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Options and Proposals for the International Governance of Geoengineering

Publication
Citation

Bodle, Ralph; Sebastian Oberthür; Lena Donat et al. 2014: Options and Proposals for the International Governance of Geoengineering. Ecologic Institute, Dessau-Roßlau.

Based on a comprehensive analysis of the existing regulatory framework and its gaps, the authors of Ecologic Institute identify general options and specific recommended actions for the effective governance of geoengineering. A key consideration is that the recommendations can be implemented in practice.

First, the study explores whether and to what extent it is useful and feasible to have a single definition of geoengineering for governance purposes. It then analyses the existing governance of geoengineering in international law, with a brief overview of EU and German law. On this basis, it develops specific regulatory options and proposals. We analyse why governance of geoengineering should be pursued and develop specific proposals how such governance should be designed.

  • The study first makes explicit the objectives and functions that governance of geoenginering is to fulfil. The geoengineering debate for the most part has not addressed this issue.
  • Second, it derives core elements of appropriate governance design from these objectives and criteria.
  • Third, we assess which geoengineering techniques require international governance on the basis of the objectives and criteria.
  • Fourth, we identify governance gaps where the existing international framework does not correspond to our proposed core governance elements.
  • Fifth, we make proposals to fill the governance gaps.
Geoengineering as a potential option for climate policy is gaining attention at the policy interface.
Language
English
Authorship
Lena Donat, LLM
Gesa Homann LLM
Elizabeth Tedsen JD
Funding
Published in
Climate Change 14/2014
Published by
Year
Dimension
215 pp.
ISSN
1862-4359
Table of contents
Keywords
international environmental law, Governance, Geoengineering, climate engineering, research, Solar Radiation Management, SRM, Carbon Dioxide Removal, CDR, climate, Biodiversity, UNFCCC, CBD, legal regulations, international environmental law
global
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Source URL: https://www.ecologic.eu/11052