenhouse gases by making humans emit less (via renewable energy,
fuel-efficient cars, well-insulated houses, and so forth) and helping the
Earth absorb as much or more (by, say, protecting or expanding forests and
wetlands). Since we haven’t mitigated enough already, we need adaptation as
well, which softens the negative effects of higher temperatures, rising
seas, and changing rainfall patterns by switching to drought-resistant
crops, protecting coastal areas from floods, and trying, in hundreds of
other ways, to make human and natural systems more resilient and robust.
These two approaches are pretty comprehensive. Classically, the only other
option is the default—proceeding as usual and hoping for the best—which is
sometimes called “loss and damage” or, more candidly, “suffering.”

Geoengineering—a diverse collection of extreme-sounding, planet-sized
proposals for stopping or reversing climate change—is often presented as a
disruptive (or simply destructive) alternative to these well-worn
paradigms. But we need to look carefully at the various ways in which
geoengineering might relate, for better or worse, to mitigation,
adaptation, and suffering. Otherwise, we risk getting distracted by the
novelty of the ideas involved and missing some deeper complexities and
controversies.

Many geoengineering proposals involve poorly understood (or entirely
theoretical) technologies intended to modify incredibly complex
atmospheric, chemical, and biological dynamics. Determining the safety and
efficacy of these technologies without just trying them out will
be complicated, maybe even impossible. But imagine for the sake of argument
that a particular geoengineering technology had somehow been indisputably
proven “safe,” with no chance of unwanted physical side effects such as
sudden droughts or floods, biodiversity collapse, ozone depletion, or
excessive cooling. There might still be reasons why we shouldn’t seriously
consider deploying or developing the technology. For example, certain
geoengineering approaches could be fundamentally incompatible with
democratic political processes, impossible to effectively govern or
administrate, destined to create conflict between countries that might
prefer different climates, or too tempting as an old-fashioned weapon of
war. Or perhaps use of the technology would transgress a profound ethical
boundary between humans and the Earth by bringing the entire planet under
active management (rather than just subjecting it to reckless passive
influence).

But even if all of these problems could be effectively and fairly resolved,
what if geoengineering has a fundamentally antagonistic relationship with
mitigation and adaptation? This concern is often (loosely) called the
“moral hazard” problem, after the insurance industry’s observation that
people sometimes drive more recklessly if their cars have safety features.
If politicians or their constituents inaccurately—but conveniently—believe
that geoengineering could solve, will solve, or has solved climate change,
why would they make any efforts to transition to renewable energy or help
protect vulnerable people from climate effects? Will hope in an uncertain,
far-off, deeply imperfect “solution” let humans off the hook at the
time—now—when they most need to be on it?

Obviously, scientists, journalists, and others have been discussing
geoengineering for quite a while, and it hasn’t caused mitigation and
adaptation to stop in their tracks. Some commentators suggest that
geoengineering is a sufficiently scary prospect that merely mentioning it
willincrease public commitment to traditional climate solutions: “Don’t
make us have to use the sulfates.” Then again, moral hazard concerns have
not been helped by wildly overenthusiastic popular coverage of
geoengineering (for example, the frankly ignoranttreatment that it received
inSuperFreakonomics). And moral hazard can be actively encouraged as well.
The fossil fuel industry, say, might double down on geoengineering since it
could, in principle, offer the industry a few more years with its existing
business models.

It’s best to think of moral hazard as a potentially serious social side
effect of geoengineering—more complicated, but not necessarily less risky,
than the physical side effects that people are worried about. But sometimes
it’s right to take risks, especially in extreme situations, and climate
change, even with effective mitigation and adaptation, poses some big risks
of its own. This point particularly relates to one set of geoengineering
proposals—those known as solar radiation management, or SRM. Emissions
reduction, althoughabsolutely necessary, turns out to be a relatively slow
way to bring the planet’s temperature back down. (Some short-lived
pollutants, such as black carbon, also contribute to global warming, and
their removal could reduce temperatures quickly, but not necessarily by
that much.) Adaptation—particularly ecosystem adaptation—takes significant
time as well. Traditionally, only suffering happens fast.

Certain SRM technologies occupy a special place in the geoengineering
conversation because they may be able to reduce global temperatures fairly
quickly, albeit with suspected and possibly unsuspected side effects. In
theory, the quick-acting nature of some SRM might be the only way to avoid
an ecosystem-changing event like a catastrophic ice melt. This suggests the
possibility of a relationship with healthy boundaries; mitigation and
adaptation would continue on their own and SRM would be considered only in
case of emergency, when no other approach we know of has a chance to work
fast enough.

However, some recent commentaryhas cast shade on this proposal. Climate
scientists point out that it is far from clear when a tipping point is
about to be crossed; political theorists note that emergencies are often
used to justify hasty and ill-advised choices and undemocratic
decision-making; and international relations scholars anticipate great
disagreement among countries about what an emergency sufficient to justify
geoengineering would look like. Besides, the whole point of moral hazard is
that people don’t make objectively correct decisions when it comes to
safety and risk. Even the feeling that emergency situations are covered by
geoengineering could be enough to derail mitigation and adaptation.

As the emergencies-only viewpoint draws fire, another, sunnier position is
getting more public attention. It views geoengineering less as Pandora’s
box and more as an extra toolbox. Some of the tools may be inappropriate,
ineffective, or too dangerous to use, but proponents of this view take a
self-consciously “rational” and often highly economic approach to the
problem of integrating geoengineering, mitigation, and adaptation. As
regards moral hazard, for example, a distractedly driven car with seat
belts and airbags can be safer than a safely driven car without them (at
least for the driver). And even if geoengineering made the world less safe,
on the whole, at least it might be cheap, and a significant enough cost
savings could justify, to an economist, an equivalent amount of additional
risk.

Whether this viewpoint is promising or alarming depends, in large part, on
whether economic ways of thinking such as cost-benefit analysis are useful
in the face of problems this intricate. The need to rationally assign a
price to everything may encourage irrationally simplified thinking. For
example, even if moral hazard isn’t created by informal discussions like
this one, it could manifest unpredictably, once geoengineering had been
deployed and therefore normalized. (Physics is filled with phenomena that
change at a fundamental level when they become stronger or more widespread,
and these phase changes or “scale effects” exist in human society as well.)
An effect like this could throw a carefully constructed, well-intentioned,
50-year deployment proposal permanently off the rails in Year Five. The
long-term planning, management, and commitment necessary to follow an
effective strategy combining geoengineering, mitigation, and adaptation may
be beyond the ability of our social systems. And just as with the fear that
large-scale SRM will cause crippling drought, it’s not obvious how to find
out whether this is true without trying it. But the costs of a failed
experiment of this magnitude could be overwhelming.

Ultimately, it’s important to ask whether separating geoengineering from
mitigation and adaptation is even useful. The 1992 U.N. Framework
Convention on Climate Change defines mitigation, in part, as “protecting
and enhancing ... greenhouse gas sinks and reservoirs,” which sounds a lot
like many carbon dioxide removal proposals, and recent emissions
scenarios—basically blueprints for keeping global temperatures within
certain limits—actually depend uponnegative emissions in the future. It’s
difficult to imagine how to achieve negative emissions without some amount
of something that is often labeled geoengineering. Likewise, the definition
of adaptation in the 2001 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Third
Assessment Report is “[a]djustment in natural or human systems in response
to actual or expected climatic stimuli or their effects”—and putting
sulfate aerosols in the stratosphere to reduce the amount of incoming
sunlight seems like a pretty clear (if potentially drastic) adjustment of a
natural system.

As the global climate change conversation heads into middle age,
geoengineering proposals are likely to become more specific and
differentiated. Perhaps this emerging familiarity will save us from both
dismissing the field as a whole and from seeing it as a glittering new
landscape filled with exciting solutions. Climate change of the speed and
magnitude that we may experience in the coming century is entirely new
territory, at least for human beings, and of the vast range of responses
that have been proposed, only suffering is truly familiar.

This article is part of the geoengineering installment of Futurography, a
series in which Future Tense introduces readers to the technologies that
will define tomorrow.Each month from January through May 2016, we’ll choose
a new technology and break it down.

Future Tense is a collaboration among Arizona State University, New
America, and Slate. To get the latest from Futurography in your inbox, sign
up for the weekly Future Tense newsletter.

George Collins is a public interest lawyer who has been involved in
geoengineering issues since the Asilomar International Conference on
Climate Intervention Technologies in 2010.

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