10.3.3 Technology Transfer
Technology transfer has broadly been discussed in the IPCC Special Report on
Technology Transfer (IPCC, 2000a). The report provides a framework for analysis
of the complex and multifaceted nature of the technology transfer process, emphasizing
the sustainable development perspective. It examines broad trends of technology
transfer in recent years, explores the international political context, discusses
policy tools for overcoming key barriers and creating enabling environments,
and provides an overview of financing and partnerships. The report also includes
sectoral perspectives on the transfer of adaptation and mitigation technologies.
These perspectives are illustrated by a wide variety of case studies. This section
highlights the main findings of the IPCC report, especially those issues related
to the role that the main stakeholders must play in the formulation and implementation
of policies that facilitate technology transfer.
10.3.3.1 The View of Technology Transfer
The effectiveness of measures to mitigate or adapt to climate change depends
to a great extent on technological innovation and the diffusion of technologies.
The transfer and/or diffusion of ESTs across and within countries is now considered
a major element of global strategies to achieve climate stabilization and support
sustainable development. At the same time, it is recognized that transferred
technologies must meet the needs and priorities of specific local circumstances.
The term technology transfer is interpreted by some as a one-time transaction
that maintains the dependency of the recipient. Some analysts therefore prefer
the notion of technology co-operation or technology diffusion, which is seen
by them as reflecting a process of technical change brought about by dispersed
and uncoordinated decisions over time. Others still may see technology transfer
as a two-way learning process that might more appropriately be called technology
communication. According to the definition used by IPCC (2000a), technology
transfer encompasses the broad set of processes that cover the flows of knowledge,
experience, and equipment for mitigating and adapting to climate change among
different stakeholders. These include governments, international organizations,
private sector entities, financial institutions, NGOs and research and/or education
institutions. It comprises the process of learning to understand, utilize, and
replicate the technology, including the capacity to choose it, adapt it to local
conditions, and integrate it with indigenous technologies. Technology
transfer will therefore be used as a broad term including all aspects mentioned
above.
While technology transfer is now a common feature of all sectors of human activity,
some features are unique to the area of climate change, including:
- scale, both in terms of geography, which may involve all countries of the
world, and the number of technologies, which could easily run into the thousands;
- number of persons that might benefit from the success of these efforts,
since the whole world is expected to be the beneficiary; and
- payback periods for the R&D expenditures, which may be too long to be
of interest to the private sector.
These features determine technology transfer activities that could be evaluated
at several levelsinternational, macro- or national, sector-specific, and
project-specific levelsand that could follow different pathways according
the interactions among the stakeholders involved in the transfer process. Each
pathway represents different types of flows of knowledge, moneys, goods, and
services among different sets of stakeholders. Each one has very different implications
for the learning that occurs and, ultimately, the degree of technology-as-knowledge
transfer that takes places beyond the simple hardware transfers.
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