# Exploring global climate intervention experiments: sociotechnical promises, innovation dynamics, and perceived co-impacts across 20 projects and pilots

**Authors:** Benjamin K. Sovacool, Chad M. Baum, Livia Fritz, Sean Low

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s11625-025-01696-6 · 2025-06-05

## TL;DR

This paper explores 20 climate intervention experiments to understand their promises, innovation dynamics, and potential impacts.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into the sociotechnical aspects of climate intervention projects through empirical analysis of 20 experiments.

## Key findings

- Actor coalitions and their promises vary significantly across different climate intervention experiments.
- Innovation dynamics in these experiments reflect a mix of engineering and ecosystem-based approaches.
- Perceived co-impacts highlight the complex interplay between technological deployment and environmental outcomes.

## Abstract

Using techniques commonly applied in participatory action research and ethnography, we examine 20 specific cases of experimentation for a selection of carbon removal and solar radiation modification interventions. These experiments include engineering-based approaches such as stratospheric aerosol injection, cloud brightening, carbon–neutral cement, biochar, direct air capture, and enhanced rock weathering alongside ecosystems-based approaches such as afforestation, seagrass restoration, and coral reef protection. Based on extensive original research of these 20 experimental projects—including 118 semi-structured research interviews and naturalistic site-based observation—we explore four questions. Firstly, what are the actor coalitions surrounding each experiment? Secondly, what promises and expectations do those actors generate? Thirdly, what innovation dynamics and styles are emergent and evident here? Finally, what perceived co-impacts are expected (by actors) to occur with widespread prospective deployment? Answering these questions in our empirical study offers insights into energy, climate, and climate intervention research, given that these experiments involve some of the most powerful and dominant actor coalitions, are supported by large amounts of climate finance investment, and will undoubtedly shape future deliberations over climate policy and technology deployment.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** carbon (MESH:D002244), biochar (MESH:C540010)

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12554822/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12554822