Stratospheric imperialism: Liberalism, (eco)modernization, and ideologies of solar geoengineering research - Kevin Surprise, 2019

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Andrew Lockley

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Jul 2, 2019, 2:39:11 PM7/2/19
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https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/2514848619844771

Stratospheric imperialism: Liberalism, (eco)modernization, and ideologies of solar geoengineering research

First Published April 18, 2019 Research Article 

Abstract

Once a fringe notion, solar geoengineering via Stratospheric Aerosol Injection (SAI) is gaining traction as a climate management tactic within mainstream institutions and factions of the climate justice movement. Cautious considerations of SAI are driven by the layered realities of climate urgency, political inaction, and the potential for climate impacts to harm the most vulnerable. This narrative is difficult to dispute, yet it originates from leading centers of SAI research—particularly the Harvard Solar Geoengineering Research Program (HSGRP)—that construct the “necessity” of research, experimentation, and potential deployment under ideological pretenses aimed at maintaining the hegemony of liberal-capitalism. Hence, advanced under the auspices of HSGRP, SAI would constitute a form of imperialism rather than a tool for climate justice. I link SAI to theories of capitalist imperialism, and situate HSGRP within Harvard’s legacy shaping U.S. imperialism and position as a nodal point of liberal-capitalist power. In this context, I identify three dominant ideologies undergirding SAI research at Harvard—ecomodernism, Realist International Relations theory, and Keynesianism—that construct a specific narrative whereby established climate solutions (liberal-capitalist ecomodernism) are frustrated by “anarchical” international politics, leaving the poor vulnerable to near-term climate impacts. SAI is thus positioned as a mechanism capable of buying time for market-driven policy and reducing near-term climate risk. HSGRP directly counter poses this approach to radical elements of the climate justice movement that address capitalism as the root cause of both climate change and global poverty.

john gorman

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Jul 3, 2019, 4:25:27 AM7/3/19
to andrew....@gmail.com, geoengineering

Just a vote of thanks to Andrew for digging through the literature to keep us all informed about the sort of papers that get published opposing our work.

 

This one does again raise the question of how such work gets funding when Stephen Salter’s work on a real solution gets none.

 

John Gorman

 

 

From: Andrew Lockley
Sent: 02 July 2019 19:39
To: geoengineering
Subject: [geo] Stratospheric imperialism: Liberalism, (eco)modernization, andideologies of solar geoengineering research - Kevin Surprise, 2019

 

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Stratospheric imperialism: Liberalism, (eco)modernization, and ideologies of solar geoengineering research

First Published April 18, 2019 Research Article https://journals.sagepub.com/templates/jsp/images/CROSSMARK_Color_horizontal.svg

Abstract

Once a fringe notion, solar geoengineering via Stratospheric Aerosol Injection (SAI) is gaining traction as a climate management tactic within mainstream institutions and factions of the climate justice movement. Cautious considerations of SAI are driven by the layered realities of climate urgency, political inaction, and the potential for climate impacts to harm the most vulnerable. This narrative is difficult to dispute, yet it originates from leading centers of SAI research—particularly the Harvard Solar Geoengineering Research Program (HSGRP)—that construct the “necessity” of research, experimentation, and potential deployment under ideological pretenses aimed at maintaining the hegemony of liberal-capitalism. Hence, advanced under the auspices of HSGRP, SAI would constitute a form of imperialism rather than a tool for climate justice. I link SAI to theories of capitalist imperialism, and situate HSGRP within Harvard’s legacy shaping U.S. imperialism and position as a nodal point of liberal-capitalist power. In this context, I identify three dominant ideologies undergirding SAI research at Harvard—ecomodernism, Realist International Relations theory, and Keynesianism—that construct a specific narrative whereby established climate solutions (liberal-capitalist ecomodernism) are frustrated by “anarchical” international politics, leaving the poor vulnerable to near-term climate impacts. SAI is thus positioned as a mechanism capable of buying time for market-driven policy and reducing near-term climate risk. HSGRP directly counter poses this approach to radical elements of the climate justice movement that address capitalism as the root cause of both climate change and global poverty.

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