https://legal-planet.org/2020/05/28/nonstate-actors-could-help-govern-solar-geoengineering/

ACADEMIACLIMATE CHANGEGEOENGINEERING
Nonstate Actors Could Help Govern Solar Geoengineering
Governments are not acting; maybe others could — and should
Although reductions in greenhouse gas emissions continue to be inadequate
to prevent dangerous climate change, solar geoengineering appears able to
substantially reduce climate risks. More research, including outdoor
experiments, is needed to reduce critical uncertainties. This could pose
some environmental risks and — arguably more importantly — will raise
diverse social concerns, such as research “sliding” into undue deployment.
For these reasons, some additional governance of solar geoengineering may
be warranted. For example, the seminal 2009 report on geoengineering from
the UK’s Royal Society concluded:


Royal Society geoengineering report
There are serious and complex governance issues which need to be resolved
if geoengineering is ever to become an acceptable method for moderating
climate change….

The greatest challenges to the successful deployment of geoengineering may
be the social, ethical, legal and political issues associated with
governance, rather than scientific and technical issues…

The governance challenges posed by geoengineering should be explored in
more detail by an international body such as the UN Commission for
Sustainable Development, and processes established for the development of
policy mechanisms to resolve them.

The 2015 report from the US National Academies makes similar points.

But despite such authoritative calls over more than a decade, governments
are still not taking significant action. The UK comes closest to having an
actual policy, which merely says “The Government is not deploying SRM [i.e.
solar geoengineering], and has no plans to do so. The UK Government has
commissioned research into the effects of SRM on climate, and monitors
research in this area.” For its part, the US recently joined the list of
countries that dedicate modest funds to geoengineering research. But a few
million dollars in support is a far cry from comprehensive governance.
Internationally, Switzerland tried to get the UN Environment Programme to
take up the issue but failed to get sufficient support. There just does not
seem to be the political incentive for policy-makers to take on such a
controversial issue. Regardless, the resulting lack of dedicated governance
is used as grounds to oppose solar geoengineering research, particularly
outdoor experiments. For this and other reasons, research has proceeded
only slowly.

In a paper recently published in Climatic Change, my Emmett Institute
colleague Ted Parson and I explore nonstate actors’ potential to contribute
to the governance of solar geoengineering research. Nonstate governance
does have some advantages: It can respond more nimbly to dynamic conditions
and emerging knowledge, and nonstate actors often can move on controversial
matters while national governments are administratively, politically, or
legally constrained. In fact, diverse forms of nonstate governance have
been effective, particularly in contested and rapidly changing issue areas.
Subsequent state oversight can sometimes build on the experience and
knowledge generated by nonstate governance.

Although a handful of scholars have suggested that nonstate actors could or
should contribute to solar geoengineering governance, we are the first to
assess nonstate governance systems in potentially fulfilling the additional
near-term needs associated with research. We consider six types of nonstate
actors routinely involved in research:

the researchers themselves,
the universities or other institutions that employ them,
funders,
academic publishers,
professional societies, and
advocacy nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), both environmental and other.
We assess the ability of each type to contribute based on the nonstate
actors’ capacity, knowledge, and interests.

We conclude that suitably configured collaborations of nonstate actors can
effectively and legitimately meet the additional governance needs of
near-term solar geoengineering research. First, enabling research requires
providing financial support and other necessary resources, coupled with
processes to define strategic priorities and to assure high scientific
quality. This is routinely and effectively done by nonstate actors in many
areas, with roles filled by funders, publishers, and others. Second,
control concerns limiting potential harms and risks from research. In view
of the resources and authority they deploy, funders and research
institutions could play a leading role in defining and implementing norms
and procedures. And third, legitimation of the enterprise constitutes a
broad social and political attribution of value and responsibility to a
wide endeavor and individual projects within it. It emerges somewhat
organically from other governance processes: transparent procedures of
defining priorities and evaluating scientific quality, assessment of risks,
public engagement on potential impacts and societal significance, and more.

It is important to emphasize what we do and do not say in this paper. For
one thing, we do not specify the substantive content of governance rules
and norms, because defining these will be a task for whatever system is
adopted. We address the governance of research, not of potential future
deployment. We recognize nonstate governance’s limitations: It might be
deemed illegitimate. It may be relatively ineffective in preventing
violations. And some critics may suggest that nonstate governance is more
vulnerable than state alternatives to capture.

Nonstate governance might actually be preferable to its state counterpart
at this stage, even if states could get involved. Nonstate actors can
sometimes draw on superior information about and relations with targets of
governance, innovate more, respond more rapidly to changes in knowledge or
capacity, engage more readily in contested areas, and operate more flexibly
across jurisdictions. For solar geoengineering in particular, early formal
state action — even in research governance — may risk prematurely locking
in early decisions or unhelpfully entangling the issue with other
contentious international debates. With the matter uncertain and rapidly
developing, a nonstate system could address immediate concerns, help
explore key uncertainties, and delay development of a more legalized regime
while some of these early uncertainties are explored and better
characterized.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to geoengineering+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/geoengineering/CAJ3C-06DGFwdpzKeaPyy9HWoiXWF_1s7GeZyNj-fz1fkdkx%2BYQ%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to