https://cspo.org/research/governance-of-geoengineering-research/project-report/

Exploring Democratic Governance of Solar Geoengineering Research
<https://cspo.org/research/governance-of-geoengineering-research/>

PROGRAM AREAS –
Project Summary & Report

With SRM research advancing to the field-research phase, CSPO and its
partners used participatory technology assessment (pTA), a method of
determining public values and opinions to help inform up-stream
decision-making, as an instrument to elicit views on the governance of SRM
research. After an iterative design process with both technical experts and
members of the lay public, CSPO hosted two day-long public deliberations on
the governance of SRM research in Boston and Phoenix in September 2018.

During the deliberations, 171 diverse citizens discussed SRM research
directions, prospective funders, and governance parameters. The
deliberations demonstrate that informed lay citizens can productively
discuss SRM research governance, acquiring both new knowledge and, through
collective reasoning, new perspectives on the subject. Our results offer
insights into some concrete constraints and conditions under which members
of the public could support SRM research.

Three broad areas of concern emerged from these deliberations:

   1. *Naturalness is preferred.* Citizens strongly prefer research on SRM
   approaches that seem to them more “natural” over those that add new
   chemicals and materials to the atmosphere. The collective intuition here is
   a concern for unintended environmental risks created by the introduction of
   unnatural substances into the climate system. This appears to be a robustly
   held sentiment among our participants, and pushes against current expert
   assumptions. Stratospheric aerosol injection, which is probably the
   approach most widely discussed by scientists, was favored by less than 20%
   of our deliberative groups.
   2. *Transparency is required.* The governance principle most strongly
   articulated and shared in our forums is transparency, although the meaning
   of the term is not sharply delineated. Yet the sentiment being expressed by
   our citizens seems quite clear: they expect that SRM research be sponsored
   by trusted institutions, conducted openly and in a publicly accountable
   manner, and protected from capture by biased or interested parties.
   3. *Who shall govern?* That SRM research does indeed require good
   governance was also a shared sensibility among our participants, as we have
   emphasized. But when it comes to institutional choices about where funding,
   governance responsibilities, and decision making should be located,
   disagreement emerges. This disagreement may in part reflect the different
   political environments of our forum locations, Phoenix and Boston. It may
   also reflect a lack of strong criteria for choosing among the options that
   we presented in the background material. Yet results do reflect some
   general sense that “independent” and “self-governing” approaches to
   governance are preferred to those of formal government bodies at either the
   national or local level. Given the lack of consensus on these matters, we
   want to flag these questions of institutional choice as an important area
   for future research on public concerns and how best to meet them.

The overall message for SRM researchers and stakeholders was clear: keep
things small; govern transparently, flexibly, and inclusively; learn from
past mistakes and be prepared to reverse course. Proceed—but with caution.
Explore public preferences in the project final report.
<https://cspo.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/SRM_book_EPUB.pdf>



Suggested report citation:

Kaplan, Leah, John Nelson, David Tomblin, Mahmud Farooque, Jason Lloyd,
Mark Neff, Bjørn Bedsted, and Dan Sarewitz. “Cooling a Warming Planet?
Public Forums on Climate Intervention Research.” Washington, DC: ASU
Consortium for Science, Policy & Outcomes (November 2019).

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