Social media summary
New article suggests alternative framing of carbon dioxide as a fruitful starting point for climate policy.
1. Introduction
Even though climate change increasingly threatens the wellbeing of humankind and this threat was recognized decades ago (IPCC, 1990), responses have remained weak (Rogelj et al., Reference Rogelj, den Elzen, Höhne, Fransen, Fekete, Winkler, Schaeffer, Sha, Riahi and Meinshausen2016). It seems more than obvious that current and past efforts to tackle climate change have been seriously insufficient. Given carbon dioxide's (CO2) role as the main greenhouse gas and the urgency of actions needed to meet the goals of the Paris agreement – most importantly staying well below 2°C increase in global average temperature – we need to profoundly rethink our approach to CO2 management. In this paper, we argue that taking different perspectives on CO2 is a fruitful starting point for such an effort.
In the battle against climate change, the first thing to accept is that carbon neutrality is no longer an ambitious enough goal. Carbon negativity is needed, i.e. ensuring that CO2 converted into solid or liquid form stays that way over centuries. It will be very difficult to meet global temperature goals without carbon removal from the atmosphere with negative emission technologies (IPCC, 2018). Although the development of these technologies contains great uncertainties (EASAC, 2018) and they should not form the basis of a mitigation agenda (Anderson & Peters, Reference Anderson and Peters2016), they still play an important role in global response to climate change. Therefore, functional incentives for the development and implementation of negative emission technologies are urgently needed.
We suggest that an alternative framing of CO2 can increase political support for policies and technologies that otherwise remain unutilized despite their significant potential for addressing problems brought about by climate change. The main argument for an alternative framing of CO2 is that it transforms the perceived solutions to tackle climate change. Framing CO2 as a valuable resource or a source of innovation, for example, strengthens the idea that CO2 reduction is not only a challenge, but also an opportunity. Plurality in CO2 framings allows the development of a richer variety of climate strategies and provides support for industrial efforts to facilitate carbon removal from the atmosphere.
CO2 reduction has been considered a costly business, making it difficult to find global consensus on actions needed to tackle climate change (Sunstein, Reference Sunstein2007; Keohane & Victor, Reference Keohane and Victor2016). Alternative framings can encourage research and development activities that could reduce costs. As an example, a change in framing can enable the creation of practices for profitable utilization of CO2 instead of its costly storage. The possibility to make a profit from clever utilization of CO2 would probably reduce the reluctance of many actors to take part in the battle against climate change. In addition to opening new profit streams, alternative framings would provide political support for new innovative technologies and policies.
2. Current framing and its origins
One explaining factor behind the failed climate policy is that for too long scientists and politicians have framed CO2 unequivocally as a problem. Over the decades the one-sided definition of CO2 as a problem has become a doctrine that has been difficult to challenge even though it unnecessarily simplifies the complex operational environment of CO2 management. The resulting policies have delayed action and narrowed the perceived solution space.
In retrospect, it is understandable that during the late 1980s and early 1990s climate change was conceptualized as an emission problem. At the time, awareness of environmental problems had emerged as a reaction to environmental hazards, such as ozone layer depletion and acid rain (Kowalok, Reference Kowalok1993). The rationale in all reactions to these hazards followed the same logic: there needed to be a clear reason for the problem. It was logical that CO2 as a fundamental cause of climate change was understood and widely accepted as a problem. Likewise, it is logical that policy and technological responses to climate change ever since have focused on CO2 mitigation. Today the framing of CO2 as a problem is perceived to be normal to an extent that thinking differently requires a mental effort. We all are used to talking about CO2emissions per capita and air pollution caused by greenhouse gases – all profoundly negative things.
3. Alternative framings
It is possible to frame CO2 differently. An analytical take on framing helps to understand how social groups collectively value and give meanings to phenomena in particular contexts and situations (Goffman, Reference Goffman1974; Entman, Reference Entman1993). Shared frames are powerful mental constructs: they highlight some things as normal and appropriate and at the same time direct attention away from other things (Tversky & Kahneman, Reference Tversky and Kahneman1986; Benford & Snow, Reference Benford and Snow2000). On one hand, it is very difficult among people who share a frame to get support for an idea that contradicts the mental premises of the frame (Gamson, Reference Gamson1992). On the other hand, widely accepted frames may become institutionalized relatively easily (Schön & Rein, Reference Schön and Rein1994; Lenschow & Zito, Reference Lenschow and Zito1998).
Because different actor groups frame things differently, situations with multiple actors often turn into collective issue framing, which can mean anything from mediation to ‘struggles over the naming and framing of a policy situation’ (Schön & Rein, Reference Schön and Rein1994: 29). Issue framing can be used to push a different agenda (Jacoby, Reference Jacoby2000) and, in the context of CO2 management, it significantly affects the ways in which different stakeholders think and talk about CO2. When there is only one accepted frame, technological and socio-political path-dependencies begin to emerge which can lock in the entire operational environment.
4. Putting framing in practice
In the context of CO2 management, alternative framings of CO2 are particularly relevant for efforts to reduce CO2 after it has been emitted into the atmosphere. In this context, utilization of CO2 has much in common with the circular economy approach where different fractions of waste are seen as potential raw materials or by-products (Ellen MacArthur Foundation, 2017; Murray et al., Reference Murray, Skene and Haynes2017). The predominant framing of CO2 as a problem hampers the development of a circular economy with respect to carbon management because it limits the utilization opportunities of CO2.
First, the current framing hampers considering CO 2as a raw material. Mineralization technology enables converting CO2 into industrial side streams for new products (Brent et al., Reference Brent, Allen, Eichler, Petrie and Mann2011) and mineralization-based solutions for carbon capture and utilization (CCU) are currently at lab-scale (Levänen & Eloneva, Reference Levänen and Eloneva2017). The key difference between mineralization-based CCU and conventional geological carbon capture and storage (CCS) is that in mineralization the captured CO2 is an essential raw material for new products – not a substance that needs to be stored without utilization. For example, through mineralization CO2 can be combined with steelmaking slag so that the end-product is pure precipitated calcium carbonate (PCC), which is needed in numerous industrial processes, such as filler or coating material in the paper industry (Eloneva et al., Reference Eloneva, Said, Fogelholm and Zevenhoven2012). The use of this combination product reduces the need to mine virgin limestone, the traditional raw material for PCC. It has been estimated that in the future CO2 utilization could mitigate 700 Mt of CO2 per year (Leung et al., Reference Leung, Caramanna and Maroto-Valer2014).
Second, the current framing hampers considering CO 2as a source of innovation for new by-products. CO2 can also be used as a feedstock to produce renewable energy sources in bio-CCS systems (Rahman et al., Reference Rahman, Aziz, Saidur, Wan Abu Bakar, Putrajaya and Hassan2017). When combined innovatively with diverse catalysts, the captured CO2 can be converted into numerous types of biofuels, such as methanol, dimethyl ether, ethanol and methane. This would allow the total amount of utilized biofuels to be increased without increased production of crops that are currently used as raw material for biofuels – an issue that has been connected to various socio-economic and environmental problems (Phalan, Reference Phalan2009). Technologies allowing biofuel production from CO2 are currently at pilot-scale (Olah et al., Reference Olah, Goeppert and Surya Prakash2008, Reference Olah, Surya Prakash and Goeppert2011; Jadhav et al., Reference Jadhav, Vaidya, Bhanage and Joshi2014). Replacement of fossil fuels with biofuels significantly contributes to global energy transition toward renewable sources and improves long-term energy security as well. The economic potential of bio-CCS has been estimated to be in the range of 2–10 Gt CO2 storage per year in 2050 (Creutzig et al., Reference Creutzig, Ravindranath, Berndes, Bolwig, Bright, Cherubini, Chum, Corbera, Delucchi, Faaij, Fargione, Haberl, Health, Lucon, Plevin, Popp, Robledo-Abad, Rose, Smith, Stromman, Suh and Masera2015).
Examples of CO2 as a potential raw material or a source of innovation demonstrate the power of framing. The idea that the problem of CO2 can be solved by injecting it underground or beneath the sea is reflected for example in the European Union's (EU) CCS directive, which defines CCS as ‘environmentally safe capture and geological storage […] of CO2’ (Directive 2009/31/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council, article 10a). In practice, this framing means that the EU's Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) automatically compensates CO2 that is geologically stored but remains unclear on how emission reductions achieved through other promising methods, such as mineralization and bio-CCS, would be compensated (Levänen, Reference Levänen2015). The uncertainty is problematic for the developers, development funders and potential users of new applications, as it places different technologies in an unequal position (Kainiemi et al., Reference Kainiemi, Eloneva, Toikka, Levänen and Järvinen2015).
Conclusions
It is not problematic per se that CO2 is framed as a problem. The problem is rather that ‘CO2 as a problem’ is such a strong and exclusive frame that it narrows the opportunities arising from alternative framings, such as considering CO2 as a raw material or a source of innovation. Framing is always tightly connected to the prospects of policymaking. In the context of CO2 management, alternative framings can be utilized in the development of novel policy instruments aimed at reducing the total amount of CO2 in the atmosphere.
We have highlighted alternative framings that may help in the development of solutions that utilize CO2 already emitted. Implementation of such solutions can be efficiently supported with economic policy instruments, such as carbon tax or trade. It is critically important that one-sided framing of CO2 as a problem does not narrow the development of technologies and related policy instruments. Instead, in the management of end-of-life CO2 all utilization opportunities should be considered equally from the perspective of overall sustainability. In addition, policies need to move upstream in the product cycle to beginning-of-life product planning. In this, alternative framings of CO2 could turn out to be valuable as well. For example, extended producer responsibility for solid carbon could cover broadly the products of petrochemical, wood, and paper and pulp industries, which would incentivize these industries to lengthen the lifetime of their products.
We recognize that neither alternative framings of CO2 nor increased deployment of new forms of CCU will provide a quick fix for climate change. However, as we move toward carbon negative societies, the fraction of emitted CO2 that can be utilized in industries will need to increase continuously. The challenge is to increase the market demand for emitted CO2 by removing institutionalized barriers to its innovative utilization. It is also important to remember that CO2 is a raw material for numerous established industries, from beverage production to plastics and fuels. While we have introduced some ideas for alternative framings, other kinds of framings could result in different implications for CO2 management. We therefore encourage more research on different framings of CO2.
It matters how we think and talk about technologies, substances and materials. As our examples point out, framings underlying our expressions can translate into justifications for seemingly rational policies and legal definitions with significant unwanted impacts. In the long run, we need to learn to recycle all kinds of substances that the contemporary way of life generates, including CO2. Seeing emissions as a resource is a logical next step in thinking about the future of post-industrial societies and the development of a circular economy.
Social media summary
New article suggests alternative framing of carbon dioxide as a fruitful starting point for climate policy.
1. Introduction
Even though climate change increasingly threatens the wellbeing of humankind and this threat was recognized decades ago (IPCC, 1990), responses have remained weak (Rogelj et al., Reference Rogelj, den Elzen, Höhne, Fransen, Fekete, Winkler, Schaeffer, Sha, Riahi and Meinshausen2016). It seems more than obvious that current and past efforts to tackle climate change have been seriously insufficient. Given carbon dioxide's (CO2) role as the main greenhouse gas and the urgency of actions needed to meet the goals of the Paris agreement – most importantly staying well below 2°C increase in global average temperature – we need to profoundly rethink our approach to CO2 management. In this paper, we argue that taking different perspectives on CO2 is a fruitful starting point for such an effort.
In the battle against climate change, the first thing to accept is that carbon neutrality is no longer an ambitious enough goal. Carbon negativity is needed, i.e. ensuring that CO2 converted into solid or liquid form stays that way over centuries. It will be very difficult to meet global temperature goals without carbon removal from the atmosphere with negative emission technologies (IPCC, 2018). Although the development of these technologies contains great uncertainties (EASAC, 2018) and they should not form the basis of a mitigation agenda (Anderson & Peters, Reference Anderson and Peters2016), they still play an important role in global response to climate change. Therefore, functional incentives for the development and implementation of negative emission technologies are urgently needed.
We suggest that an alternative framing of CO2 can increase political support for policies and technologies that otherwise remain unutilized despite their significant potential for addressing problems brought about by climate change. The main argument for an alternative framing of CO2 is that it transforms the perceived solutions to tackle climate change. Framing CO2 as a valuable resource or a source of innovation, for example, strengthens the idea that CO2 reduction is not only a challenge, but also an opportunity. Plurality in CO2 framings allows the development of a richer variety of climate strategies and provides support for industrial efforts to facilitate carbon removal from the atmosphere.
CO2 reduction has been considered a costly business, making it difficult to find global consensus on actions needed to tackle climate change (Sunstein, Reference Sunstein2007; Keohane & Victor, Reference Keohane and Victor2016). Alternative framings can encourage research and development activities that could reduce costs. As an example, a change in framing can enable the creation of practices for profitable utilization of CO2 instead of its costly storage. The possibility to make a profit from clever utilization of CO2 would probably reduce the reluctance of many actors to take part in the battle against climate change. In addition to opening new profit streams, alternative framings would provide political support for new innovative technologies and policies.
2. Current framing and its origins
One explaining factor behind the failed climate policy is that for too long scientists and politicians have framed CO2 unequivocally as a problem. Over the decades the one-sided definition of CO2 as a problem has become a doctrine that has been difficult to challenge even though it unnecessarily simplifies the complex operational environment of CO2 management. The resulting policies have delayed action and narrowed the perceived solution space.
In retrospect, it is understandable that during the late 1980s and early 1990s climate change was conceptualized as an emission problem. At the time, awareness of environmental problems had emerged as a reaction to environmental hazards, such as ozone layer depletion and acid rain (Kowalok, Reference Kowalok1993). The rationale in all reactions to these hazards followed the same logic: there needed to be a clear reason for the problem. It was logical that CO2 as a fundamental cause of climate change was understood and widely accepted as a problem. Likewise, it is logical that policy and technological responses to climate change ever since have focused on CO2 mitigation. Today the framing of CO2 as a problem is perceived to be normal to an extent that thinking differently requires a mental effort. We all are used to talking about CO2emissions per capita and air pollution caused by greenhouse gases – all profoundly negative things.
3. Alternative framings
It is possible to frame CO2 differently. An analytical take on framing helps to understand how social groups collectively value and give meanings to phenomena in particular contexts and situations (Goffman, Reference Goffman1974; Entman, Reference Entman1993). Shared frames are powerful mental constructs: they highlight some things as normal and appropriate and at the same time direct attention away from other things (Tversky & Kahneman, Reference Tversky and Kahneman1986; Benford & Snow, Reference Benford and Snow2000). On one hand, it is very difficult among people who share a frame to get support for an idea that contradicts the mental premises of the frame (Gamson, Reference Gamson1992). On the other hand, widely accepted frames may become institutionalized relatively easily (Schön & Rein, Reference Schön and Rein1994; Lenschow & Zito, Reference Lenschow and Zito1998).
Because different actor groups frame things differently, situations with multiple actors often turn into collective issue framing, which can mean anything from mediation to ‘struggles over the naming and framing of a policy situation’ (Schön & Rein, Reference Schön and Rein1994: 29). Issue framing can be used to push a different agenda (Jacoby, Reference Jacoby2000) and, in the context of CO2 management, it significantly affects the ways in which different stakeholders think and talk about CO2. When there is only one accepted frame, technological and socio-political path-dependencies begin to emerge which can lock in the entire operational environment.
4. Putting framing in practice
In the context of CO2 management, alternative framings of CO2 are particularly relevant for efforts to reduce CO2 after it has been emitted into the atmosphere. In this context, utilization of CO2 has much in common with the circular economy approach where different fractions of waste are seen as potential raw materials or by-products (Ellen MacArthur Foundation, 2017; Murray et al., Reference Murray, Skene and Haynes2017). The predominant framing of CO2 as a problem hampers the development of a circular economy with respect to carbon management because it limits the utilization opportunities of CO2.
First, the current framing hampers considering CO 2as a raw material. Mineralization technology enables converting CO2 into industrial side streams for new products (Brent et al., Reference Brent, Allen, Eichler, Petrie and Mann2011) and mineralization-based solutions for carbon capture and utilization (CCU) are currently at lab-scale (Levänen & Eloneva, Reference Levänen and Eloneva2017). The key difference between mineralization-based CCU and conventional geological carbon capture and storage (CCS) is that in mineralization the captured CO2 is an essential raw material for new products – not a substance that needs to be stored without utilization. For example, through mineralization CO2 can be combined with steelmaking slag so that the end-product is pure precipitated calcium carbonate (PCC), which is needed in numerous industrial processes, such as filler or coating material in the paper industry (Eloneva et al., Reference Eloneva, Said, Fogelholm and Zevenhoven2012). The use of this combination product reduces the need to mine virgin limestone, the traditional raw material for PCC. It has been estimated that in the future CO2 utilization could mitigate 700 Mt of CO2 per year (Leung et al., Reference Leung, Caramanna and Maroto-Valer2014).
Second, the current framing hampers considering CO 2as a source of innovation for new by-products. CO2 can also be used as a feedstock to produce renewable energy sources in bio-CCS systems (Rahman et al., Reference Rahman, Aziz, Saidur, Wan Abu Bakar, Putrajaya and Hassan2017). When combined innovatively with diverse catalysts, the captured CO2 can be converted into numerous types of biofuels, such as methanol, dimethyl ether, ethanol and methane. This would allow the total amount of utilized biofuels to be increased without increased production of crops that are currently used as raw material for biofuels – an issue that has been connected to various socio-economic and environmental problems (Phalan, Reference Phalan2009). Technologies allowing biofuel production from CO2 are currently at pilot-scale (Olah et al., Reference Olah, Goeppert and Surya Prakash2008, Reference Olah, Surya Prakash and Goeppert2011; Jadhav et al., Reference Jadhav, Vaidya, Bhanage and Joshi2014). Replacement of fossil fuels with biofuels significantly contributes to global energy transition toward renewable sources and improves long-term energy security as well. The economic potential of bio-CCS has been estimated to be in the range of 2–10 Gt CO2 storage per year in 2050 (Creutzig et al., Reference Creutzig, Ravindranath, Berndes, Bolwig, Bright, Cherubini, Chum, Corbera, Delucchi, Faaij, Fargione, Haberl, Health, Lucon, Plevin, Popp, Robledo-Abad, Rose, Smith, Stromman, Suh and Masera2015).
Examples of CO2 as a potential raw material or a source of innovation demonstrate the power of framing. The idea that the problem of CO2 can be solved by injecting it underground or beneath the sea is reflected for example in the European Union's (EU) CCS directive, which defines CCS as ‘environmentally safe capture and geological storage […] of CO2’ (Directive 2009/31/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council, article 10a). In practice, this framing means that the EU's Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) automatically compensates CO2 that is geologically stored but remains unclear on how emission reductions achieved through other promising methods, such as mineralization and bio-CCS, would be compensated (Levänen, Reference Levänen2015). The uncertainty is problematic for the developers, development funders and potential users of new applications, as it places different technologies in an unequal position (Kainiemi et al., Reference Kainiemi, Eloneva, Toikka, Levänen and Järvinen2015).
Conclusions
It is not problematic per se that CO2 is framed as a problem. The problem is rather that ‘CO2 as a problem’ is such a strong and exclusive frame that it narrows the opportunities arising from alternative framings, such as considering CO2 as a raw material or a source of innovation. Framing is always tightly connected to the prospects of policymaking. In the context of CO2 management, alternative framings can be utilized in the development of novel policy instruments aimed at reducing the total amount of CO2 in the atmosphere.
We have highlighted alternative framings that may help in the development of solutions that utilize CO2 already emitted. Implementation of such solutions can be efficiently supported with economic policy instruments, such as carbon tax or trade. It is critically important that one-sided framing of CO2 as a problem does not narrow the development of technologies and related policy instruments. Instead, in the management of end-of-life CO2 all utilization opportunities should be considered equally from the perspective of overall sustainability. In addition, policies need to move upstream in the product cycle to beginning-of-life product planning. In this, alternative framings of CO2 could turn out to be valuable as well. For example, extended producer responsibility for solid carbon could cover broadly the products of petrochemical, wood, and paper and pulp industries, which would incentivize these industries to lengthen the lifetime of their products.
We recognize that neither alternative framings of CO2 nor increased deployment of new forms of CCU will provide a quick fix for climate change. However, as we move toward carbon negative societies, the fraction of emitted CO2 that can be utilized in industries will need to increase continuously. The challenge is to increase the market demand for emitted CO2 by removing institutionalized barriers to its innovative utilization. It is also important to remember that CO2 is a raw material for numerous established industries, from beverage production to plastics and fuels. While we have introduced some ideas for alternative framings, other kinds of framings could result in different implications for CO2 management. We therefore encourage more research on different framings of CO2.
It matters how we think and talk about technologies, substances and materials. As our examples point out, framings underlying our expressions can translate into justifications for seemingly rational policies and legal definitions with significant unwanted impacts. In the long run, we need to learn to recycle all kinds of substances that the contemporary way of life generates, including CO2. Seeing emissions as a resource is a logical next step in thinking about the future of post-industrial societies and the development of a circular economy.
Acknowledgements
The authors wish to thank the editor and anonymous reviewers for helpful comments.
Financial support
This research has received funding from the following projects: Decentralizing Finland's energy regime: The triggers and dynamics of transition (DEFEND), Academy of Finland project number 284972; Creative adaptation to wicked socio-environmental disruptions (WISE), Academy of Finland's Strategic Research Council project number 312623; University profiling (Profi), Academy of Finland project number AKA/4/02.04.10/2016.
Conflicts of interest
None.