Policy Brief: Safeguarding the polar regions from dangerous geoengineering

This policy brief summarizes for policymakers the extensive assessment contained in the peer-reviewed paper Siegert et al., 2025 “Safeguarding the polar regions from dangerous geoengineering: a critical assessment of proposed concepts and future prospects”. This assessment was published in Frontiers in Science on 09 September 2025. Content of this policy brief has been approved by the co-authors. For more information and references, please see the original open-access paper at https://doi.org/10.3389/fsci.2025.1527393. Geoengineering approaches have gained increasing attention as proposed solutions to reduce the adverse effects of climate change, especially impacts from polar regions such as sea-level rise and permafrost thaw emissions. Our scientific assessment, by 42 leading polar and climate scientists, evaluated five proposed geoengineering concepts that focus on polar action. The assessment concludes that these methods are unlikely to work in avoiding climate impacts, would have potentially severe and unpredictable environmental and societal impacts, and would be prohibitively expensive or unfeasible in harsh polar conditions. It concludes that research efforts are better focused on decarbonising and, in the polar regions, on fundamental research that will underpin detailed understanding of processes driving observed and projected changes.

Details

Publication status:
Published Online
Author(s):
Authors: Cavitte, Marie, Kirkham, James ORCIDORCID record for James Kirkham, Pearson, Pamela

On this site: James Kirkham
Date:
3 November, 2025
Journal/Source:
Zenodo
Page(s):
8pp
Link to published article:
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17488507