http://scienceblogs.com/stoat/2014/02/13/who-should-pay-for-solar-geoengineering-liability/

A question raised by the normally sensible Geoengineering Politics. They
come to an odd conclusion:any damages caused by SRM [Solar Radiation
Management, I believe - W] would essentially be the negative side effects
of a response measure intended to remediate harms caused by excessive
fossil fuel use, and fossil fuel companies have been the primary direct
beneficiaries of this activity, it stands to reason that they should be the
ones to pay for its cleanupand offer an analogy:This is precisely how the
international oil spill liability regime works-the International Oil
Pollution Compensation (IOPC) Funds, financed exclusively by oil companies,
have paid out more than $700 million in compensation since 1978Now there is
a problem with this analogy, or rather two. The first and most obvious is
that oil spills are caused directly by the oil companies, and dealing with
them is a cost of their operation (or they could tighten up their
procedures and spill less, which would also cost, but differently). You
could argue that paying for SRM is analogous to paying for oil spills, but
paying for getting it wrong is stretching things a bit. If some (company,
or govt) puts up mirror-satellites to reduce incoming solar, and
accidentally fries Australia, is that really the fault of those who put the
CO2 in the atmosphere? This is perhaps part of the fun that things like
geoengineering will inevitably lead to. After all, GW will have benefits as
well as costs, so sorting out whether those who would have benefited are
allowed to sue those who prevented that benefit would be fun.The second
problem is that spilling fuel is a consequence of extracting or
transporting oil, but not a necessary consequence. Thus its reasonable to
expect the companies to minimise it, and to fine (or otherwise force them
to pay up to clear up the mess) if they do spill. Whereas emitting CO2
(most fossil fuel is inevitably going to get burned at some point in its
use cycle) is essentially a necessary consequence of extracting and selling
fuels.I'm also dubious about the assertion that in regard to excessive
fossil fuel use, ... fossil fuel companies have been the primary direct
beneficiaries of this activity. As I said before, I think the primary
beneficiary has been the consumer of the fossil fuels, not the companies.

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