Geoengineering Could Worsen Climate Change
By Tim Radford
LONDON—Geoengineering—which sometimes seems to be the
despairing climate scientist’s Plan B—simply won’t work. It won’t offer a quick
fix to the planet’s burden of global warming, and it will be difficult to
convince anybody that it could work at all.
Geoengineering is any deliberate, large-scale intervention
in the workings of the climate machine that might offer a way of containing
global warming. The accent is on the word deliberate.
Humans are already “engineering” the climate just by
continuously adding carbon dioxide by burning fossil fuels, but the climate
change that will follow is an unhappy consequence, not a deliberate plan.
Since governments have been either slow, or very slow, to
agree on systematic plans to drastically reduce dependence on fossil fuels,
researchers have in the last decade or so begun to propose ways in which
deliberate steps might counter global warming.
Problems underestimated
They have suggested darkening the skies with deliberate
discharges of sulphate aerosols to block incoming radiation. They have proposed
“seeding” the ocean with iron to encourage photosynthesis and increase carbon
uptake by phytoplankton, they have suggested brightening the clouds by spraying
salt particles into them to make them more reflective.
Now British researchers have taken a long hard look at three
aspects of geoengineering research and arrived at a bleak conclusion: it would
just be better not to emit greenhouse gases on a prodigal scale.
Geoengineering projects would certainly never offer an easy
answer: they may not be disastrous, but they don’t look good, or popular. The
public would prefer more investment in renewable energy to, for example, the
deployment of artificial volcanoes that pumped fine particles into the
stratosphere.
Piers Forster, professor of physical climate change at the
University of Leeds, said: “The devil is in the detail. Geoengineering will be
much more expensive and challenging than previous estimates suggest, and any
benefits would be limited.”
“Full-scale
deployment of climate engineering technologies will be the clearest indication
that we have failed… as planetary stewards”
This is consistent with a number of studies within the last
two years. Researchers have repeatedly concluded that such schemes either won’t
work or could actually generate more heat or could upset rainfall patterns or
could have serious consequences for specific regions or could simply generate
intractable problems for governments, science ministries and international
agencies that might have to make the big decisions.
But the interest in geoengineering continues. One good
reason is that—at least as a theoretical exercise—it could help climate
scientists better understand the fine detail of the workings of the planet.
Major volcanic eruptions can discharge so much ash and sulphate aerosols into
the upper atmosphere that they actually cool the planet for years, and a recent
study has argued that the slowdown in global warming in the last decade could
be a consequence of a series of relatively minor eruptions.
But human attempts to replicate the effect would be fraught.
“The potential for misstep is considerable,” said Matthew Watson, a natural
hazards scientist at the University of Bristol, UK.
The British scientists don’t dismiss geoengineering
outright. That is because if, under the notorious “business-as-usual” scenario,
nations go on burning fossil fuels, then by 2100 the consequences could be
catastrophic.
Dr Watson said: “Full-scale deployment of climate
engineering technologies will be the clearest indication that we have failed in
our role as planetary stewards. But there is a point at which not deploying
some technologies would be unethical.”
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