https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/european-journal-of-risk-regulation/article/patenting-the-sun-possible-exclusion-of-srm-technologies-from-patenting-and-risk-regulation/F254B8527E9D9E34B27392375ADE5697

*Authors: *Wenting Cheng

*12 December 2025*

*Abstract*
In an interview with Jonas Salk, the inventor of the first polio vaccine,
when asked whether he owned the patents for the vaccine, Salk replied with
a rhetorical question: “Could you patent the sun?” Decades later, patents
about the Sun indeed emerged as solar radiation modification (SRM)
technologies advanced. The current international legal system does not
preclude the patenting of SRM technologies, primarily on the basis of the
principle of technology neutrality in the Agreement on Trade-Related
Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS Agreement). Since SRM has
inherent dual effects – its potential benefits in helping reduce climate
risk coexist with significant potential risks, including environmental harm
and governance challenges. Risk regulation may require the exclusion of
patents for certain SRM technologies. This article examines the potential
grounds and current proposals to prohibit patents on certain SRM
technologies, and the challenges these proposals may face under the
principle of technology neutrality under the TRIPS Agreement. It then seeks
to overcome the challenges by proposing to incorporate ex ante risk
considerations into the patent system, which could be best implemented
through a sui generis regulatory framework for SRM regulation that includes
a prohibition on SRM patents.

*Source: Cambridge University Press *

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