One of the leitmotifs of the recent discussions around the
SPICE project technology test cancellation was the support for the remainder
(90%) of the project to continue. Objectors’ responses to allowing researchers to
explore climate engineering are entirely predictable. First, we were accused of
being ‘in it for the research money’, an obnoxious slur borrowed from climate
sceptics when describing climate scientists. Now, we are ‘sweet and naive’:
well meaning, bumbling boffins, trying to help but providing ammunition to the
Machiavellian aims of politicians too lazy to do anything but retain the status
quo. Next, I predict, we’ll be encouraged to turn on each other and our
research will be used to try to ‘divide and conquer’. Differences of opinion
are our modus operandi.
It’s already
beginning to happen. Stock responses to papers suggesting climate engineering
might work/have positive impacts (no matter how buried in caveats) include
demonising the researchers involved. On the other hand, research, including several
recently published papers, is already being used to
suggest that climate engineering (and ergo researching climate engineering) is
a waste of time. Just think about that paradox for a moment – ‘research into
climate engineering shows research into climate engineering is worthless’.
What these papers demonstrate is that it is surely
better to know than not. After all three large eruptions of the
latter half of the 20th century rainfall patterns were impacted by
increased aerosol. Does this mean that this form of climate engineering should
be discarded? No, it doesn’t. Make no mistake, no form of climate engineering
is a free ride and we cannot get back to where we were. There will be winners
and losers if we deploy stratospheric aerosols or not, unless we change, as a
species, very quickly. The questions have to be ‘what are the impacts of both
scenarios and which is preferable?’ I am often asked, ‘is climate engineering a
good idea’. My response is ‘I’ve no idea, but it would be a good idea to know
if it’s a bad idea’. Only through research can we generate the evidence base
for a salient answer. It is vitally important that scientists are given the
space within which to ask and try to answer difficult questions.
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