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Journal Article

Public Perceptions of Ocean-Based Carbon Dioxide Removal: The Nature-Engineering Divide?

Authors

  • Bertram
  • C.
  • Merk
  • C.

Publication Date

DOI

10.3389/fclim.2020.594194

Key Words

acceptance

blue carbon

Climate Engineering

naturalness

nature-based solution

negative emission technology

ocean-based carbon dioxide removal (CDR)

öffentliche Wahrnehmung

Public Perception

Related Topics

Sustainable Development

Climate

Public acceptability is a standard element on the list of potential constraints on research and deployment of ocean-based carbon dioxide removal (CDR). We outline past work on the public perceptions and acceptability of ocean-based CDR among laypersons covering the main developments over the past 15 years. We compare and synthesize insights from two distinct strands of literature – one on climate engineering approaches and the other on coastal ecosystem management or blue carbon approaches. We also draw conclusions from studies on land-based CDR for emerging ocean-based approaches. Main determinants of perceptions identified in the past are controllability, environmental impacts, containment, permanence of carbon storage, risks and benefits for the local population as well as to which degree an approach is perceived as natural or engineered. We highlight how these aspects may influence perceptions and acceptability of ocean-based CDR approaches which have not yet been on the agenda of perceptions research. Even though ocean-based CDR approaches cannot be neatly divided into categories, the public's tendency to favor approaches perceived more as natural over approaches perceived more as engineering could result in a dilemma between approaches with possibly high carbon sequestration potential but low levels of acceptability and approaches with possibly low sequestration potential but high levels of acceptability. To effectively work toward achieving net-zero carbon emissions by mid-century, however, we need to bridge the gap between natural and engineering-type approaches, also in research, to come up with a broad portfolio of CDR options to complement classic mitigation and adaptation measures.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Dr. Christine Merk
    Kiel Institute Researcher

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Research Center

  • Global Transformation