https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-019-0564-z

Climate experts’ views on geoengineering depend on their beliefs about
climate change impacts
Astrid Dannenberg & Sonja Zitzelsberger
Nature Climate Change (2019) | Download Citation

Abstract
Damages due to climate change are expected to increase with global warming,
which could be limited directly by solar geoengineering. Here we analyse
the views of 723 negotiators and scientists who are involved in
international climate policy-making and who will have a considerable
influence on whether solar geoengineering will be used to counter climate
change. We find that respondents who expect severe global climate change
damages and who have little confidence in current mitigation efforts are
more opposed to geoengineering than respondents who are less pessimistic
about global damages and mitigation efforts. However, we also find that
respondents are more supportive of geoengineering when they expect severe
climate change damages in their home country than when they have more
optimistic expectations for the home country. Thus, when respondents are
more personally affected, their views are closer to what rational
cost–benefit analyses predict.

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