Thanks Renaud.  I have written some comments about McKibben’s article at the 
planetary restoration blog 
<https://planetaryrestoration.net/f/response-to-bill-mckibben---how-to-cool-the-planet>
 .

 

Regards

 

Robert Tulip

 

From: geoengineering@googlegroups.com <geoengineering@googlegroups.com> On 
Behalf Of Renaud de RICHTER
Sent: Wednesday, 23 November 2022 12:01 AM
To: geoengineering <geoengineering@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [geo] Dimming the Sun to Cool the Planet Is a Desperate Idea, Yet 
We’re Inching Toward It | The New Yorker

 

www.newyorker.com 
/news/daily-comment/dimming-the-sun-to-cool-the-planet-is-a-desperate-idea-yet-were-inching-toward-it
  
<https://www.newyorker.com/news/daily-comment/dimming-the-sun-to-cool-the-planet-is-a-desperate-idea-yet-were-inching-toward-it>
 


Dimming the Sun to Cool the Planet Is a Desperate Idea, Yet We’re Inching 
Toward It


Bill McKibben 22/11/2022 

  _____  

If we decide to “solar geoengineer” the Earth—to spray highly reflective 
particles of a material, such as sulphur, into the stratosphere in order to 
deflect sunlight and so cool the planet—it will be the second most expansive 
project that humans have ever undertaken. (The first, obviously, is the ongoing 
emission of carbon and other heat-trapping gases into the atmosphere.) The idea 
behind  <https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2012/05/14/the-climate-fixers> 
solar geoengineering is essentially to mimic what happens when volcanoes push 
particles into the atmosphere; a large eruption, such as that of Mt. Pinatubo, 
in the Philippines, in 1992, can measurably cool the world for a year or two. 
This scheme, not surprisingly, has few public advocates, and even among those 
who want to see it studied the inference has been that it would not actually be 
implemented for decades. “I’m not saying they’ll do it tomorrow,” Dan Schrag, 
the director of the Harvard University Center for the Environment, who serves 
on the advisory board of a geoengineering-research project based at the 
university, told my colleague Elizabeth Kolbert for “ 
<https://www.amazon.com/Under-White-Sky-Nature-Future/dp/0593136276?ots=1&tag=thneyo0f-20&linkCode=w50>
 Under a White Sky,” her excellent book on technical efforts to repair 
environmental damage, published last year. “I feel like we might have thirty 
years,” he said. It’s a number he repeated to me when we met in Cambridge this 
summer.

Others, around the world, however, are working to speed up that timeline. There 
are at least three initiatives under way that are studying the potential 
implementation of solar-radiation management, or S.R.M., as it is sometimes 
called: a commission under the auspices of the Paris Peace Forum, composed of 
fifteen current and former global leaders and some environmental and governance 
experts, that is exploring “policy options” to combat  
<https://www.newyorker.com/news/annals-of-a-warming-planet> climate change and 
how these policies might be monitored; a Carnegie Council initiative of how the 
United Nations might govern geoengineering; and Degrees Initiative, an academic 
effort based in the United Kingdom and funded by a collection of foundations, 
that in turn funds research on the effects of such a scheme across the 
developing world. The result of these initiatives, if not the goal, may be to 
normalize the idea of geoengineering. It is being taken seriously because of 
something else that’s speeding up: the horrors that come with an overheating 
world and now regularly threaten its most densely populated places.

This year, the South Asian subcontinent went through an unprecedented spring 
heat wave, and then the heat settled, for nearly the entire summer, on China. 
Drought plagued Europe, while Pakistan endured the  
<https://www.newyorker.com/news/dispatch/pakistans-unseen-climate-change-survivors>
 worst floods in decades, and the Horn of Africa suffered a fifth consecutive 
failed rainy season. All this, along with more systemic damage, such as the 
melt at the poles, happened with a globally averaged temperature increase of 
just slightly more than one degree Celsius over pre-Industrial Revolution 
temperatures. To the extent that nations have agreed on anything about climate 
change, it’s that we need to limit that temperature rise; with the 2016 Paris 
climate accords, nations adopted a resolution that committed them to “holding 
the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2° C above 
pre-industrial levels and pursuing efforts to limit the temperature increase to 
1.5° C above pre-industrial levels.”

The method to accomplish this was supposed to be the reduction of emissions of 
carbon dioxide and methane by replacing fossil fuels with clean energy. That is 
happening—indeed, the pace of that transition is quickening perceptibly in the 
United States, with the adoption of the Biden Administration’s Inflation 
Reduction Act and its ambitious spending on renewable power. But it’s not 
happening fast enough: the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has said 
that we need to cut worldwide emissions in half by 2030, and we’re not on track 
to come particularly close to that target—in this country or globally. Even 
before 2030, we may, at least temporarily, pass the 1.5-degree mark. In late 
September, the longtime NASA scientist James Hansen, who has served as the Paul 
Revere of global warming, pointed out on his Web site that 2022, like most 
years in recent decades, will be one of the hottest on record, which is 
remarkable in this case, because the Pacific is in the grips of a strong La 
Niña cooling cycle. And the odds are strong, Hansen wrote, that there will be a 
hot El Niño cycle sometime next year, which means that “2024 is likely to be 
off the chart as the warmest year on record . . . Even a little futz of an El 
Nino — like the tropical warming in 2018-19, which barely qualified as an El 
Nino — should be sufficient for record global temperature. A classical, strong 
El Nino in 2023-24 could push global temperature to about +1.5°C.”

It’s likely, in other words, that conditions may force a reckoning with the 
idea of solar geoengineering—of blocking from the Earth some of the sunlight 
that has always nurtured it. Andy Parker is a British climate researcher who 
has worked on geoengineering for more than a decade—first at the Royal Society 
and then at Harvard’s Kennedy School—and now runs the Degrees Initiative. He 
told me, “For the whole time I’ve worked on this, it’s been like  
<https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2021/10/11/can-nuclear-fusion-put-the-brakes-on-climate-change>
 nuclear fusion—always a few decades away no matter when you ask. But there are 
going to be events in the next decade or so that will sharpen people’s minds. 
When temperatures approach and then cross 1.5 centigrade, that will be a 
non-arbitrary moment.” He added, “That’s the first globally agreed climate 
target we’re on course to break. Unless we find a way to remove carbon in 
quantities not imaginable presently, this would be the only way to stop or 
reverse rapidly rising temperature.”

Everyone studying solar geoengineering seems to agree that it’s a terrible 
thing. “The idea is outlandish,” Parker told me. Mohammed Mofizur Rahman, a 
Bangladeshi scientist who is one of Degrees Initiatives’ grantees, noted, “It’s 
crazy stuff.” So did the veteran Hungarian diplomat Janos Pasztor, who runs the 
Carnegie initiative on geoengineering governance, and said, “People should be 
suspicious.” Pascal Lamy, a former head of the World Trade Organization 
(W.T.O.), who is the president of the Paris Peace Forum, agreed, saying, “It 
would represent a failure.” Jesse Reynolds, a longtime advocate of 
geoengineering research, who launched the forum’s commission, wrote recently 
that geoengineering’s “reluctant ‘supporters’ are despondent environmentalists 
who are concerned about climate change and believe that abatement of greenhouse 
gas emissions might not be enough.” Reynolds speaks for this geoengineering 
community on this point. They are, to a person, willing to acknowledge that 
reducing emissions by replacing coal, gas, and oil represents a much better 
solution. “I think the basic answer is moving more rapidly out of fossil 
fuels,” Lamy said. “I’m a European. I’ve been supporting this view for a very 
long time. Europe is in some ways well ahead of others.”

But these same people all say that, because we’re not making sufficient 
progress on that task, we’re going to “overshoot” 1.5 degrees Celsius. (The 
Paris Peace Forum’s project, in fact, is called the Overshoot Commission.) So, 
they think, we had best investigate and plan for a fallback position: the 
possibility that the world will need to break the glass and implement this 
emergency plan. “My own simple answer is that we did not move rapidly enough 
out of fossil fuels,” Lamy said. Carbon polluters still aren’t paying enough 
for the harms that they “externalize,” or pass on to everyone else. “And the 
reason for that, in a global market system which is run by capitalists, whether 
we like it or not, is that the price of carbon, implicit or explicit, is not at 
a level that would allow markets to internalize carbon damage.”

Lamy, it must be said, was the head of the W.T.O. from 2005 to 2013, crucial 
years when CO2 output was soaring, and W.T.O. rules prohibit climate actions 
that interfere with its free-trade principles. In this country, a large amount 
of the research and advocacy for these interventions comes from Harvard, the 
richest educational institution in the world, which only agreed last year, 
after a decade’s efforts by students and faculty, to phase out fossil-fuel 
investments in its endowment. Harvard’s research has been funded by, among 
others, Bill Gates, formerly the richest man in the world. If you wanted to 
build a conspiracy theory or a science-fiction novel about global élites trying 
to control the weather, you’d have the pieces. However mixed these groups’ 
records on addressing climate change have been, they are having an effect now: 
the pace of publishing studies on geoengineering in scientific journals has 
begun to pick up, and the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and 
Medicine and other organizations have called for accelerating research. These 
researchers say that we should be studying both the science and the governance 
of solar geoengineering, with a focus on two questions: what would happen if we 
put particles into the stratosphere, and who would make the call?

The enormous step of dimming the sun could turn out to be very easy, at least 
from a technological point of view. Filling the air with carbon dioxide took 
close to three hundred years of burning coal and oil and gas, millions of miles 
of pipelines, thousands of refineries, hundreds of millions of cars. That 
enormous effort, carried out by just a fraction of the world’s population, has, 
with increasing speed, pushed the atmospheric concentration of CO2 from about 
275 parts per million, before the Industrial Revolution, to about 425 parts per 
million now. It would take only a tiny fraction of that effort to inject 
aerosol particles into the stratosphere. (Sulphur dioxide is the most commonly 
discussed candidate, but aluminum, calcium carbonate, and, most poetically, 
diamond dust, have also been proposed.) A recent article in the Harvard 
Environmental Law Review estimates that the “direct costs of 
deployment—collecting the precursor materials for aerosols, putting them into 
the sky, monitoring, and so on—would be . . . as low as several billion dollars 
a year.” Any country with a serious air force could probably release sulphur 
from planes in the upper atmosphere. You might not even need a country: it 
would cost Elon Musk, currently the world’s richest man, far less to fund such 
a mission than it did to buy Twitter—and he’s already got the rockets.

So the question is less whether geoengineering can “work”—as the Harvard Law 
Review article makes clear, the scientific evidence suggests that it would 
“likely produce a substantial, rapid cooling effect worldwide” and that it 
“could also reduce the rate of sea-level rise, sea-ice loss, heatwaves, extreme 
weather, and climate change-associated anomalies in the water cycle.” The 
question is more: what else would it do? On a global scale it could, at least 
temporarily, turn the sky hazy or milky (hence the title of Kolbert’s book); it 
could alter “the quality of the light plants use for photosynthesis” (no small 
thing on a planet basically built on chlorophyll—studies have shown that U.S. 
corn production increased as polluting aerosols went down in the wake of 
amendments to the Clean Air Act); and it might damage the ozone layer, which is 
only now repairing itself from our recent assault with fluorocarbons. (By way 
of comparison, the largest volcanic eruption ever recorded, at Mt. Tambora, in 
1815, on an island that is now part of Indonesia, spewed a cloud of particles 
that temporarily caused the temperature to drop a degree Celsius. That change 
produced, in 1816, “a year without a summer” across much of the northern 
hemisphere. Lake ice was observed in Pennsylvania into August, and, in Europe, 
where grain yields plummeted, hungry crowds rioted beneath banners reading 
“Bread or Blood.”)

Video From The New Yorker

The most likely problems, though, would probably be not global but regional. 
Lowering the temperature, precisely because it would affect global weather 
patterns, would produce different and hard-to-predict outcomes in different 
places. I spoke about this tendency with Inés Camilloni, a climatologist at the 
University of Buenos Aires who is investigating the possible effects of 
geoengineering on rivers in South America’s La Plata river basin. (Her work is 
partially funded by the Degrees Initiative.) “What we found is that 
implementation of S.R.M. strategies could lead to an increase in the mean flow 
of the rivers of the basin, which means more water for hydropower energy, 
something that could be considered positive. Also an increase in the levels at 
low-flow times, which is a positive, considering these droughts we’re having,” 
she said. “But you also could experience an increase in the higher flow, and 
this could be associated in the rate of flooding in the rivers.”

In South Africa, a study by a University of Cape Town team, also funded by 
Parker’s group, indicated that S.R.M. could cut the possibility of drought in 
that coastal city, which, in 2018, came dangerously close to reaching a “day 
zero” shutoff of water supplies, as local reservoirs turned into dustbowls. But 
another team working from Benin, in West Africa, found that geoengineering 
would likely lead to less rain in a region that has suffered from calamitous 
desertification. Mohammed Rahman, working from an office in Bangladesh’s 
renowned International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, said his 
research showed that in some parts of Asia malaria would increase, and in 
others it would decline. “The result we had was on a coarse scale, like a 
continental scale. Here it gets better, here it gets worse,” he said.

A climate “solution” that helps some and harms others could spark its own kind 
of crisis. A Brookings Institution report last December began with a 
scenario—it’s 2035, and a country begins unilateral deployment of S.R.M.: “the 
country has decided that it can no longer wait; they see geoengineering as 
their only option.” Initially, “the decision seems wise, as the increase in 
global temperatures starts to level off. But soon other types of anomalous 
weather begin to appear: unexpected and severe droughts hit countries around 
the world, disrupting agriculture.” In response, “another large country, under 
the impression it has been severely harmed . . . carries out a focused military 
strike against the geoengineering equipment, a decision supported by other 
nations who also believe they have been negatively impacted.” This development, 
however, becomes even more devastating—with no one putting chemicals into the 
stratosphere, they decline rapidly in the course of a year, and “temperatures 
dramatically rebound to the levels they would have reached on their previous 
trajectory.” The result, they conclude, is “disastrous.”

That last potential development, which scientists call “termination shock,” has 
been widely researched; Raymond Pierrehumbert, a professor of physics at the 
University of Oxford, and Michael Mann, perhaps America’s best-known climate 
scientist after Hansen, have said that it is reason enough to avoid solar 
geoengineering. “Some proponents insist we can always stop if we don’t like the 
result,” Mann and Pierrehumbert wrote in the  
<https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/apr/22/climate-crisis-emergency-earth-day>
 Guardian. “Well yes, we can stop. Just like if you’re being kept alive by a 
ventilator with no hope of a cure, you can turn it off — and suffer the 
consequences.” The other projected problem, though—the chance for huge 
differential effects—is the one that could keep the discussion from ever really 
getting off the ground. The peril isn’t that far-fetched; volcanic eruptions 
have affected the timing and the position of the monsoon on the South Asian 
subcontinent. Imagine if India started pumping sulphur into the atmosphere only 
to see a huge drought hit Pakistan: two nuclear powers, already at odds, with 
one convinced the other is harming its people. Or maybe it’s China—driven by a 
series of summers like the one it just endured—that starts down this road, and 
it’s India that suddenly faces unrelenting floods. These two nations also share 
a militarized border, and a series of overlapping international alliances. Or 
maybe it’s Russia, or any number of countries. Global treaties prohibit weather 
modification as a tool of war (something that the U.S., in fact,  
<https://www.nytimes.com/1972/07/03/archives/rainmaking-is-used-as-weapon-by-us-cloudseeding-in-indochina-is.html>
 attempted in Vietnam, but at present they don’t rule out war as a reaction to 
weather modification gone awry.

All this explains why, earlier this year, sixty “senior scholars” from across 
the world, now joined altogether by more than three hundred and fifty political 
and physical scientists, signed a letter urging an absolute moratorium—“an 
international non-use agreement”—on solar geoengineering. Frank Biermann, a 
political scientist at Utrecht University, in the Netherlands, was a core 
organizer. “We believe there’s no governance system existing that could decide 
this, and that none is plausible,” he told me. “You’d have to take decisions on 
duration, on the degree—and if there are conflicts—‘we want a little more here, 
a little less here’—all these need adjudication.” He points out that the U.N. 
Security Council would be a problematic governing body: “Anything can be 
blocked by the veto of five of the most polluting countries. Some kind of 
governance by the major powers? You’d need the agreement of the U.S., Russia, 
China, India, and there’s no chance of that. The small countries? The people 
who want this talk about consultation, but not co-decision. When I talk to 
African colleagues, none of them expects the world would get a decision right 
for their countries.” Faced with such problems, Biermann and his colleagues 
urge a complete halt to any testing of the new technologies. “Governance has to 
be first,” he said. “If you don’t know what to do with such technology, don’t 
develop it.”

Building such a governance structure would be “truly unprecedented,” Pasztor, 
the diplomat leading the Carnegie governance study, acknowledged. “It’s such a 
global issue, and everyone would be affected and not necessarily equally. Is it 
totally impossible? I don’t think so, but it’s very difficult.” There are 
organizations that have a piece of the responsibility already: the World 
Meteorological Organization, Pasztor pointed out, has a “global atmosphere 
watch” that could monitor the effects of the deployment. The U.N. has charged 
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change with tracking the progress of 
global warming. But the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change, which 
oversaw the Paris climate accord, he said, “lacks a mandate to look at this: 
article 2 of its charter is about negative anthropogenic interference with the 
climate system, but this would be a positive anthropogenic interference, or 
otherwise one wouldn’t do it.” The best analogue for a potential geoengineering 
governance scheme, Pasztor told me, might be the Nuclear Non-Proliferation 
Treaty (N.P.T.), “which has managed global risks in a way that has served 
humanity quite reasonably over sixty years.”

But the N.P.T. is an agreement not to do something—it probably does more to 
strengthen Frank Biermann’s argument that a non-use treaty might work. “It’s 
not a unique idea to stop normalization of an undesirable technology,” Biermann 
said. “There’s lots of international treaties, and agreement among scientists 
to stop or restrict or prohibit certain technologies”—bioweapons, chemical 
weapons, anti-personnel land mines. “Human cloning, Antarctic mining. People 
say we’re against modernity. We are not. We don’t want to block climate 
research—we want an agreement not to use a certain technology because it’s not 
good for the world.”

So far, this view has prevailed. The one real-world attempt to test 
geoengineering in the atmosphere came in the summer of last year, when a 
Harvard team planned to launch a balloon over northern Sweden, to test how well 
large fans could create a wake in which to inject the reflective particles. But 
the experiment would have taken place above the territory of the Saami 
Indigenous people—reindeer herders who live across the top of Scandinavia, and 
whose lives have been profoundly disrupted by warmer winters. The head of the 
Saami council, a woman named Åsa Larsson Blind, said that geoengineering “goes 
against the respect” that Indigenous people have for nature; the council 
composed a letter to the Harvard team that thirty other Indigenous groups 
around the world also signed, and that Sweden’s most famous environmentalist,  
<https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2021/04/19/greta-thunbergs-happy-crusade> 
Greta Thunberg, endorsed. (The experiment struck me as a bad idea, too.)

In response, as a Reuters  
<https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/after-sun-dimming-setback-geoengineers-seek-diplomatic-fix-2022-01-17/>
 analysis put it, the Harvard team and others promoting the study of 
geoengineering “are turning to diplomacy to advance their work.” David Keith, a 
professor of applied physics at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied 
Sciences, who has long been the most ardent proponent of the research, said. 
“There is no question that, in the public battle, if it is Harvard against the 
Indigenous peoples, we cannot proceed. That is just a reality.”

In the months that followed, Lamy launched the Overshoot Commission, pulling 
together a panel that included a few well-known environmentalists, but was 
heavily weighted toward governmental leaders from the Global South: the former 
President of Mexico, the former Minister of Finance for Indonesia, the former 
President of Niger. Perhaps the most compelling member is Anote Tong, who was 
the President of Kiribati, from 2003 to 2016. Kiribati is a country of about 
hundred and twenty-one thousand people who live on atolls spread across 1.4 
million square miles of the central Pacific, in Oceania. It is, notably, the 
only country situated in all four hemispheres, but, more relevantly for these 
purposes, the nation averages just six feet above sea level, and two small 
islets have already been swallowed up by the sea. So-called king tides, which 
come at full or new moon, have swept away homes and small farms. “Our kia-kias 
[local houses], our kitchen, everything washed away. The only part left is just 
beside the road,” a resident told National Geographic. “The land is all beach, 
no soil, and it’s right where the waves are now. We were forced to leave 
because we had no other choice.”

I e-mailed President Tong a list of questions; he responded a few days later 
from Vanuatu, another Pacific archipelago nation, many of whose eighty-three 
islands are less than a metre above sea level. He’d joined Lamy’s commission, 
he said, “In the expectation that through my participation I would be able to 
make a more effective contribution to ensuring greater urgency to action on 
climate change.” Geoengineering is a “prime example of our arrogance in our 
capacity to shape nature to our whims with technology. It should not be the 
answer to a disaster which we have caused and now seek to remedy.” And yet, he 
added, “Geoengineering as a possible solution to this catastrophe will 
definitely become the only option of last resort if we as a global community 
continue on the path we have been going. There will be a point when it has to 
be either geoengineering or total destruction.”

It’s not clear what sentiment would or should prevail in an ethical contest: an 
Indigenous regard for untouched nature, or concern for the 
almost-certain-to-be-displaced inhabitants of islands like Kiribati. What is 
clear is that both those ideas play, at some level, symbolic roles in this 
fight, without the actual political power to decide one way or another. 
(Neither the Saami nor the Kiribatians possess an air force.) Another party 
with a clear interest, however, possesses enormous influence, and that’s the 
fossil-fuel industry. Its history with regard to climate change—which began, as 
great investigative  
<https://insideclimatenews.org/book/exxon-the-road-not-taken/> reporting has 
now made clear, by organizing large-scale efforts to lie about the dangers of 
global warming, even as its own scientists were making those dangers clear 
inside the industry—provides abundant evidence that it will act to protect its 
business model for as many years as it can, without regard for much of anything 
else. A technology promoted by its advocates as a way to “buy time” for the 
planet could be seen by Big Oil as a way to buy time for itself.

“For many years they had a strategy of climate denial,” Biermann said, of 
fossil-fuel companies, but that is changing. “Everyone has to agree there is 
now a problem. But reducing emissions means that a lot of oil and gas will have 
to stay in the ground, that investments will be lost.” A 2021  
<https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-021-03821-8> study in the journal 
Nature found that ninety per cent of coal and nearly sixty per cent of oil and 
natural gas must be kept in the ground to allow even a halfway chance of 
meeting that 1.5-degree target—that amount of fuel is worth perhaps thirty 
trillion dollars.

The industry, in order to keep its business model intact, has turned first to 
“carbon sequestration” schemes—the recently passed Inflation Reduction Act, for 
instance, is larded with money to put expensive machinery on fossil-fuel-fired 
power plants, to catch the CO2 as it leaves the smokestack and then pipe it 
underground. These measures are incredibly costly, especially since solar and 
wind energy are already cheaper than fossil fuel. (There’s overlap between the 
proponents of these technologies and those investigating geoengineering—as 
Naomi Klein pointed out in her 2014 book, “ 
<https://www.amazon.com/This-Changes-Everything-Capitalism-Climate/dp/1451697392?ots=1&tag=thneyo0f-20&linkCode=w50>
 This Changes Everything,” in 2009, David Keith, of Harvard, co-founded a 
company, called Carbon Engineering, to build machines to suck CO2 from the air, 
which received funding from, among others, one of the biggest players in 
Canada’s tar-sands oil industry.) And geoengineering is likely to be the next 
step in this progression: “In a few years,” Biermann said, “people like the 
Koch family will jump on solar dimming. They’ll say, ‘Listen, we don’t have to 
reduce emissions so brutally and so quickly, because we have a Plan B for the 
next thirty or forty years.’ It’s the same as climate denial, in that it helps 
people have doubts.”

President Tong, from his vantage point a few feet above the Pacific, offered a 
clear-eyed view. Undoubtedly, he said, geoengineering would be seized on by the 
oil industry as an excuse to “continue with business as usual.” In fact, he 
said, “In my moments of frustration I often wonder if this is part of their 
strategy to maintain our dependence on resources which are within their 
control.” Long political and diplomatic experience, he said, had taught him 
that “the industry has always been in control, in spite of all our eloquent and 
passionate campaigns.”

If you’re looking for ironies, here’s one: the 1.5-degree Celsius figure that 
geoengineering proponents seem poised to use as the trigger for their biggest 
push, originally came from the most vulnerable countries on Earth—small island 
states such as Kiribati and some of the African nations most imperilled by 
drought. I heard it for the first time at the Copenhagen climate summit, in 
2009, when delegates raised a chant of “1.5 to Stay Alive.” Six years later, 
that number was officially added to the preamble of the Paris accord, in an 
effort to raise “ambition” among countries to cut emissions. And it has worked, 
at least a little: it allowed scientists to demonstrate how quickly we need to 
move if we want to meet those targets (cutting emissions by half by 2030), 
which, in turn, moved the public and then the legislative debates in many 
places. Now, however, it may also become an excuse for short-circuiting some of 
that progress, for reducing the pace of change. The fossil-fuel industry, which 
filled the atmosphere with carbon, may now help force us to fill it with 
sulphur, as well.

A novel feature of the geoengineering debate is that many people first heard 
about it in a novel.  
<https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2022/01/31/can-science-fiction-wake-us-up-to-our-climate-reality-kim-stanley-robinson>
 Kim Stanley Robinson, in his earlier years an award-winning writer of science 
fiction, may have thought more fully about geoengineering than anyone else. His 
early classic work—a trilogy about the settlement of Mars, each volume of which 
won the Hugo Award as the year’s best sci-fi—hinges on a debate about whether, 
and how much, to “terraform” the red planet by changing its atmosphere to more 
closely resemble Earth’s. The debate is long—never-ending, really. As often 
happens, compromise keeps working in the direction of doing something, not 
leaving it alone, and the Martian atmosphere gradually thickens, allowing more 
and more settlement. But Robinson (in real life an ardent hiker, whose most 
recent book is a nonfiction account of the High Sierra, the prototypical 
wilderness) makes sure to leave some parts of Mars alone.

In recent years, Robinson has turned away from starships, space elevators, and 
distant planets to focus on the single most important challenge of our time—and 
one that surprisingly few fiction writers have really taken on. But he’s 
brought some of the tools of his intergalactic musings to bear on our 
challenge, geoengineering included. In “ 
<https://www.amazon.com/Ministry-Future-Kim-Stanley-Robinson/dp/0316300136?ots=1&tag=thneyo0f-20&linkCode=w50>
 The Ministry for the Future,” his best-selling 2020 novel, he opens with an 
almost unbearable account of a heat wave in India, one where the humidity stays 
so high that human bodies can’t sweat enough to cool down, and millions die. 
“All the children were dead. All the old people were dead,” he wrote. “People 
murmured what should have been screams of grief.” In the aftermath, the Indian 
government decides that it will geoengineer the atmosphere. There is an angry 
exchange with the U.N. about India’s “Air Force doing a Pinatubo” and, after a 
while, Delhi stops experimenting with sulphur and allows a thousand other ideas 
to gradually blunt the impact of planetary warming.

But there’s no denying the author’s prescience: this spring saw  
<https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2022/08/01/living-through-indias-next-level-heat-wave>
 the most dire pre-monsoon heat wave in Indian history; only a slightly lower 
humidity prevented a real-life reprise of the mass death in the book. It will 
take such an event to trigger something as powerful as geoengineering, Robinson 
said, when we talked this summer. Countries and individuals probably won’t be 
spurred to preëmptively geoengineer the atmosphere “by the sense of a coming 
crisis,” he told me, “nor by sea level rise or habitat loss or anything else 
that is an indirect effect of rising global temperatures. It will be the direct 
consequence—deaths by way of extreme heat wave—that will do it.” He pointed out 
that, as we spoke, China was undergoing a heat wave even more anomalous than 
the one in South Asia, and, as a result, had deployed fleets of planes to seed 
clouds with silver iodide in hopes of inducing rain—not a huge step from 
sending those same fleets into the stratosphere with sulphur. I think 
Robinson’s analysis is likely correct; there will come a point when the sheer 
impossible horror of what we’re doing to the planet, and what we have already 
done, may make geoengineering seem irresistible.

But there’s another plot device that has emerged, this one in real life: the 
dramatic drop in the price of renewable energy. We’ve long imagined that 
dealing with global warming requires moving from cheap fossil fuels to 
expensive renewable energy, but, in the past few years, oil, gas, and coal have 
grown more expensive, and sun and wind power have plummeted in price. Suddenly, 
we have the power to deal with global warming by transitioning, very rapidly, 
from expensive fossil fuels to  
<https://www.newyorker.com/news/essay/in-a-world-on-fire-stop-burning-things> 
cheap sources of renewable energy.

The transition to clean energy should keep getting easier in the next few 
years, both because the price of clean energy keeps dropping as we get more 
experienced at using it, and because the political power of the fossil-fuel 
industry to slow down the transition should wane, as solar and wind builds its 
own muscular constituency. And it needs to happen if we are to halve emissions 
by 2030 and so have a decent chance of meeting the targets set in Paris. 
Perhaps we’d take that deadline more seriously if we saw it as our best shot at 
avoiding a planet wrecked by carbon and also put at risk by sulphur. Solar 
panels and wind turbines are our best vaccine against high temperatures, but 
also against the hubris of one more giant gamble. ♦

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