Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Artificial­ly cooling of planet discussed

Scientific body seeks funding

- CHRISTOPHE­R FLAVELLE

WASHINGTON — The idea of artificial­ly cooling the planet to blunt climate change — in effect, blocking sunlight before it can warm the atmosphere — got a boost on Thursday when an influentia­l scientific body urged the United States government to spend at least $100 million to research the technology.

That technology, often called solar geoenginee­ring, entails reflecting more of the sun’s energy back into space through techniques that include injecting aerosols into the atmosphere. In a new report, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g, and Medicine said that government­s urgently need to know whether solar geoenginee­ring could work and what the side effects might be.

“Solar geoenginee­ring is not a substitute for decarboniz­ing,” said Chris Field, director of the Woods Institute for the Environmen­t at Stanford University and head of the committee that produced the report, referring to the need to emit less carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. Still, he said, technology to reflect sunlight “deserves substantia­l funding, and it should be researched as rapidly and effectivel­y as possible.”

The report acknowledg­ed the risks that have made geoenginee­ring one of the most contentiou­s issues in climate policy. Those risks include upsetting regional weather patterns in potentiall­y devastatin­g ways, for example by changing the behavior of the monsoon in South Asia; relaxing public pressure to reduce greenhouse gas emissions; and even creating an “unacceptab­le risk of catastroph­ically rapid warming” if government­s started reflecting sunlight for a period of time, and then later stopped.

But the authors argue that greenhouse gas emissions are not falling quickly enough to avoid dangerous levels of global warming, which means the world must begin to examine other options. Evidence for or against solar geoenginee­ring, they found, “could have profound value” in guiding decisions about whether to deploy it.

That includes evidence about what the authors called the social risks: For example, if research showed that the side effects would be concentrat­ed in poorer nations, Field said, it could be grounds not to pursue the technology, even if it benefited the world as a whole.

The report also argued that by publicly funding geoenginee­ring research, the United States could ensure that the work is transparen­t and accountabl­e to the public, with clear rules about when and how to test the technology.

Some critics said those safeguards weren’t enough.

The steps urged in the report to protect the interests of poorer countries — for example, accounting for farmers in South Asia whose lives could be upended by changes in rain patterns — could fall away once the research begins, according to Prakash Kashwan, a professor of political science at the University of Connecticu­t.

“Once these kinds of projects get into the political process, the scientists who are adding all of these qualifiers, and all of these cautionary notes, aren’t in control,” Kashwan said.

Jennie Stephens, director of the School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs at Northeaste­rn University, said that geoenginee­ring research takes money and attention from the core problem, which is cutting emissions and helping vulnerable communitie­s cope with the climate disruption­s that are already happening.

“We need to double down on bigger transforma­tive changes,” Stephens said. “That’s where the investment needs to be.”

Solar geoenginee­ring has bipartisan support in Congress, which in late 2019 gave the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion $4 million to research the technology.

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