Detailed Record



The Economics and Governance of Solar Geoengineering


Abstract Limited progress on reducing global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions has sparked increasing interest in whether the global community should consider the use of solar geoengineering (SGE)—technologies designed to reflect sunlight away from Earth—as a short-term approach to reduce climate change damages. Through theory, surveys, simulations, and experiments, economists have studied the strategic implications of SGE, how these technologies interact with incentives to mitigate GHG emissions, and the challenges of governing them. This article provides a comprehensive review of the literature, starting with how SGE is incorporated into economic models. One issue is whether SGE will crowd out efforts to mitigate GHG or will enhance mitigation efforts. We identify conditions under which each of those results is likely. We review the economics of governing SGE, particularly the issue of a single actor unilaterally deploying SGE to manipulate global temperatures. Our review synthesizes the main findings from the literature with the goal of better informing global climate policies.
Authors Juan Moreno‐Cruz ORCID , David M. McEvoy ORCID , Matthew McGinty ORCID , Todd L. Cherry University of WyomingORCID
Journal Info University of Chicago Press | Review of Environmental Economics and Policy , pages: 000 - 000
Publication Date 12/23/2024
ISSN 1750-6816
TypeKeyword Image article
Open Access closed Closed Access
DOI https://doi.org/10.1086/733652
KeywordsKeyword Image Geoengineering (Score: 0.8551823)