https://www.knowablemagazine.org/article/sustainability/2020/why-solar-geoengineering-should-be-part-climate-crisis-solution

Why solar geoengineering should be part of the climate crisis solution
The controversial technology of reflecting sunlight away from the planet
could help blunt the worst impacts of climate change

By Betsy Mason 09.16.2020
For decades, climate scientist David Keith of Harvard University has been
trying to get people to take his research seriously. He’s a pioneer in the
field of geoengineering, which aims to combat climate change through a
range of technological fixes. Over the years, ideas have included
sprinkling iron in the ocean to stimulate plankton to suck up more carbon
from the atmosphere or capturing carbon straight out of the air.

Illustrated portrait of climate scientist David Keith.
CREDIT: JAMES PROVOST (CC BY-ND)

Climate scientist David Keith
Harvard University

Keith founded a company that develops technology to remove carbon from the
air, but his specialty is solar geoengineering, which involves reflecting
sunlight away from Earth to reduce the amount of heat that gets trapped in
the atmosphere by greenhouse gases. The strategy hasn’t been proven, but
modeling suggests it will work. And because major volcanic eruptions can
have the same effect, there are some real-world data to anchor the idea.

In the near future, Keith and his colleagues hope to launch one of the
first tests of the concept: a high-altitude balloon that would inject tiny,
reflective particles into the layer of the upper atmosphere known as the
stratosphere. The place and time for the experiment are still to be
determined, but it would be a baby step toward showing whether artificial
stratospheric particles could help cool the planet the way eruptions do
naturally.

But the idea of using a technological fix for climate change is
controversial. Talking about — let alone researching — geoengineering has
long been considered taboo for fear that it would dampen efforts to fight
climate change in other ways, particularly the critical work of reducing
carbon emissions. That left geoengineering on the fringes of climate
research. But people’s attitudes may be changing, Keith says. He argues
that while geoengineering by itself cannot solve the problem of climate
change, it could help mitigate the damage if implemented carefully
alongside emissions reductions.

In 2000, Keith published an overview of geoengineering research in the
Annual Review of Energy and the Environment, in which he noted that major
climate assessments up until that point had largely ignored it. Earlier
this year, he spoke in Seattle about the current state of the field at the
annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Knowable Magazine talked with Keith about how the scientific, technological
and geopolitical landscape has changed in the intervening decades.

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This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

Twenty years ago you called geoengineering “deeply controversial.” How has
the controversy changed since then?

Back then it was something that a pretty small group of people who thought
about climate knew about — and mostly agreed they wouldn’t talk about. And
that was it. Now it’s much more widely discussed. I think the taboo is
reduced, for sure. It’s certainly still controversial, but my sense is that
there has been a real shift. An increasing number of people who are in
climate science or in public policy around climate or in environmental
groups now agree that this is something we should talk about, even if many
think it should never be implemented. There’s even growing agreement that
research should happen. It feels really different.

Why was there a taboo against talking about geoengineering, and do you
think was it valid?

I think it’s well-intentioned; people are right to worry that talking about
geoengineering might reduce the effort to cut emissions. I don’t think this
concern about moral hazard is a valid reason not to do research. There were
people who argued that we shouldn’t allow the AIDS triple-drug cocktail to
be distributed in Africa because it would be misused, creating resistance.
Others argued against implementation of airbags, because people would drive
faster. There is a long history of arguing against all sorts of potentially
risk-reducing technologies because of the potential for risk compensation —
the possibility that people will change behavior by taking on more risks. I
think it’s an ethically confused argument.

For me, the most serious concern is some entities — like big fossil-fuel
companies that have a political interest in blocking emissions cuts — will
attempt to exploit the potential of geoengineering as an argument against
emissions cuts. This concern has likely been the primary reason that some
big civil-society groups want to block or contain discussion of this stuff
so it doesn’t enter more widely into the climate debate. For me the concern
is entirely justified, but I think the right answer is to confront it
head-on rather than avoiding debate. I don’t want a world where decisions
are made by elites talking behind closed doors.

Graphic illustrates where aerosols would be added to the upper atmosphere
to reflect some portion of sunlight away from Earth.
Solar geoengineering would involve injecting reflective aerosols from
high-altitude planes into the layer of the upper atmosphere known as the
stratosphere, which stretches between 10 to 50 kilometers (6 to 31 miles)
above Earth’s surface. The idea is that the aerosol particles would reflect
a small amount of sunlight away from the planet, reducing the amount of
heat trapped by greenhouse gases and mitigating some of the effects of
climate change.

Has the amount of geoengineering research increased in the past two decades?

Dramatically, even in the last couple of years. When I wrote that Annual
Reviews paper in 2000, there was virtually zero organized research. There
were a few researchers occasionally getting interested and putting in like
1 percent of their time.

Now there are little research programs almost everywhere you care to
mention. There’s a Chinese program that’s pretty serious; there’s an
Australian one that’s better funded than anything in the United States;
there are several in Europe.

What has been the biggest surprise over the past 20 years in how solar
geoengineering might work?

The big surprise has been recent results, including two studies I was
involved in, showing that the effects of a global solar geoengineering
program wouldn’t be as geographically unequal as was feared. What matters
for real public policy is who is made worse off.


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For one paper published last year in Nature Climate Change, we used a very
high-resolution computer model, and we compared, over all the land surface,
two worlds: one world where we have two times preindustrial levels of
carbon dioxide and the other world where we have enough solar
geoengineering to reduce the temperature change by half. For each of the 33
geographical study regions designated by the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change, we tried to look at whether solar geoengineering would move
a particular climate variable back toward preindustrial levels, which we
call “moderated,” or move it further away from preindustrial, which we call
“exacerbated.”

We focused on some of the most important climate variables: change in
extreme temperature, change in average temperature, change in water
availability and change in extreme precipitation. And what we found seems
almost too good to be true: There wasn’t a single variable in a single
region that was exacerbated. That was a surprise.

In a paper published in March in Environmental Research Letters, we did the
same analysis with another model, and we found that with solar
geoengineering, everything is moderated in all regions except four. But all
four of those are dry regions that get wetter. So my guess is many
residents of those regions would actually prefer that outcome because in
general people are more worried about getting drier than wetter.

Now, what the model shows may or may not be true in the real world. But if
there is a single reason to really look at these technologies and evaluate
them in experiments, it’s results like this that show you can reduce almost
all or many of the major perturbations of climate without making any region
significantly worse. That’s quite a thing.

How would your planned real-world experiment, known as the Stratospheric
Controlled Perturbation Experiment (SCoPEx), work?

SCoPEx is a stratospheric balloon experiment to put aerosols in the
stratosphere and measure their interaction over the first hours and the
first kilometer or so after release in a plume. It involves a high-altitude
balloon that will lift a gondola carrying a package of scientific
instruments to an altitude of 20 kilometers. It will release a very small
amount of materials such as ice, calcium carbonate (essentially powdered
limestone) or sulfuric acid droplets known as sulfates. The gondola will be
fitted with propellers that were originally made for airboats so that it
can fly through the plume of released materials to take measurements.

The amount of released material will be on the order of 1 kilogram, which
is far too small to have any direct health or environmental impact once
released. The goal is not to change climate or even to see if you can
reflect any sunlight. The goal is simply to improve our models of the way
aerosols form in the stratosphere, especially in plumes, which is very
relevant for understanding how solar geoengineering would work. We hope to
launch the experiment soon. But when and where that will happen depends on
balloon availability and recommendations from an advisory committee.

Three-panel diagram shows design of experimental balloon carrying a
tethered payload of instruments below it against a dark sky. The payload,
outfitted with propellers and solar panels, releases a steam of particles,
travels above the plume and then casts an instrument into the plume to take
measurements.
The planned Stratospheric Controlled Perturbation Experiment will send a
balloon carrying scientific instruments in a gondola into the stratosphere.
The instruments will release a small amount of material — likely ice or
mineral dust — to form a kilometer-long plume of aerosol particles (left).
Modified airboat propellers will allow the gondola to maneuver above the
plume (middle) and lower instruments into the plume to take repeated
measurements of how the particles spread through the stratosphere (right).

CREDIT: ADAPTED FROM J.A. DYKEMA ET AL / PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE
ROYAL SOCIETY A 2014

We know there are health risks related to sulfuric acid pollution in the
lower atmosphere. Are there potential health risks from injecting sulfate
aerosols into the stratosphere?

Anything we put in the stratosphere will end up coming down to the surface,
and that’s one of the risks we must consider. A full-scale solar
geoengineering program might involve injecting around 1.5 million tons of
sulfur and sulfuric acid into the stratosphere per year. This could be done
using a fleet of aircraft; roughly 100 aircraft would need to continuously
fly payloads up to about 20 kilometers (12 miles) altitude. You would not
be wrong to think this sounds crazy. We know that sulfuric acid pollution
in the lower atmosphere kills many people every year, so putting sulfuric
acid into the stratosphere is obviously a risk. But it’s important to
understand how much 1.5 million tons a year really is.

The 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo, in the Philippines, poured about 8
million tons of sulfur in one year into the stratosphere. It cooled the
climate and had implications for all sorts of systems. Current global
emissions of sulfur are about 50 million tons a year into the lower
atmosphere, and that kills several million people every year from fine
particulate air pollution. So the relative risk from solar geoengineering
is fairly small, and it has to be weighed against the risk of not doing
solar geoengineering.

How quickly could a full-scale solar geoengineering program get off the
ground?

It could happen very fast, but all the ways it happens very fast are bad
cases, basically where one country just jumps on it very quickly. It’s
obvious that what would be best is for countries not to just start doing it
but to articulate clear plans and build in checks and balances and so on.

If there were much wider research over the next half-decade to decade —
which is possible because attitudes really are changing — then it’s
plausible that some coalition of countries could begin to inch toward real
implementation with serious, visible plans that can be critiqued by the
scientific community starting by the end of this decade. I don’t expect it
will happen that fast, but I think it’s possible.

How does geoengineering fit in with other efforts to combat climate change
such as reducing fossil-fuel emissions and removing carbon from the air?

The first, and by far the most important, thing we do about climate change
is decarbonizing the economy, which breaks the link between economic
activity and carbon emissions. There’s nothing I can say about solar
geoengineering that changes the fact that we have to reduce emissions. If
we do not do that, we’re done.

Then carbon removal, which involves capturing and storing carbon that has
already been emitted, could break the link between emissions and the amount
of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Large-scale carbon removal really
makes sense when emissions are clearly heading toward zero, and we’re
getting toward the harder chunk of the economy to mitigate. And then solar
geoengineering is a thing that might partially and imperfectly weaken, but
not break, the link between the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere
and climate changes — changes in sea level, changes in extreme events,
changes in temperature, etc.

So if you look at the curve of overall greenhouse gases in the atmosphere,
you can think of emissions cuts as flattening the curve. Carbon removal
takes you down the other side of the curve. And then solar geoengineering
can cut off the top of the curve, which would reduce the risk of the carbon
dioxide that is in the air already.

A conceptual graph shows how solar engineering could be implemented,
alongside greenhouse gas emissions cuts and carbon removal technologies, to
reduce the anticipated impacts of climate change (y-axis) over time
(x-axis).
David Keith envisions using multiple approaches to combat climate change.
The red line shows how the impacts of climate change would worsen with a
business-as-usual scenario of unabated burning of fossil fuels and other
greenhouse gas emissions. Aggressively cutting emissions bends that curve,
and removing carbon from the atmosphere offers further cuts, but there are
still consequences from the already high levels of carbon dioxide. In this
scenario, solar geoengineering would lessen the impact from existing
atmospheric carbon dioxide, effectively carving the top off the curve.

Some people think we should use it only as a get-out-of-jail card in an
emergency. Some people think we should use it to quickly try to get back to
a preindustrial climate. I’m arguing we use solar geoengineering to cut the
top off the curve by gradually starting it and gradually ending it.

Do you feel optimistic about the chances that solar geoengineering will
happen and can make a difference in the climate crisis?

I’m not all that optimistic right now because we seem to be so much further
away from an international environment that’s going to allow sensible
policy. And that’s not just in the US. It’s a whole bunch of European
countries with more populist regimes. It’s Brazil. It’s the more
authoritarian India and China. It’s a more nationalistic world, right? It’s
a little hard to see a global, coordinated effort in the near term. But I
hope those things will change.

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