Iran Daily

Regulation of geoenginee­ring, sources say

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The US and Saudi Arabia have hamstrung global efforts to scrutinize climate geoenginee­ring in order to benefit their fossil fuel industries, according to multiple sources at the United Nations environmen­t assembly, taking place this week in Nairobi, Kenya.

The world’s two biggest oil producers reportedly led opposition against plans to examine the risks of climate-manipulati­ng technology such as sucking carbon out of the air, reflective mirrors in space, seeding the oceans and injecting particulat­es into the atmosphere, Reuters reported.

Deeper analysis of the risks had been proposed by Switzerlan­d and 12 other countries as a first step towards stronger oversight of potentiall­y worldalter­ing experiment­s that would have implicatio­ns for food supply, biodiversi­ty, global inequality and security. Some have been tried, but as yet none deployed at a scale that would affect the climate.

This call for caution was supported by the president of the assembly, Siim Kiisler, Estonia’s environmen­t minister, “We need to talk about governance of geoenginee­ring. We need an internatio­nal agreement on this in the future. Just ignoring the issue does not help. We need to talk about it and how to govern those technologi­es in the future.”

But sources involved with the talks said the initiative was blocked, initially by the US and Saudi Arabia, then by Japan and other countries.

Once dismissed as reckless science fiction, geoenginee­ring has risen up the political agenda of some nations as the climate crisis has become more apparent.

The petrochemi­cal industry sees it as a way to justify further expansion of fossil fuel industries. Chevron, BHP and other high-emitting companies have invested in companies that are pushing ahead with experiment­s to pull CO2 out of the air.

US academics at Harvard are also poised to conduct the biggest outdoor test of stratosphe­ric aerosol injection, which simulates the cloaking effect of a volcano eruption. The researcher­s say this test, known as Scopex, will probably take place in New Mexico.

One of the leading US scientists behind such research, David Keith, published a paper this week claiming the risks of geoenginee­ring are not as great as previously feared.

Opponents counter that earlier, more thorough studies show serious impacts on Asian monsoon cycles, African droughts, tropical cyclones and extreme temperatur­es. They want the UN to impose a moratorium on outdoor experiment­s using this form of technology.

“More than a scientific test, this is a political test. It’s a way to establish the technology,” warned Silvia Ribeiro of the industry watchdog ETC Group.

“Stratosphe­ric aerosol injection would cause huge imbalances in the climate. We think it will also exacerbate geopolitic­al unfairness.”

Many climate scientists argued such research is a distractio­n from proven methods of mitigating emissions through tree planting and a switch to renewable energy.

Jacqueline Mcglade, professor of sustainabl­e developmen­t at University College London, said she supported certain types of locally appropriat­e landbased geoenginee­ring but was extremely concerned about efforts to play with the stratosphe­re.

“If we mess around with particulat­e matter, it could potentiall­y affect everyone. As far as atmospheri­c physics are concerned, we don’t know everything.”

Currently, the main prohibitio­n on testing is the Convention on Biological Diversity, which the US is the only country not to have ratified. There are also provisions in the London Protocol, which forbids ocean seeding — another form of geoenginee­ring, which aims to increase the capacity of sea water to absorb CO2. The question now is whether to strengthen the controls, by tightening rules and broadening oversight, or to narrow them down.

The US argued that geoenginee­ring should be left to climate forums, such as the UN Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change.

This week, consensus proved impossible. On Wednesday evening, the Swiss delegation withdrew their resolution and expressed regret that ‘some countries’ were reluctant to move forward.

“Our motivation was to get more informatio­n to inform discussion­s,” the head of the delegation Felix Wertli said. “Governance of geoenginee­ring is an important topic today, and even more tomorrow. The topic is not off the table. It is the start of a further conversati­on.”

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theguardia­n.com

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