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Inverse
Inverse
Science
Alexis Schwartz

Bill Gates is funding a controversial climate fix that could save the Earth — or doom it


In 1601 CE, China plunged into turmoil.

The spring and summer were unusually frigid, while the latter part of the year was scorching. Floods and frost conspired to destroy crops, and drought killed whatever was left alive. According to contemporary eye-witness accounts, with the autumn heat came disease epidemics and famine. An account dating to 1611 describes how people “ate tree bark and grassroots” to survive.

The rest of the world was not spared: European wine harvests failed. In Russia, perhaps 500,000 people perished within two years. The reason was not war nor a virulent pathogen: It was a temporary climate apocalypse, now called the Little Ice Age.

The world’s suffering stemmed from an eruption: In 1600, the Peruvian Huaynaputina volcano violently spewed ash, dust, and toxic gases into the atmosphere. The sulfuric ash traveled from Europe to Japan, dimmed the sunlight, and made temperatures around the world crash.

The result was a worldwide crop failure, destroying countries’ food reserves. Some historians speculate the cataclysm put an end to early efforts to colonize North America in Jamestown, Virginia, where many early inhabitants died of malnutrition.

How to Save the Earth: On Earth Day 2022, Inverse explores some of the most ambitious, exciting, and controversial efforts to save our planet.

Similar catastrophes followed another eruption in 536 C.E., which plunged the world into darkness and blocked out the Sun for 18 months. Summer temperatures dropped to 1.5 degrees Celsius (34.7 degrees Fahrenheit), crops failed, and millions died. Ultimately, the ensuing Plague of Justinian would spur the collapse of the Roman Empire.

And in 1783 C.E., the world endured the Móðuharðindin, or “Mist Hardships” — environmental catastrophes stemming from the Laki volcano erupting on Iceland. Then, an estimated 11 million people perished in two famines in India; and tens of thousands of Europeans starved to death, and those who survived propelled the French Revolution.

To historians, powerful volcanic eruptions catalyze social upheaval. Yet to climate scientists, they make for interesting research — and for some, they even suggest a way to survive our ongoing, human-driven climate crisis.

Solar radiation modification

During a Plinian eruption — one powerful enough to eject a column of sulfur and dust into the stratosphere — the particles shoot up and spread out to an umbrella-like plume. The cloud of matter scatters incoming sunlight, cooling the Earth below. Over time, this cooling effect decreases global temperature.

It’s a straightforward concept: The Sun’s light shining on Earth hits the dense sulfuric clouds and reflects into space, leaving the shrouded land below to cool down. Imagine sitting underneath a gazebo on a hot sunny day and the temperature change between shade and sunlight.

This effect, known as “radiative forcing,” is attractive to a subset of climate scientists as it offers a potential Hail Mary option to a modern global warming problem.

During the 1991 Mount Pinatubo eruption, 15 million tons of sulfur dioxide were released into the atmosphere, cooling global temperature by 0.5 degrees Celsius. The relatively mild eruption, paired with humanity’s advancements in technology and food security, helped solidify the idea.

Some scientists proposed geoengineering the atmosphere using solar radiation modification (SRM) to counter swiftly rising temperatures. Retrofitted planes would release sulfuric aerosol clouds into our atmosphere, mimicking a volcano’s planetary cooling clouds and countering rising temperature. To its advocates, SRM is cheap, easy to do, and global. Whether or not you think it is brilliant, SRM is controversial.

Even SRM proponents aren’t necessarily “fans.” In a New York Times Op-Ed, David Keith, Applied Physics professor and lead developer of Harvard’s Solar Geoengineering Research Program, phrases the argument thus: “What’s the Least Bad Way to Cool the Planet?

Meanwhile, the Union of Concerned Scientists, a scientific watchdog agency, has recommended “a precautionary approach.”

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change sits on the fence, while the National Academy of Sciences proposed deeply prefaced research, warning of potential catastrophes resulting from mismanagement and even climate warfare.

These fears have stunted research for now, but given SRM’s low barrier to entry and the gathering sense of climate doom, it may not be a matter of when the world will use SRM but how the world will use SRM.

Environmentally speaking, it’s unknown if increased cloud coverage would uniformly cool the planet or even exacerbate problems in local areas. Some scientists worry about disrupting India’s monsoons, for example, which help feed billions of people; or reducing rain around the equator. Others are concerned about ocean acidification from falling sulfuric particles. Restrictive budgets limit scientists’ ability to run computer simulations, and federal funding for research is nonexistent.

The science, and subsequently, scientific opinion is hazy due to a general lack of peer-review studies. It’s also why in 2021, the National Academy of Sciences called for $100 million in research funding — and why some diehards like Keith are pursuing studies despite blowback.

“We have got all the complexities of bias of who believes what,” Keith tells Inverse.

The science of SRM

Now, Keith splits his time between leading Harvard’s Solar Geoengineering Lab and advising Bill Gates on climate policy, specifically on SRM. (Gates is now a funder for the Harvard Solar Geoengineering Lab). Keith’s current research, he explains, contradicts earlier theories about SRM’s ecological effects.

“All the early papers suggested solar geoengineering may reduce droughts, and almost all recent reporting, including the front page of headlines of The Guardian, suggest it causes droughts. So it gives you a sense of the total disconnect of how this is written about and what the actual science says,” Keith says.

What does the actual science say? It’s complicated and costly.

Trying to determine the effects of SRM costs money. A lot of money.

When creating SRM simulations, researchers are hampered by cash. The expenses of gathering the data up and crunching the numbers stall radical research.

“We only get to do some simulations; we have to try and make them count,” says Walker Lee, a solar geoengineering researcher at Cornell’s Sibley School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering.

“In a perfect world, we wouldn't need solar geoengineering.”

What will happen if we need to reduce the world’s temperature by 0.5 degrees Celsius or 1.5 degrees Celsius? What does optimal SRM look like in these scenarios? Since SRM is a “problem-solving” question, researchers tend to build their simulations around objectives, not hypotheses.

“We can figure out how to optimize solar geoengineering,” says Lee, “but optimization is kind of a misleading term as it implies that there’s the best answer or a right answer. That is inherently subjective.”

“Whatever the best answer is or the best solution or the best climate state is going to depend on who you ask,” Lee adds.

“Rather than trying to pick up the best one, we usually pick a goal that would be reasonable. Then we see how hard it is or how easy it is to reach that goal, how much sulfur we need in the climate model, and then what happens to the rest of the climate.”

Scientists also can’t conduct real-world trials. Keith says there are “hundreds of little experiments you could do.” But Lee admits, “you certainly couldn’t put the shaving cream back in the bottle... Once the aerosols are there, you wouldn't be able to do anything but just sort of wait for them to disappear.”

Opponents of SRM are, perhaps unsurprisingly, easy to find within academia and politics. In a January 2022 letter in WIREs Climate Change journal, 60 researchers and academics called for an “international non-use agreement” on SRM technologies and SRM research in general. The consortium called for a ban on outdoor experiments or deployment of aerosols, national funding for research, and on patents.

One of the signatories, Sheila Jasanoff, an expert on science policy at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, tells Inverse pursuing SRM is “potentially planetary quality-of-life changing technology.”

The change would not necessarily be good. Jasanoff takes issue with the argument that the research is “basic science,” in that it isn’t a full-scale deployment of the technology in the real world but rather a controlled investigation into how it might work.

“I think that’s a somewhat either naive or disingenuous point,” she says.

“Because, after all, why are these basic science things being done? What needs to be decided is: Is this a pathway we should be going down?”

“Far more attention is being paid to the technology than the social infrastructure of ensuring responsibility in the uses of these technologies. That asymmetry is something that needs to be addressed,” Jasanoff adds.

“You certainly couldn’t put the shaving cream back in the bottle.”

Are we politically prepared to implement SRM on a global scale? Smaller and less-developed nations will likely not hold the keys to SRM — yet they may also be the nations most affected by it. The international community is also struggling to understand how SRM might be monitored and by whom. In a 2021 paper, the United Nations mentions solar geoengineering, but “the report makes no recommendations on whether to use either method.”

Some opponents believe SRM will negate other solution-based approaches to climate change, such as carbon extraction and emission mitigation. In theory, SRM is easier, cheaper, and quicker to do than carbon extraction, which involves complex air filtering technology or decades of reforestation.

The nature of SRM research funding doesn’t help its case, either, with Bill Gates and other private billionaires writing checks.

“Given the great disparities and wealth and the huge concentrations of wealth in a few hands, we should be having the debate to what extent should foundations be allowed to sidestep governmental policy,” says Jasanoff.

“Bill Gates has been a major supporter of geoengineering and with the best intentions, but that’s not the point. The point is that by channeling money through the private sector, you avoid deliberation, and you avoid decision points at which you might come up with conclusions or constraints,” she adds.

Unfortunately, humanity is running out of time to decide: As emissions rapidly increase, do we have time to mitigate climate change through carbon extraction technology, emissions limits, and green energy, or must we go on the offensive?

“In a perfect world, we wouldn’t need solar geoengineering, but there is a nonzero probability that climate change is going to hurt really, really badly,” Lee says.

NASA currently estimates that the world’s temperatures will rise between 2.5 and 4.5 degrees Celsius by 2100. Even if reaching net-zero emissions was possible in the near-term future (it isn’t), it’d take many millennia for Earth to absorb excess greenhouse gases. If humanity stopped producing carbon today, the Earth’s temperature would still increase far past 1.5 degrees Celsius by the early 2030s. The consequences of the rise? Some 70 to 90 percent of coral reefs will die off, 25 percent of all marine life will perish, sea levels will rise as much as three feet (risking 4 million U.S. lives), and “once in a lifetime” storms will become commonplace.

“Based on where we are right now and the projections for the future, and regardless of whether you account for past patterns of human behavior, we are not guaranteed to reach a world with less than 1.5 degrees of warming,” says Lee.

“And when or if that happens, what are we going to do?”

How to Save the Earth: On Earth Day 2022, Inverse explores some of the most ambitious, exciting, and controversial efforts to save our planet.

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