4.4 Article

Determining our climate policy future: expert opinions about negative emissions and solar radiation management pathways

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11027-022-10030-9

Keywords

Expert survey; Climate engineering; Carbon dioxide removal; Negative emissions technologies; Solar radiation management; Greenhouse gas removal

Funding

  1. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the European Research Council (ERC) [951542-GENIE-ERC-2020-SyG]

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Negative emissions technologies and solar radiation management techniques are increasingly seen as crucial complements to traditional climate change mitigation and adaptation. Some options, such as afforestation and reforestation, ecosystem restoration, and soil carbon sequestration, are seen as necessary, feasible, and affordable, with minimal risks and barriers. However, other options, such as ocean alkalization or fertilization, space-based reflectors, high-altitude sunshades, and albedo management via clouds, are seen as unnecessary risky or costly choices.
Negative emissions technologies and solar radiation management techniques could contribute towards climate stability, either by removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and storing it permanently or reflecting sunlight away from the atmosphere. Despite concerns about them, such options are increasingly being discussed as crucial complements to traditional climate change mitigation and adaptation. Expectations around negative emissions and solar radiation management and their associated risks and costs shape public and private discussions of how society deals with the climate crisis. In this study, we rely on a large expert survey (N = 74) to critically examine the future potential of both negative emission options (e.g., carbon dioxide removal) and solar radiation management techniques. We designed a survey process that asked a pool of prominent experts questions about (i) the necessity of adopting negative emissions or solar radiation management options, (ii) the desirability of such options when ranked against each other, (iii) estimations of future efficacy in terms of temperature reductions achieved or gigatons of carbon removed, (iv) expectations about future scaling, commercialization, and deployment targets, and (v) potential risks and barriers. Unlike other elicitation processes where experts are more positive or have high expectations about novel options, our results are more critical and cautionary. We find that some options (notably afforestation and reforestation, ecosystem restoration, and soil carbon sequestration) are envisioned frequently as necessary, desirable, feasible, and affordable, with minimal risks and barriers (compared to other options). This contrasts with other options envisaged as unnecessary risky or costly, notably ocean alkalization or fertilization, space-based reflectors, high-altitude sunshades, and albedo management via clouds. Moreover, only the options of afforestation and reforestation and soil carbon sequestration are expected to be widely deployed before 2035, which raise very real concerns about climate and energy policy in the near- to mid-term.

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