https://www.rand.org/pubs/perspectives/PEA1133-1.html

*Climate Control*
International Legal Mechanisms for Managing the Geopolitical Risks of
Geoengineering
*Michelle Grisé, Emmi Yonekura, Jonathan S. Blake, David DeSmet, Anusree
Garg, Benjamin Lee Preston*

The prospect of using geoengineering to address the accelerating effects of
climate change is becoming more likely, and many of the potential
technologies have negative externalities on the global to regional scale.
In this Perspective, the authors review the state of different
geoengineering technologies, highlighting differences in technological
development stage, price, time scales, and potential secondary effects.
They discuss the geopolitical risks that may be introduced by
geoengineering implementation. Given the many serious risks that
geoengineering poses, they conclude by examining whether existing
international governance mechanisms manage the geopolitical risks
associated with geoengineering.

This Perspective draws on a review of the relevant technical, international
relations, and international law literature, as well as a
scenario-development workshop in which 24 academic research experts on
climate policy, international relations, and international law considered
the geopolitical risks of geoengineering and the role of international
legal mechanisms in the management of these geopolitical risks. The
workshop was conducted virtually in two three-hour sessions over two days.
This Perspective and the recommendations contained herein should be of
interest to decision makers and policymakers in the area of climate risk
management.

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