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https://www.degrees.ngo/degrees-at-un-science-summit/

*Degrees’ Inés Camilloni and Andy Parker discuss risk-risk framing and SRM
research at UN science summit*

   - *October 10, 2023*

>From left to right, Dr Vibha Dhawan (TERI), Clara Blotto (SRMYW), Janos
Pasztor (C2G), Prof. Inés Camilloni (Degrees), Andy Parker (Degrees) and Dr
Shuchi Talati (DSG) during UN Science Summit session in New York, USA.
Photo Credit: the Degrees Initiative.

How can we make well-informed decisions about solar radiation modification
(SRM)? Two representatives of Degrees, CEO Andy Parker and Degrees-funded
climate scientist Prof. Inés Camilloni were part of a high-level panel that
addressed this question during a special Science Summit session in New York
on 26 September 2023, in advance of the UN General Assembly.

The session, co-organised by the Carnegie Climate Governance Initiative (C2G
<https://www.c2g2.net/>), the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO <https://www.unesco.org/en>), The Energy and
Resources Institute (TERI <https://www.teriin.org/>) and Degrees, provided
insights into the key knowledge and governance gaps around making
well-informed decisions on SRM and how those gaps might be addressed.

UNESCO Assistant Director-General for the Social and Human Sciences,
Gabriela Ramos, opened the session by outlining the ethical questions
surrounding SRM technologies. She noted that “there is also a lack of
research in the Global South and there is also a lack of governance on this
matter [SRM]” and stressed that “the debate needs to be global and include
all the countries in the Global South in particular.”
“As an IPCC author of the 1.5 °C report, SRM was one of the issues that was
discussed in the report. And I realised that nobody from the Global South
was really involved in the discussion. It was a Global North discussion,
among scientists from the North. So, I decided that we should produce more
information from our region to be part of this conversation. That’s why I
am here.”
Prof. Inés Camilloni

Prof. Camilloni and Parker delivered a keynote presentation on SRM
knowledge gaps and the risk-risk framing
<https://www.c2g2.net/wp-content/uploads/202203-C2G-RR-Full.pdf>. Briefly
stated, this framing suggests that the impacts of SRM can only meaningfully
be evaluated in comparison to the risks of a warmed world.

They were followed by Dr Shuchi Talati, founder of the Alliance for Just
Deliberation on Solar Geoengineering <https://sgdeliberation.org/>, who
gave a presentation on public engagement in solar geoengineering.

The panel discussion was moderated by Executive Director of C2G, Janos
Pasztor, and included Prof. Camilloni alongside a range of high-level
stakeholders from across different sectors and regions.

Discussions evolved around the ethical dilemmas posed by implementing or
rejecting SRM, the role of private actors and the importance of regulation,
as well as the need for an inclusive and global conversation about the
risks from SRM and climate change.

Panellists outlined the key considerations for making informed decisions
about SRM. Their conversations generally underlined the need for further
SRM research and broader stakeholder engagement, particularly in the Global
South, to generate the necessary information to enable inclusive and
informed decision-making on this subject.
“The risk-risk framing doesn’t tell you whether or not to use SRM and it
can’t be the last word on the topic. It is the starting point for any
serious analysis of SRM."
Andy Parker
*Watch the event recording here*
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j7FCXt2MmeQ>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j7FCXt2MmeQ

*Source: The Degrees Initiative*


Twitter <https://twitter.com/DegreesNGO> Linkedin
<https://www.linkedin.com/company/degrees-initiative/> Youtub
<https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz8Hl9U802HUXel55Bt00Mw>

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