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No Governance Is Governance: Mapping Solar Geoengineering Discussions in Latin America & the Caribbean

Socio-political
Argentina | Luna
Ethics, Governance

Summary

Researchers analysed reactions to an unauthorised 2023 solar geoengineering deployment in Mexico, finding it exposed a governance gap in Latin America and the Caribbean. Media and policy responses often failed to distinguish research from non-research SRM “experiments”, undermining legitimate science and prompting a proposed ban in Mexico. The authors argue the region has an opportunity to develop its own SRM governance by building research capacity and inclusive policy spaces.

Abstract

Global discussions around the risks, benefits and governance of solar radiation modification (SRM) in the climate change response portfolio are accelerating, but the topic remains nascent in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). In 2023, a US start-up (Make Sunsets) performed a small-scale, non-research deployment of SRM in Baja California, Mexico, without prior permission or community engagement. Their actions prompted Mexico to announce its intention to ban SRM experimentation, underscoring the need for governance to prevent irresponsible practices that could discredit legitimate research. We perform an empirical and ethical analysis of the landscape of academic discussions and media coverage on SRM in the LAC region, focusing on the Make Sunset case. Our analysis leads us to three conclusions: first, a lack of regulations in LAC that fosters mistrust, fuels perceptions of neo-colonialism and restricts potentially valuable and responsible research; second, we argue that the theatrical Make Sunsets case is not ethically justified in light of the diversity of risks associated with it; third, we offer foundational, participatory recommendations to promote effective, transparent and sustainable governance of SRM, including LAC in global conversations.

Publication data

Journal: European Journal of Risk Regulation
Date: 14 July 2025
DOI: 10.1017/err.2025.10025

Authors

Florencia Luna

CONICET & Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences (FLACSO), Argentina

Maria Ines Carabajal

University of Buenos Aires (UBA)

Inés Camilloni

University of Buenos Aires & CONICET

María Florencia Santi

CONICET, University of Entre Ríos (UNER) & Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences (FLACSO), Argentina

Gian Franco Lisanti

Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences (FLACSO), Argentina

Julieta Nasi

Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences (FLACSO), Argentina

Timothy Daly

Program of Bioethics, FLACSO Argentina

Ignacio Mastroleo

 CONICET & Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences (FLACSO), Argentina

Cintia Rodríguez Garat

Universidad Nacional de La Plata

The Degrees Initiative
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