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Science and global environmental politics. The Case of Stratospheric Ozone Depletion. Science, Uncertainty & Risk. The authority of science Modern notion of progress “Knowledge is power” Perceived neutrality, objectivity (fact/value) Uncertainty: incomplete information
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Science and global environmental politics The Case of Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
Science, Uncertainty & Risk • The authority of science • Modern notion of progress • “Knowledge is power” • Perceived neutrality, objectivity (fact/value) • Uncertainty: incomplete information • Risk: probability of an undesirable event • Policy Qs • Which risks to mitigate? • How to mitigate risk? • Who decides? • Risk assessment • Cost-benefit analysis • Probabilistic; money is the measure • Problems • Future vs. present; elitism; nonmonetary values; risk cultures
Risk Perception & (Ir)rationality • Representativeness: drawing analogies • Availability: over-rating highly publicized risks • Anchoring: people stick to old information • Overconfidence, denial of risk • Subjective factors • Autonomy: more risk-accepting when voluntary • Fairness: who causes & who bears risks? • Natural causes more acceptable than human-induced
Epistemic Communities • Groups of technical experts united by consensual knowledge and common policy goals • Transnational scope • Influential through state agencies, IOs, NGOs, media • Agenda-setting, fact finding, developing policy options, implementation • Said to be influential in many treaties • Rational experts > international cooperation
Why science does not generate rational policy • Scientific consensus is rare • “Facts” must be interpreted • Scientists are rarely advocates • Much policy is not based on science • Risk of information overload • Scientific agenda is moral, political decision • What counts as knowledge? • “Other” knowledges
Precautionary Principle • Under threat to human health or environment, precautions should be taken even without full scientific proof of causality. • “ounce of prevention is worth pound of cure” • German “forecaring principle” (acid rain) • Embryonic principle of international law • Shifts burden of proof • Promotes foresight, humility, recognition of interdependence
Ozone Depletion: Agenda Setting • CFCs: the “miracle compound” • Non-toxic, chemically inert, many uses • Few makers (DuPont is #1) • Stratospheric ozone • O3 absorbs UV-radiation, which causes skin cancer, cataracts, phytoplankton death… • 1974 discovery: CFCs destroy ozone • 1978: U.S., Canada, Nordic aerosol ban • 1977-85: fact-finding, little action
Science in the Ozone Negotiations • Vienna Convention (1985) • Antarctic ozone hole (1986) • Not predicted by models • Cause unknown; CFCs suspected • Negotiators advised to ignore it • Models predicted 7% ozone loss by 2050 • Montreal Protocol (1987) • U.S. vs. E.U.; virtually no DC participation • IC’s to cut CFCs in half by 2000 • DC’s can increase CFC use for 10 years
How did the ozone hole have an effect? • Not predicted by models, opened door to knew way of framing the knowledge • “Chlorine-loading” scheme • Emerged when chlorine concentrations reached 2 ppb • Stabilizing Cl required 85% reduction • U.S. position: 95% cutback • Montreal Protocol was not enough
Beyond Montreal • Amendments: 2/3 vote, majority of IC’s & DC’s • Binding on dissenters: sovereignty? • 1988: New Science • Arctic “hole” • Antarctic hole linked to CFCs • Global ozone losses • 1990s: CFC substitutes & Multilateral Fund • Necessity for DC participation • India & China to consume 1/3 CFCs by 2008 • Grand bargain: participation for development aid
Amending Montreal • London, 1990: CFC phaseout by 2000 • Plus carbon tetrachloride & methyl chloroform • Multilateral ozone fund ($1 B since) • Copenhagen, 1992: phaseout by 1996 • Phase out HCFCs by 2030 • Bangkok, 1993: phase out methyl bromide • Montreal, 1997: ban MB by 2005 (IC’s) • Beijing, 1999: HCFC freeze @ 1989 levels • IC’s ban by 2004; DC’s by 2016 • Compliance, black market
Coming Attractions • 2010 ~ Total phase-out of CFCs, halons and carbon tetrachloride in developing countries. • 2015 ~ Total phase-out of methyl chloroform and methyl bromide in developing countries. • 2030 ~ Total phase-out of HCFCs in developed countries. • 2040 ~ Total phase-out of HCFCs in developing countries
Montreal Protocol Effectiveness • The shining example of green diplomacy • Ozone hole • 1986: 14 million km2 • 2006: 28 million km2 • Chlorine loading near its peak • At least a decade before it begins to heal • Predicted to be normal mid-century • Multilateral ozone fund • $2.2 billion, 1991-2007 • Considered very effective
Relationship & contrast to climate change • Scientists increasingly outspoken • Small, concentrated industry vs. the glue of the global economy • Availability of profitable substitutes • Science-led protocol amendment process • Norms of universal participation and “common but differentiated responsibility” • U.S. demands “universal participation” on climate change