http://www.iass-potsdam.de/en/content/solar-radiation-management-foresight-governance

Solar Radiation Management: Foresight for Governance
Date:
Thu, 08/27/2015 to Fri, 08/28/2015
“Solar Radiation Management: Foresight for Governance (SRM4G)” is a
3-workshop project running over the course of 2015 that will use foresight
methods to construct scenarios that investigate varying contexts and
contingencies surrounding “Global Responses to Climate Change in 2030”.
Against this background, it will explore the capacities of a range of
proposed governance mechanisms to provide oversight over the research and
development of SRM technologies under alternative environmental and
sociopolitical conditions.

In a future-oriented discourse in which governance designs are often
dependent on imaginaries of risk, foresight methods may inform and
strengthen critical conversations on how to explore the capacities of
prospective forms of SRM governance. The workshops will be carried out by a
core group of 10-12 researchers from multiple disciplines and practitioners
from policy and NGO backgrounds, as well as a revolving and additional set
of figures external to the CE research community to add wider perspective.

The objectives of the workshops are:

To construct coherent scenarios based on systemic analysis and structured
group communication;
To identify what the advantages and drawbacks of different governance
systems are in scenarios;
To make explicit the assumptions upon which alternative expectations and
preferences for specific governance systems are based;
To do so in a participatory manner that challenges and integrates the
assumptions and expertise of an interdisciplinary group of participants;
To explore foresight and scenarios as a future-oriented methodology, with
which to focus and structure priorities and worldviews on SRM risks and
governance.
In the first workshop (July 13-14), participants conducted a series of
methodological steps in order to prepare for the construction of detailed
scenarios. They first engaged in a “horizon scanning” activity to encourage
expansive thinking of a complex array of factors, conduct an analysis of
relevant factors, and assess factors to expose key uncertainties and
relevant trends. Then, they conducted an analysis designed to assess
consistency between key uncertainties derived in the first workshop, in
order to lay the cornerstones for the scenario construction.

In the second workshop (August 27-28), participants will first focus on
transforming abstract scenario frameworks into more concrete pictures and
histories of the future, utilising a backcasting technique to trace rough
chronologies of events from 2030 back to the present day. Next, they will
assess the opportunities and threats SRM governance would face in each
scenario. Finally, they will create governance mechanisms and pathways
tailored to each individual scenario (which may reference proposals from
the academic literature and initiatives at the international level).

In the third workshop (November 12-13, 2015), participants will be
presented with and discuss the developed scenarios of alternative futures
as well as the governance proposals, before assessing proposals against the
full set of scenarios developed using a SWOT analysis framework (Strengths,
Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats). Participants will attempt to find a
governance pathway that is robust and resilient against the range of
scenarios. In addition, all participants will engage in a discussion on
findings and implications.

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