Khaleej Times

Tampering with the weather could end in disaster

- - Project Syndicate CaRRoll muffett

As concentrat­ions of atmospheri­c carbon dioxide surpass 400 parts per million, the costs of the climate crisis – in terms of economic losses, environmen­tal impacts, and human lives – continue to rise. Last October, the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned that global temperatur­es approachin­g 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels will have serious consequenc­es for humanity and biodiversi­ty. Anything beyond that level will be catastroph­ic.

To avoid crossing the 1.5°C threshold, the world must nearly halve its CO2 emissions by 2030, and reach net zero emissions by 2050. This will be possible only if we completely eliminate fossil fuels from the economy within the next few decades. Attempts to circumvent that reality will only make matters worse.

We’re at risk of doing just that. A growing number of people are now considerin­g the once-unthinkabl­e strategy of geoenginee­ring our way out of the climate crisis. Proposed approaches vary widely, but all share a few key features: they are technologi­cally uncertain, environmen­tally risky, and more likely to accelerate the climate crisis than to reverse it.

Proponents advocate two main geoenginee­ring strategies: carbon dioxide removal (CDR) and solar radiation modificati­on (SRM). Both – along with most other geoenginee­ring strategies – would depend on the widespread deployment of so-called carbon capture, utilizatio­n, and storage (CCUS), in which a suite of technologi­es captures CO2 from industrial waste streams and stores it undergroun­d, in the oceans, or in materials.

On its own, this would raise serious environmen­tal and social risks. But, economical­ly, CCUS is viable only if captured carbon is pumped into old oil wells to force out more oil, into abandoned coal mines to produce natural gas, or into refineries to produce yet more plastic. This would benefit the fossil-fuel industry – and hurt everyone else.

The specifics of each strategy only reinforce the dangers of geoenginee­ring. Consider CDR, which aims to absorb carbon from the atmosphere after it has been emitted. The most widely discussed approach – bioenergy with carbon capture and storage

(BECCS) – would mean clearing large stretches of intact forest, displacing food crops, or both, to produce more burnable fuels. This would threaten food security. Another major CDR technology – direct air capture (DAC) – would suck CO2 from the air by installing what are essentiall­y huge air filters around the planet. To pay for this extremely energy-intensive process, proponents want to use the captured CO2 to produce diesel and jet fuels, which would then be burned and re-emitted in an endless cycle. Put simply, DAC is a very expensive means of turning renewable energy into gas.

The other major geoenginee­ring strategy, SRM, seeks to mask rather than reduce atmospheri­c CO2. The most widely discussed approach involves injecting sulfur dioxide (SO2) into the upper atmosphere, producing a temporary cooling effect.

But burning coal, oil, and gas – which also produce large amounts of SO2 – has the same effect, while also causing acid rain and depleting the ozone layer. Proponents of SRM thus argue, perversely, that we should protect the planet by producing more of the pollutants that are already destroying it.

The explanatio­n for this apparent cognitive dissonance is simple. As a new analysis by the Center for Internatio­nal Environmen­tal Law shows, many of those advocating geoenginee­ring have worked for, been funded by, or stood to profit from the fossil-fuel industries that created the climate crisis in the first place.

The oil, gas, coal, and utility industries have spent decades researchin­g, patenting, and promoting geoenginee­ring technologi­es. This is clearly a counter-productive strategy. The world simply cannot afford to waste any more time and resources on geoenginee­ring myths and fantasies.

We have the tools we need to tackle the climate crisis. Promoting renewable energy and energy efficiency, protecting and restoring natural forests and ocean ecosystems, and respecting the right of indigenous peoples to act as stewards of their traditiona­l lands are all workable, cost-effective solutions to the climate crisis that can be deployed and scaled up now. All that is needed is the political will to embrace them – and the will to reject specious strategies devised by those who should be fixing the problem, rather than dreaming up new ways to profit from it. - Carroll Muffett is President and CEO of the Center for Internatio­nal Environmen­tal Law and a co-author of CIEL’s Fuel to the Fire report.

The world simply cannot afford to waste any more time and resources on geoenginee­ring myths and fantasies

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates