The focus of climate policy so far has been on reducing the accumulation of greenhouse gases. That approach, however, requires broad international cooperation and, being expensive, has been hindered by free riding; so far, little action has been taken. An alternative approach is to counteract climate change by reducing the amount of solar radiation that strikes the Earth - "geoengineering." In contrast to emission reductions, this approach is inexpensive and can be undertaken by a single country, unilaterally. But geoengineering also has worrying consequences: it may harm some countries; it would not address ocean acidification; it would pose new risks. The fundamental challenge posed by this new technology is not free riding but governance: who should decide if and under what circumstances geoengineering should be used? © 2007 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
CITATION STYLE
Barrett, S. (2008). The incredible economics of geoengineering. In Environmental and Resource Economics (Vol. 39, pp. 45–54). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10640-007-9174-8
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