Key point : Aladdin argued that IP law is a de facto form of governance
when there is no other meaningful legal regime, as is the case for
geoengineering

http://gcrinstitute.org/aladdin-diakun-gives-public-lecture-on-geoengineering-and-ip-law/

On Thursday 16 May, GCRI hosted an online lecture by Aladdin Diakunentitled
‘Towards the Effective Governance of Geoengineering: What Role for
Intellectual Property?’ Aladdin is an MA Candidate at the Balsillie School
of International Affairs who is researching how IP law can serve as a form
of de facto governance of geoengineering.The UK Royal Society defines
geoengineering as “the deliberate large-scale manipulation of the planetary
environment to counteract anthropogenic climate change.” With the
atmospheric concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere recently having reached
400ppm—higher than any point in at least 800,000 years—and international
climate change governance having shown scant progress, geoengineering is
increasingly discussed as a climate change strategy. One branch of
geoengineering is carbon dioxide removal (CDR), which includes technologies
like carbon capture and storage, afforestation, and ocean fertilization,
the latter of which was controversially tested when an American
entrepreneur dumped 100 tons of iron sulphate into the coastal waters of
British Columbia in 2012. The other branch of geoengineering is solar
radiation management (SRM), which, rather than removing CO2 from the
atmosphere, lowers the planet’s temperature by reflecting sunlight via
techniques like cloud seeding, landscape modification (e.g. painting all
roofs white), and stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI).These forms of
geoengineering could help combat the effects of climate change, but they
also pose a global catastrophic risk (GCR). For example, pretend that the
United States decides to artificially lower Earth’s temperature using SAI.
As described in a recent paper by Seth Baum, Tim Maher, and Jacob
Haqq-Misra, if a pandemic, nuclear war, or some other global catastrophe
interferes with our ability to continue using SAI, then global temperatures
would rapidly increase to their natural levels, potentially resulting in a
second global catastrophe. SAI also neglects other negative effects of
runaway greenhouse gas emissions, like ocean acidification.While no
countries propose that we deploy the more exotic forms of geoengineering
right now, there is a growing call to research geoengineering and develop
international norms so that we make smart decisions down the road.So what
do patents have to do with all of this?Many people’s experience with
patents primarily consists of watching Samsung and Apple trade punches in
court over whether Apple invented rounded black rectangles or square app
icons. But under the radar, geoengineering patents are already flying off
the shelves, most of which are for carbon capture and storage (CCS) and
direct sequestration technologies, although there are also patents for
ocean fertilization, stratospheric aerosol injection, and other
geoengineering technologies.Aladdin argued that IP law is a de facto form
of governance when there is no other meaningful legal regime, as is the
case for geoengineering [1]. Currently, geoengineering patents are too
broad (e.g. issued for a geoengineering technique rather than a very
specific technology) and could quickly become gobbled up by a small group
of private actors, which weakens innovation. And not all geoengineering
research is made public, meaning that private entities could be releasing
positive geoengineering research while withholding negative research.
However, a sui generis patent system, meaning one that is customized for
the unique concerns of geoengineering, could provide a flexible framework
to oversee patents, spur innovation, consider international interests, and
make sure that research is transparent and publicly available. Aladdin
pointed out that while such reform is necessary, it is far from sufficient
to address all of the complex challenges posed by geoengineering
activities.During the online lecture, we also discussed the analogues
between geoengineering and other GCRs, such as pandemics. For example,
research into bioengineering and pharmaceuticals is relatively unregulated,
and negative research findings can be concealed or falsified, which may
weaken our ability to combat a pandemic. One participant commented that a
possible model to oversee research comes from ‘Cambia,’ a nonprofit based
in Australia that allows private researchers to share information without
releasing it to the public, which protects the integrity of the patent
process. Another overarching issue we discussed was social justice: the
costs and benefits of GCRs are uneven, and society should consider the
impact our actions have on more vulnerable communities.Here is the full
abstract of the talk:This presentation makes the case that, owing to the
prominence of private sector activity, the absence of a comprehensive
regulatory framework, and the theoretical importance of informal governance
mechanisms, IP regimes are a crucial yet understudied component in the
emerging architecture of geoengineering governance. It further argues that,
given geoengineering’s complex challenges, IP reform is a necessary but
insufficient condition for effective governance innovation. In particular,
path dependence implies that if we wish to address the significant
normative and socio-economic challenges associated with geoengineering, we
must quickly move to address IP’s de facto governance of the field.The
presentation was hosted online via Skype, with the presentation hosted on
Prezi. There were six people in the audience, including Catherine Rhodes, a
Research Fellow in Science Ethics at the University of Manchester,
and Simon Driscoll, a geoengineering expert in the PhD program at Oxford’s
Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics sub-department. Other attendees
were GCRI’s Kaitlin Buter, Mark P. Fusco, Tony Barrett, Grant Wilson, and
Seth Baum.[1] Some international instruments, like the London Convention
and Protocol and the Convention on Biological Diversity, touch on
geoengineering. See Bracmort, K., & Lattanzio, R. (2013). ‘Geoengineering:
Governance and Technology Policy,’ Conressional Research Service.
www.fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/R41371.pdf

Tagged with Aladdin Diakun, geoengineering, intellectual property

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