After COVID, Swiss group plots future for science, diplomacy

by Joseph K. Clark

A Swiss project to lay the diplomatic groundwork for future scientific breakthroughs is gathering momentum ahead of a planned international summit

GENEVA — With COVID-19, space exploration, and climate change big on many minds, a so-called “do tank” in Geneva, bankrolled by Switzerland’s government, is gearing up to develop long-term scientific projects, ranging from a global court for scientific disputes to a Manhattan Project-style effort to rid excess carbon from the atmosphere. Backers of the Geneva Science and Diplomacy Anticipator want to bridge the Swiss city’s image as a hub for conflict resolution with visionary scientific ambitions on big-picture issues, including the future of humanity.

 

First created in late 2019, GESDA presented its first activity report Tuesday and announced plans for a summit in October, bringing together hundreds of United Nations officials, Nobel laureates, academics, diplomats, advocacy group representatives, and members of the public. The initiative’s backers include the heads of top Swiss universities and the world’s largest atom smasher, located at the CERN European nuclear research organization. They say the coronavirus pandemic has given science a platform unseen for several decades. They want to leverage the attention from a public health crisis that has taken nearly 3 million lives and quashed economies to encourage thinking about the interplay among science, politics, and society.

COVID

Peter Brabeck, a former chairman and CEO of Nestle, who the Swiss government tapped to lead GESDA, used COVID-19 as an example of how planning could help avoid future health crises, noting that the mRNA vaccine technology being used now to fight the pandemic has been around a decade.

“We could have perhaps been more prepared for the pandemic than we were today,” Brabeck said from GESDA headquarters at Geneva’s Campus Biotech. “Only a scientific breakthrough is not enough. It has to be embedded in a diplomatic framework so that it can be implemented” by governments and companies.

“Technology is advancing at an incredible speed. But the framework around it — diplomacy — is slower than ever, so we have to find a way to accelerate the diplomacy also,” he said.

The pandemic has featured vaccine nationalism, political disputes, and mutual recriminations between China — where the coronavirus first emerged — and the United States, experiencing the world’s most deadly outbreak. The reputation of the World Health Organization also has suffered.

“I would not pretend that GESDA could avoid such a confrontation as happened in the World Health Organization,” Brabeck said. “GESDA can call attention before this escalates… (and) if diplomacy would come in before the fact, many of these conflicts might be resolved.”

Brabeck said the initiative aims to be a “catalyst” and not an operator of any projects it looks to develop. While seed money came from the Swiss government, GESDA counts academics from South Africa and a top health ministry official in Singapore among board members, seeking outside funding and talking with charitable foundations.

The summit’s goal planned for October is to help map the relationship between scientific breakthroughs and their impacts on society and the world. USDA wants to assess the feasibility of structures such as an international organization to ensure safe access to quantum infrastructure and to lay a foundation for an agreement on using artificial intelligence.

It said a global court could help resolve scientific disputes. A Manhattan Project-style research and development effort could help industry “accelerate the decarbonization of industrial processes in the next decades” — an allusion to the secret atomic bomb project in Los Angeles Alamos, New Mexico, during World War II.

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