https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10584-020-02921-0

Potentials and critiques of building a Southeast Asian interdisciplinary
knowledge community on critical geoengineering studies
Laurence L. Delina
Climatic Change (2020)Cite this article

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Abstract
Geoengineering has generally been a research province of the Global North.
Developing countries, especially climate-vulnerable regions such as
Southeast Asia, have made few contributions to a critical understanding of
geoengineering. To deliver more climate action, we need to amplify Global
South voices in this debate. This essay summarizes the deliberations of a
workshop that sought to build an inter- and multi-disciplinary knowledge
community on the critical study of geoengineering in Southeast Asia. Held
in Indonesia, this workshop involved discussions among 17 social science
researchers, climate modelers, environmental policy analysts, and civil
society actors from the region. On the basis of in-depth discussions,
research themes were developed to help guide future geoengineering research
in Southeast Asia. These themes included: biochar techniques for carbon
capture and storage; expansive modeling of regional impacts of
stratospheric aerosol injection, especially for transboundary water bodies;
national and regional governance implications of carbon dioxide removal and
solar radiation management; and critical social study of these
technologies. The workshop participants called for support for regional
research on geoengineering through new funding opportunities and increased
international collaboration.

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