https://www.c2g2.net/project/arctic-circle-assembly/

 [image: C2G] <https://www.c2g2.net/>
Carnegie Climate Governance Initiative
[image: Carnegie Council logo] <https://www.carnegiecouncil.org/>
Arctic Circle Assembly10 October 2019, Reykjavík, Iceland

The Arctic plays a key role in the global climate system. This makes the
region an area of special interest for those considering the viability of
climate-altering technologies, including Solar Radiation Modification and
large-scale Carbon Dioxide Removal. In addition, others are considering
interventions to engineer or protect ice in order to slow or reverse ice
melt. But is there adequate governance in place to protect people and
ecosystems should these climate-altering technologies be tested or used?

C2G will host two sessions at the Arctic Circle Assembly
<http://www.arcticcircle.org/> in Reykjavík, Iceland, 10 October 2019. These
sessions are aimed at encouraging society-wide discussions about the risks
or potential benefits, as well as ethical and governance challenges, of the
possible use of climate-altering technologies in the Arctic.
Governing Emerging Climate Technologies in the Arctic


*Thursday, 10 October 2019, 17:15-18:15Kaldalón, Harpa Ground Level*
Learn more <https://www.c2g2.net/project/arctic-circle-assembly/#session1>
Saving the Arctic: Ethics, Values and the Next Generation


*Thursday, 10 October 2019, 18:30-19:30Kaldalón, Harpa Ground Level*
Learn more <https://www.c2g2.net/project/arctic-circle-assembly/#session2>
Governing Emerging Climate Technologies in the Arctic

*Thursday, 10 October 2019, 17:15-18:15, in the room Kaldalón, Harpa Ground
Level <https://goo.gl/maps/3g2Q1WfGb5Rh5gKz7>*

The Arctic is warming faster than any other region, with potentially
profound consequences for the entire planet. To counter or slow this trend,
some scientists are exploring emerging climate technologies, including
solar radiation modification (SRM), to lower temperatures by reflecting the
sun’s radiation back into space and/or to preserve or increase Arctic sea
ice.

These technologies could pose significant risks as well as potential
benefits. Thus far, however, government policymakers have been largely
unaware of research and potential experiments of these emerging climate
technologies in the Arctic. Indigenous groups often say they have not been
adequately consulted, and fear risks to their health, ecosystems, and way
of life. Existing governance for these technologies is spotty and not well
coordinated at the international level.

This session will explore which emerging climate technologies researchers
are considering with respect to the Arctic, what their effective governance
might include, and their implications for the region and, indeed, the world
at large.
 Speakers
Sir David King
Jason Box
Shawna Larson
Pétur Halldórsson
Cynthia Scharf
Saving the Arctic: Ethics, Values and the Next Generation

*Thursday, 10 October 2019, 18:30-19:30, in the room Kaldalón, Harpa Ground
Level <https://goo.gl/maps/3g2Q1WfGb5Rh5gKz7>*

Most scientists agree that what happens in the Arctic affects the entire
world, as the integrity of the Arctic plays a crucial role in stabilizing
the global climate system. With the Arctic heating up twice as fast as
other regions on the planet, some scientists are now researching additional
efforts to preserve or ‘refreeze’ Arctic sea ice, or to lower temperatures
by reflecting the sun’s radiation back into space.

Some see this as a moral imperative for averting catastrophic climate
impacts, particularly for future generations. But do the ends justify the
means? In seeking to preserve the Arctic with emerging climate
technologies, such as injecting reflective aerosol into the stratosphere,
brightening marine clouds, or making parts of the Earth’s surface brighter
to reflect solar radiation, would the world be opening a Pandora’s Box that
could lead to other risks – both known and unknown – for future generations?

What role should ethics and values, both religious and secular, play in
this debate? How might this inform governance of these technologies? What
do young people, including indigenous youth who will live with the
consequences of these decisions, know or think about this dilemma?
 Speakers
Ashley Komangaapik Rose Cummings
Maria Krabbe Hammershøy
Ilona Mettiainen
Sir David King
Cynthia Scharf

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