https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/21550085.2026.2643139#abstract

*Authors: *Leonie N. Bossert & Clare Palmer

*11 March 2026*

*Abstract*
Negative effects of anthropogenic climate change are accelerating. The
threat climate change poses has prompted research into radical
technological responses, including forms of solar radiation management
(SRM). While there has been some consideration of the ethical challenges
SRM technologies present, to date, these have almost exclusively concerned
humans. Here, we take one leading form of SRM, stratospheric aerosol
injection (SAI), and examine the ethical questions its deployment might
present for wild animals. We map this terrain by investigating two
overarching ethical questions: a) whether deploying stratospheric aerosol
injection should be seen as in-principle wrong from animal ethics
perspectives, and b) if not, or where it is not, what ethicists need to
consider to morally evaluate SAI in the context of wild animals. To address
the second question, we explore existing research gaps regarding empirical
information on the effects of SAI on animals, the possible impacts of SAI
on animal welfare, and its potential implications for justice issues when
animals are included in theories of justice.

*Source: Taylor & Francis *

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