Warning of Solar Geoengineering's Dangers, Group Recommends a Global Ban

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A Harvard research team recently announced plansย to perform early tests to shoot sunlight-reflecting particles into the high atmosphere toย slow or reverse globalย warming.ย 

These research efforts,ย which could take shape as soon as the first half of 2019, fall under the banner of aย geoengineering technology known as solar radiation management, which is sometimes calledย โ€œsun dimming.โ€ย 

However, less than two weeks after the announcement, theย climate science and policy instituteย Climate Analyticsย tookย aim at these ambitions in a new briefing titledย โ€Why geoengineering is not a solution to the climate problem,โ€ which goes as far as recommending a global ban on solarย geoengineering.

The group’s briefingย warns about the dangers of proceeding withย solar radiation management (SRM) inย particular.

The basic idea behind SRM is to release particles into the Earthโ€™s stratosphere, the atmospheric layer approximately 6โ€“30 miles above the surface,ย where they would then reflect some of the sunโ€™s light (and heat) away from Earth, resulting in atmosphericย cooling.

Harvard’s scientists working on this concept point to the particles released by volcanic eruptions as real-world examples of how it might work. One such example is the 1991 eruption ofย Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines, an event which released large amounts of sulfur dioxideย into theย stratosphere.ย 

According to NASA,ย  after Mount Pinatubo’s eruption, โ€œOver the course of the next two years strong stratospheric winds spread these aerosol particles around the globe,โ€ which ledย to a temporary global cooling of about 1ยฐ Fahrenheit over the following 15 months.ย The Harvard team plans to investigate calcium carbonate, a commonย calcium supplement and antacid, as a potential particle to use instead of sulfurย dioxide.


Proposed solar radiation management using a tethered balloon to inject sulfate aerosols into the stratosphere. Credit: Hughhunt, CC BYSAย 3.0

Despite this parallel, why is Climate Analytics warning against solar radiation management? For a long list of reasons, including the potential for some pretty disastrousย consequences.

Solar Radiation Management Doesnโ€™t Address the Realย Issue

Earth’s climate is warming because humans are pumpingย large amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, with carbon dioxide from fossil fuel-burningย topping that list. As Climate Analytics notes, solar radiation management โ€œdoes not address the drivers of human-induced climate change.โ€ Instead, the briefing says, this geoengineering approach โ€œwould mask warming temporarilyโ€ in a best-case scenario, while representing a fundamental and โ€œpotentially dangerousโ€ย threat to the Earth’s basic climateย operations.

As Mt. Pinatubo’sย eruption showed, the basic conceptย behind the Harvard team’s proposalย certainly has the potential to cool the planet, but Climate Analytics notes the many sizable and unique risks to attempting solar radiation management on a long-term, globalย scale.

Critics of solar radiation management โ€” and there are many โ€” note that one of the biggest risks of thisย approachย is that it becomes a distraction from the primary goalย of decarbonizing the global economy in order to address the root cause of climateย change.

A recent in-depth piece from In These Times quotes a document from the group Hands Off Mother Earth, which opposes solarย geoengineering:

โ€œGeoengineering perpetuates the false belief that todayโ€™s unjust, ecologically, and socially devastating industrial model of production and consumption cannot be changed and that we therefore need techno-fixes to tame itsย effects.โ€

Even David Keith, one of the Harvard scientists working on solar radiation management,ย shares the concern that this work could distract from the required efforts to reduce global carbonย emissions.

โ€œOne of the main concerns I and everyone involved in this have, is that Trump might tweet โ€˜geoengineering solves everything โ€” we donโ€™t have to bother about emissions.โ€™ That would break the slow-moving agreement among many environmental groups that sound research in this field makes sense,โ€ย Keith said in 2017, according to The Guardian.

Afterย scientists’ recentย announcement ofย a very short timeline for the world to drastically cut carbon emissions, some are viewing solar radiation management as a way to allow for continued fossil fuel use while hoping for โ€œtechno-fixesโ€ to avert globalย catastrophe.

Risks Far Outweigh Potentialย Reward

In a world where even predicting the weather is more difficult due to climate change, it isnโ€™t hard to fathom that changing the global climate quicklyย could have many unknown consequences. Butย as Climate Analytics points out,ย there are plenty of knownย risks and concerns surrounding solar radiation management,ย including theย following:

Weather System Changes:ย According to the Climate Analytics briefing: โ€œSolar radiation management would alter the global hydrological cycle,โ€ which means changes to global weather patterns, including monsoon activity. Tweaking monsoon activity may not bode well for many people around the world.ย โ€œThese [monsoon] rains not only play a vital role in food security and exports, but also provide essential water for the very large, and often already vulnerable, populations,โ€ states theย briefing.

Ocean Acidification: Anotherย negative impactย of increased atmospheric carbon dioxide is the acidification of the oceans. Reflecting away sunlight does nothing to address this problem fundamentally caused by excess carbonย dioxide.

Global Agriculture:ย Whileย increasing atmospheric carbon dioxideย concentrations can be beneficial up to a point for some plants, that benefit likely would be canceled out by the reduction in actual sunlight reaching plant life, which is necessary forย photosynthesis.

Decreased Renewable Energy Production:ย As with agriculture, lower levels of sunlight reaching the Earthโ€™s surface would reduce solar power production. Andย changing the global climate and weather could also alter wind powerย potential.

Geopolitical and Catastrophicย Risks

While purposefully altering the global atmosphere would be an unprecedented project in both scale and impact, the endeavor actuallyย would not cost very much and could be done unilaterally by one country. Solar radiation management would likely affect different parts of the world in different ways, some positively and someย negatively.

The Climate Analytics briefing highlights this potential:ย โ€œSRM will strongly alter the climate system producing โ€˜winnersโ€™ and โ€˜losersโ€™ in different regions and with different levels of deployment. It could therefore become a source of massive conflict betweenย nations.โ€

This potential for geopolitical conflictย is one reason Climate Analytics is calling for a global ban on solar radiationย management.

Another reason is because the group views the approachย as a grand form of โ€œkicking the canโ€ โ€” that is, the can leaking too many greenhouse gases โ€” down the road. And once solar radiation management is deployed on a global scale, it has to continue even in the event of graveย consequences becauseย stopping the program would induce something known as โ€œterminationย shock.โ€

Climate Analytics predicts that termination shockย โ€” the resultย of stopping an SRM program once begun โ€” would result in โ€œvery rapid and large-scale planetary warmingโ€ that could occur โ€œon a timescale ofย months.โ€

Geoengineering and Sunย Dimming

With Harvard leading solar geoengineering field testsย and the long-term support of people such asย Microsoft billionaire Bill Gates, the idea that โ€œtechno-fixesโ€ will save the planet from climate catastrophe arenโ€™t going away. Especially with major media outlets such as CNN running headlines suggesting these approaches could be โ€œthe answer to global warming.โ€

The answer to global warming has been around for more than fifty years. The head of the American Petroleum Institute spelledย out part of this solution at an industry conference in 1965 in whichย he said,ย โ€œThere is still time to save the world’s peoples from the catastrophic consequence of pollution, but time is runningย out.โ€

The solution he acknowledged then was โ€œan alternative nonpolluting means of powering automobiles, buses, andย trucks.โ€ย 

While the world has far less time to act than in 1965, the solution to global warming remains more of aย political challenge than a technologicalย one.ย 

Main image: Partial solar eclipse.ย Credit: andersbknudsen,ย CC BYย 2.0

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Justin Mikulka is a research fellow at New Consensus. Prior to joining New Consensus in October 2021, Justin reported for DeSmog, where he began in 2014. Justin has a degree in Civil and Environmental Engineering from Cornell University.

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