Engineering the Climate: The Ethics of Solar Radiation Management discusses the ethical issues associated with deliberately engineering a cooler climate to combat global warming. Climate engineering (also known as geoengineering) has recently experienced a surge of interest given the growing likelihood that the global community will fail to limit the temperature increases associated with greenhouse gases to safe levels. Deliberate manipulation of solar radiation to combat climate change is an exciting and hopeful technical prospect, promising great benefits to those who are in line to suffer most through climate change. At the same time, the prospect of geoengineering creates huge controversy. Taking intentional control of earth’s climate would be an unprecedented step in environmental management, raising a number of difficult ethical questions. One particular form of geoengineering, solar radiation management (SRM), is known to be relatively cheap and capable of bringing down global temperatures very rapidly. However, the complexity of the climate system creates considerable uncertainty about the precise nature of SRM’s effects in different regions. The ethical issues raised by the prospect of SRM are both complex and thorny. They include: 1) the uncertainty of SRM’s effects on precipitation patterns, 2) the challenge of proper global participation in decision-making, 3) the legitimacy of intentionally manipulating the global climate system in the first place, 4) the potential to sidestep the issue of dealing with greenhouse gas emissions, and, 5) the lasting effects on future generations. It has been widely acknowledged that a sustained and scholarly treatment of the ethics of SRM is necessary before it will be possible to make fair and just decisions about whether (or how) to proceed. This book, including essays by 13 experts in the field of ethics of geoengineering, is intended to go some distance towards providing that treatment.
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Introduction: The Extraordinary Ethics of Solar Radiation Management Christopher J. Preston Part I. Present and Future Generations Chapter 1: Geoengineering, Solidarity, and Moral Risk Marion Hourdequin Chapter 2: Might Solar Radiation Management Constitute a Dilemma? Konrad Ott Chapter 3: Domination and the Ethics of Solar Radiation Management Patrick Taylor Smith Part II. Marginalized, Vulnerable, and Voiceless Populations Chapter 4: Indigenous Peoples, Solar Radiation Management, and Consent Kyle Powys Whyte Chapter 5: Solar Radiation Management and Vulnerable Populations: The Moral Deficit and its Prospects Christopher J. Preston Chapter 6: Solar Radiation Management and Non-human Species Ronald Sandler Part III. Moral Hazards and Hidden Benefits Chapter 7: The World That Would Have Been: Moral Hazard Arguments Against Geoengineering Ben Hale Chapter 8: Climate Remediation to Address Social Development Challenges: Going Beyond Cost Benefit and Risk Approaches to Assessing Solar Radiation Management Holly Jean Buck Part IV. Ethics of Framing and Rhetoric Chapter 9: Insurance Policy or Technological Fix: The Ethical Implications of Framing Solar Radiation Management Dane Scott Chapter 10: Public Concerns About the Ethics of Solar Radiation Management Wylie Carr, Ashley Mercer, and Clare Palmer Part V. The Cultural Milieu Chapter 11: The Setting of the Scene: Technological Fixes and the Design of the Good Life Albert Borgmann Chapter 12: Between Babel and Pelagius: Religion, Theology, and Geoengineering Forrest Clingerman Chapter 13: Making Climates: Solar Radiation Management and the Ethics of Fabrication” by Maia Galarraga and Bronislaw Szerszynski
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This well-written, well-edited work makes the assumption that solar radiation management (SRM) would be accomplished by putting reflective aerosols into the atmosphere since the world is not doing much to alleviate global warming in other ways. However, the book is not primarily concerned with the actual method. Contributors recognize that scientists will have difficulty predicting the effects (e.g., local climate changes) of SRM. They cover various issues, such as the fact that using SRM may prevent people from taking firm measures to control CO2 emissions. Authors also explore the ramifications for future generations, who will probably need to continue the practice of SRM; the importance of involving poor and marginalized peoples in decisions about SRM; and effects on nonhuman species. In addition, the book includes chapters suggesting that SRM might be used to help solve other social problems, rather than causing new ones, and that it is foolish to deal with the moral choices involved in using SRM without considering people's religion and other matters. This is a wide-ranging and important book, apparently the only one on the subject--scholarly, but accessible to intelligent readers who are not geoengineers or ethicists. Good index and excellent scholarly apparatus. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readership levels.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780739190548
Publisert
2013-12-05
Utgiver
Vendor
Lexington Books
Vekt
417 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
153 mm
Dybde
21 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
278

Biographical note

Christopher J. Preston is an Associate Professor of Environmental Ethics at the University of Montana. He is the author of Saving Creation: Nature and Faith in the Life of Holmes Rolston, III (Trinity University Press, 2009) and Grounding Knowledge: Environmental Philosophy, Epistemology, and Place (University of Georgia Press, 2003), an edited collection of essays titled Nature Value, and Duty: Life on Earth with Holmes Rolston, III (Springer, 2007), and a special issue of the journal Ethics and the Environment on the “Epistemic Significance of Place.”