https://www.arctictoday.com/sami-join-call-to-cancel-sun-dimming-technology-test/

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Sámi join call to cancel sun-dimming technology test
A range in Arctic Sweden would be used to test technology related to
potential future geoengineering efforts.

ByKevin McGwin -March 15, 20216

A science balloon of the sort that would be used in the SCoPEx test is
deployed at the Esrange Space Center in Kiruna. (Esrange Space Center)
With efforts to curb the emissions causing global climate change struggling
to overcome inertia and political barriers, some observers are pushing for
a set of more dramatic measures, collectively known as geoengineering, that
would halt or reverse warming by making massive changes to the planet’s
climate system.

One such idea is the dispersion of sun-reflecting aerosols into the
atmosphere. In theory, the concept is simple: release a substance into the
atmosphere that will send some of the sun’s energy back into space.

Proponents of this approach like to point out that it is inspired by nature
itself: Volcanic eruptions eject ash into the atmosphere with the same
outcome. Indeed, the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo, in the Philippines,
is said to have lowered global temperatures by 0.5 degrees Celsius.

They also cite its relatively low cost: A 2018 report by the UN’s
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change suggested that solar-radiation
modification, as such processes are known, would be an effective way to
limit global temperature increases to the 1.5 degrees C target is set in
2015 at a cost of no more than $10 billion annually. By comparison, Morgan
Stanley estimated in 2019 that the cost of the alternative, reducing the
carbon pollution that causes global warming in the first place, would
require $50 trillion worth of investment by 2050.

[With glacial melt accelerating, a geoengineering movement gathers momentum]

But the idea is exceedingly controversial. The IPCC admits there are
ethical questions involved with such measures, given their potential
unknown consequences and humanity’s track record when we have intervened
with nature in the past. There are also legal hindrances to developing
them. A 2010 agreement among 193 countries outlawed geoengineering until
there was enough evidence that the benefits of tinkering with the planet
outweighed any harm it might do. That has made the issue mostly academic.

The agreement does permits lab work and “small-scale scientific research
studies” in the field. And, in June, a project named SCoPEx (short for
Stratospheric Controlled Perturbation Experiment), being carried out by the
Harvard University-affiliated Keutsch Group, is considering whether to do
just that. Pending a decision by its advisors, the group will launch a
scientific balloon from the Esrange Space Centre, in Kiruna, Sweden, that
will put the equipment that would be used in subsequent tests through its
paces.

The Keutsch Group insists the launch it is not an experiment in
geoengineering, since no sun-reflecting substances will be released during
the launch. Although, it confirms that if all systems function as designed,
a test at a later date would make sense.


But that is a false delineation, argues a group of three Swedish
conservancies and the Saami Council, which represents Sámi interests in
Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia. They consider geoengineering a “moral
hazard,” given the potentially dramatic consequences is could cause, and
they oppose the experiment on the grounds that a test of equipment that
could be used in a geoengineering experiment is, in fact, an experiment in
geoengineering.

The groups have also taken the Keutsch Group to task for failing to live up
to its own guidelines, which say it should take the opinions of Swedish or
local leaders into account. This has not happened. Moreover, they point
out, there are no Swedish or Sámi representatives on the group’s advisory
board.

Had they done so, they would have learned that the experiment runs counter
to Sweden’s efforts to reduce carbon pollution, as well as the Sámi
understanding of the natural world.

“This project must stop,” Åsa Larsson-Blind, the Saami Council’s Swedish
vice-president, told SVT, a broadcaster, last week. “We do not accept the
use of Sámi territory to test and legitimize a technology we are against.”

Douglas MacMartin, an engineer at Cornell University, is a proponent of
“climate engineering” but accepts that it is not something that everyone is
keen on.

“Can we cool the Arctic? The short answer is ‘yes’,” he said during a
presentation last week about using geoengineering to prevent permafrost
from thawing. “But I phrase that deliberately as ‘can we’ rather than
‘should we’ because that’s actually a much more complicated question.”

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