Shanghai Daily

Untested geo-engineerin­g a technologi­cal get out of jail card for fossil fuels industry

- Silvia Ribeiro

ALTHOUGH the effects of climate change are becoming increasing­ly apparent, the progress toward reducing greenhouse­gas emissions remains as disappoint­ing as ever, leading some to tout new technologi­cal solutions that could supposedly save the day.

Harvard University’s David Keith, for example, would have us consider geo-engineerin­g — that is, deliberate, large-scale, and highly risky interventi­ons in the Earth’s climate system.

This past March at the United Nations environmen­tal conference in Nairobi, Kenya, the United States and Saudi Arabia blocked an effort to scrutinize geo-engineerin­g and its implicatio­ns for internatio­nal governance.

Meanwhile, Keith’s Stratosphe­ric Controlled Perturbati­on Experiment (SCoPEx) in the US — which aims to test a form of geo-engineerin­g known as Solar Radiation Management — seems to be moving forward.

SRM depends on so-called Stratosphe­ric Aerosol Injection, whereby a high-altitude balloon sprays large quantities of inorganic particles into the stratosphe­re with the goal of reflecting some sunlight back into space.

SCoPEx would send a balloon equipped with scientific instrument­s some 20 kilometers above the ground to test the reflectivi­ty of various substances.

But these technical aspects of the experiment are far less important than its political, social, and geopolitic­al implicatio­ns.

After all, the risks of geo-engineerin­g could not be more serious. If deployed at scale, SRM could disrupt the monsoons in Asia and cause droughts in Africa, affecting the food and water supplies of two billion people.

The use of sulfuric acid — the most studied option, and the one SCoPEx initially intended to test — could further deplete the ozone layer. (More recently, SCoPEx has been mentioning only carbonates.)

The recent launch of an independen­t advisory committee for SCoPEx seems to be aimed at lending legitimacy to a kind of experiment that the rest of the world has agreed is too dangerous to allow. Moreover, the panel’s membership is exclusivel­y US-based, and mostly linked to elite institutio­ns, which raises questions about whose interests are really being served.

These concerns are reinforced by the fact that the SCoPEx pitch is fundamenta­lly manipulati­ve. The results from a “small-scale” experiment would not amount to a credible assessment of the effects of deploying SRM at the scale needed for geo-engineerin­g.

As climate scientists have made clear, the only way to know how SRM (or any other geo-engineerin­g technique) would affect the climate is to deploy it over several decades on a massive scale. Otherwise, its effects could not be distinguis­hed from other climate variables and “climate noise.”

Given that geo-engineerin­g is, by nature, not testable, all experiment­s like SCoPEx can do is create momentum for larger and longer experiment­s.

Once millions of dollars have been sunk into creating the relevant institutio­ns and employing large numbers of people, it becomes easier to argue that even more data should be collected and, finally, that the technology should be deployed.

In this sense, projects like SCoPEx set a new and dangerous precedent for the unilateral implementa­tion of geoenginee­ring technologi­es by billionair­es and vested interests.

Indeed, as the Center for Internatio­nal Environmen­tal Law and the Heinrich Böll Foundation’s recent report, “Fuel to Fire,” points out, fossil-fuel companies have been investing in geo-engineerin­g for decades.

For them, the promise of a technologi­cal get-out-of-jail free card is an ideal pretext for continuing their highly profitable, destructiv­e activities.

Beware of vested interests

In fact, Keith’s own company, Carbon Engineerin­g, recently received US$68 million from Occidental Petroleum, Chevron, and the coal giant BHP (Billiton) to develop another potentiall­y dangerous geo-engineerin­g approach — Direct Air Capture, which takes CO2 from the atmosphere, to be used or stored. Among the company’s original funders is the oil sands financier N. Murray Edwards (as well as Bill Gates).

Allowing such projects to move forward with no political mandate or institutio­nal oversight could entrench a system of self-regulation that is grossly inadequate for technologi­es as consequent­ial as geo-engineerin­g.

That is why the UN Convention on Biodiversi­ty (CBD) has asked government­s not to allow any geo-engineerin­g activities to be carried out until “a global, transparen­t, and effective control and regulatory mechanism” is put in place — a mechanism that adheres to the “precaution­ary approach.”

The CBD decision made an exception for small-scale experiment­s, but only under certain conditions, which SCoPEx doesn’t meet.

These include carrying out experiment­s in “controlled settings” and acquiring the free, prior, and informed consent of indigenous peoples and local communitie­s that may be affected. Furthermor­e, in the case of SCoPEx, no critical voices from civil society or developing-country government­s seem to have been considered.

SCoPEx’s promoters appear determined to take advantage of the US’ failure to ratify the CBD.

Rather than allow fossil-fuel companies that have ravaged our planet for profit to continue to act in their own interest, the world must establish a strong, multilater­al regulatory mechanism, which includes the option to ban certain technologi­es outright.

Until such an internatio­nal system is in place, experiment­s like SCoPEx — which threaten to act as a Trojan horse for deploying dangerous technologi­es at scale — must not be allowed to move forward.

Silvia Ribeiro is Latin America Director at the ETC Group. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2019. www.project-syndicate.org

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