https://legal-planet.org/2019/10/03/sixth-international-geoengineering-governance-summer-school-2019/

Sixth International Geoengineering Governance Summer School, 2019A brief
report from a recent Emmett-convened event

As the severity of climate change risks and the inability of current
efforts to adequately limit risks become clear, geoengineering technologies
– active large-scale environmental interventions to reduce disruptions
caused by elevated greenhouse gases – are increasingly receiving attention
and generating controversy. These proposals would either remove and
sequester atmospheric carbon dioxide
<https://legal-planet.org/2018/10/01/a-major-challenge-for-avoiding-climate-change-hides-in-plain-sight/>
 or modify the Earth’s radiation balance, such as increasing the planet’s
reflectivity, through “solar geoengineering.
<https://legal-planet.org/2018/10/15/another-possible-means-to-keep-global-warming-within-1-5-degrees-celsius/>
”

Some of these technological responses appear to offer substantial
risk-reduction opportunities. They may also present serious new risks, and
certainly present novel and potentially severe governance challenges. It is
thus essential to research these technologies to better understand how they
might work, how well they might achieve desired objectives, and what
environmental risks and social impacts they might present. It is also
essential to start discussions — among governments, relevant experts, civil
society groups, and concerned citizens — about the specific nature of
political and governance challenges these technologies present, and how
these might be mitigated, now and in the future. Yet while these
discussions are important, they are also challenging  due to the multiple
scientific, social, and political areas they implicate, the depth of
uncertainty, and the intensity of conflict. The global scale of
geoengineering’s effects and the multiple values implicated call for new
and diverse voices — particularly from developing countries — to join the
scientific and policy debates. Yet entering such an uncertain and contested
space can be daunting.
[image: (Most) Participants of the Sixth International Geoengineering
Governance Summer School, 2019]
<https://legal-planet.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/P8091804.jpg>

(Most) participants and instructors of the Sixth International
Geoengineering Governance Summer School, 2019

To help advance these conversations, in August the UCLA Law School’s Emmett
Institute on Climate Change and the Environment convened the Sixth
International Geoengineering Governance Summer School
<https://law.ucla.edu/centers/environmental-law/emmett-institute-on-climate-change-and-the-environment/events/2019-climate-engineering-conference/>
in
Banff, Alberta, Canada, with support from a generous grant by the Open
Philanthropy Project. Organized and directed by Emmett Institute faculty
co-director Ted Parson and co-sponsored by the Emmett Institute and four
partner organizations,* the Summer School brought together sixty
international (from sixteen countries!) leading experts, advanced students,
early-career researchers, and professionals for five days of intensive,
collaborative exploration of the societal, political, governance, and
ethical aspects of geoengineering.

The Summer School focused on the governance opportunities and challenges
posed by geoengineering, related both near-term to research, development,
and capacity-building, as well as longer-term and more speculatively to
potential deployment. A particularly salient issue was how these
interventions might interact with the primary climate responses of
emissions cuts and adaptation.

The program followed a novel two-part structure. It opened with two days of
intensive instructor-led briefings and panels, which (together with an
extensive advance reading list) aimed to provide essential basic
information to let all participants, whatever their field of expertise and
career stage, to be informed and confident participants in discussions.
Briefings covered introductions to scientific and technological issues
presented by carbon dioxide removal and solar geoengineering; governance
foundations and proposals; interactions between geoengineering and other
key elements of climate-change response such as emissions cutting and
adaptation; current developments and controversies; and issues related to
knowledge and uncertainty — i.e., what do, or can, we know about these
as-yet undeveloped technologies, how do we know it, and how can we learn
more?

Following these opening briefing sessions, the remaining three days of the
Summer School comprised two parallel tracks of collaborative work. In the
first track, any participant was invited to propose a project for a group
to undertake, via a statement posted online and a short oral “pitch”
presentation to the group. After brief clarifying discussion of the
proposals, participants self-selected into workgroups and projects on which
they wanted to focus. This track thus involved no central control by
organizers, but rather was entirely driven by participants’ interests and
choices. In selecting projects, participants were urged to consider a few
explicit criteria: that the projects address some interesting and important
issues related to governance of geoengineering; that they not duplicate
existing work; and that they offer the prospect of meaningful progress in
the limited time available. Otherwise, there was no central control. In
particular, the form and intended output of projects was completely
unconstrained, explicitly including starting collaborative research
projects, drafting op-eds or other non-specialist publications, developing
proposed contributions to policy or governance, crafting instructional
material, or creating a story or other work of art on the theme of
geoengineering and its governance. Eight workgroups formed, each of which
completed substantial interim work products by the end of the Summer
School, including:

   - a draft paper on the meaning of and requirements for legitimacy in
   international governance of geoengineering;
   - a draft paper on how the governance needs of research on solar
   geoengineering — in particular outdoor experiments that involve actively
   perturbing environmental conditions — vary with the spatial and time scale
   of the experiment;
   - a draft paper exploring the neglected area of potential interactions
   between climate change adaptation and carbon dioxide removal;
   - an op-ed on the potential implications of geoengineering technologies
   for geopolitics and international security;
   - a draft paper on the ambiguous and contradictory ways in which the
   concepts of “nature” and “natural” are used in discussions of
   geoengineering (and more broadly) — including a mischievous Twitter bot
   that tweets randomly selected sentiments and images about “nature”
   <https://twitter.com/naturebot2>;
   - an online resource to support teaching about geoengineering in
   college-level courses;
   - a strategic plan and set of briefing notes to introduce geoengineering
   to senior national-level government officials and identify potential
   near-term issues, decisions, and controversies; and
   - a draft terms-of-reference and business plan for a new nongovernmental
   organization that would support and manage research on solar geoengineering.

The second track of collaborative work was a scenario exercise, in which
assigned groups of participants dealt with scenarios of potential events
related to future deployment of geoengineering and intended to generate
acute — yet plausible — challenges to international policy and governance.
Four scenarios each presented a distinct challenge, all set against
background conditions in the year 2040, in which international climate
policy has achieved moderate progress, roughly in line with present Paris
commitments, but climate change and impacts are mounting rapidly. In each
scenario, the geoengineering-related challenge is driven by a different set
of political actors. In two of them, the actors presenting the challenge
are nation-states: a group of middle powers in the first scenario, and a
group of highly vulnerable middle and low-income countries in the second.
The other two scenarios are driven by non-state actors: a group of
multinational firms in one case (combining former oil majors and large
technology firms), and a widespread, loosely coordinated grassroots
movement in the other.

For all scenarios, two groups were tasked with developing a proposed
governance response to address the challenge. Each group then received a
critique and challenge to their proposed governance solution, prepared by
the other group working with the same scenario. Finally, the two groups on
each scenario collaborated to identify the most promising governance
response they could generate, by combining and amending elements of both
their proposals, and to identify the most serious contingencies and
uncertainties they judged likely to influence their joint response’s
effectiveness.

There are multiple published outputs in preparation based on work conducted
in the summer school in each of these two tracks. From the first track, the
eight workgroups are all developing their outputs to publish and
disseminate in a wide variety of scholarly, popular, and other outlets,
each in line with the character and aims of the work. Organizers of the
summer school are preparing reports, which will outline the innovative
process model and aims of the Summer School and synthesize key issues and
insights from across the work of the eight workgroups. For the scenario
exercise, organizers and participants are preparing a collection of reports
that will summarize the overall context and aims of the exercise, the
substantive details and groups’ governance responses to the four scenarios,
and resultant insights arising from critical comparison across all
scenarios and responses. Further discussions and insights arising from the
Summer School will be reported here on Legal Planet and also as one or more
Pritzker Briefs published by the Emmett Institute.

** In addition to the Emmett Institute, co-sponsoring partner organizations
for the Summer School included the Forum for Climate Engineering Assessment
<http://ceassessment.org/>, the Solar Radiation Management Governance
Initiative <http://www.srmgi.org/>, Harvard’s Solar Geoengineering Research
Program <https://geoengineering.environment.harvard.edu/>, and the Carnegie
Climate Governance Initiative <https://www.c2g2.net/>. The Emmett
Institute’s project on geoengineering governance is sponsored by a grant
from the Open Philanthropy Project <https://www.openphilanthropy.org/>.*

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