Cal­i­for­nia has a his­to­ry of going it alone to pro­tect the envi­ron­ment. Now, as US Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump pulls back on cli­mate sci­ence and pol­i­cy, sci­en­tists in the Gold­en State are sketch­ing plans for a home-grown cli­mate-research insti­tute — to the tune of hun­dreds of mil­lions of dol­lars per year.

The ini­tia­tive, which is backed by California’s flag­ship uni­ver­si­ties, is in the ear­ly stages of devel­op­ment. If it suc­ceeds, it will rep­re­sent one of the largest US invest­ments in cli­mate research in years. The nascent ‘Cal­i­for­nia Cli­mate Sci­ence and Solu­tions Insti­tute’ would fund basic- and applied-research projects designed to help the state to grap­ple with the hard real­i­ties of glob­al warming.

The project could be fund­ed by rev­enue from the state’s cap-and-trade pro­gramme to reduce green­house-gas emis­sions, but its polit­i­cal prospects are unclear. Advo­cates say they have received a warm recep­tion from Cal­i­for­nia Gov­er­nor Jer­ry Brown, but a spokesper­son for Brown would say only that “dis­cus­sions are ongo­ing”. The pro­pos­al must also clear the state legislature.

The goal is to devel­op the research we need, and then put cli­mate solu­tions into prac­tice,” says Daniel Kam­men, an ener­gy researcher at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia, Berke­ley. Although the insti­tute would focus on sci­ence to serve Cal­i­for­nia, Kam­men says Brown and oth­er state lead­ers rec­og­nize that their work will have glob­al impact — par­tic­u­lar­ly now that Trump has promised to pull the Unit­ed States out of the 2015 Paris cli­mate accord. “The term we often use is ‘rule from below,’” Kam­men says.

And Cal­i­for­nia might ulti­mate­ly have some com­pa­ny. At Colum­bia Uni­ver­si­ty in New York City, sci­ence dean Peter de Meno­cal — a palaeo­cli­ma­tol­o­gist — hopes to build an alliance of major uni­ver­si­ties and phil­an­thropists to sup­port research into press­ing ques­tions about the impacts of cli­mate change. Poten­tial top­ics include local vari­a­tions in sea-lev­el rise and the chang­ing avail­abil­i­ty of fresh­wa­ter resources and food.

De Meno­cal has already test­ed the idea on a small­er scale. Last year, he launched the Cen­ter for Cli­mate and Life at Colum­bia, enlist­ing cor­po­rate phil­an­thropists to fund the university’s Earth sci­en­tists. The project has raised about US$8 mil­lion. “This prob­lem is big­ger than any one insti­tu­tion,” says de Meno­cal. “What pri­vate phil­an­thropy can do that the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment doesn’t do is tar­get assets to solve spe­cif­ic problems.”

Writ large, that is what aca­d­e­mics in Cal­i­for­nia hope to do. The pro­posed cli­mate insti­tute there has drawn sup­port from near­ly all the state’s major aca­d­e­m­ic insti­tu­tions, includ­ing all ten Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia cam­pus­es and pri­vate pow­er­hous­es such as Stan­ford Uni­ver­si­ty and the Cal­i­for­nia Insti­tute of Tech­nol­o­gy in Pasade­na. Sci­en­tists from any insti­tu­tion would be eli­gi­ble for grants to study top­ics rang­ing from ocean acid­i­fi­ca­tion to tax pol­i­cy, Kam­men says; pri­or­i­ty would go to projects and exper­i­ments that engage com­mu­ni­ties, busi­ness­es and policymakers.

The goal is to devel­op the research we need, and then put cli­mate solu­tions into prac­tice.” — Daniel Kam­men

It would not be the first time that Cal­i­for­nia has stepped up to sup­port an area of sci­ence that has fall­en out of favour in Wash­ing­ton DC. In 2004, the state’s vot­ers approved $3 bil­lion to cre­ate the Cal­i­for­nia Insti­tute for Regen­er­a­tive Med­i­cine in Oak­land, after then-Pres­i­dent George W. Bush restrict­ed fed­er­al sup­port for research on human embry­on­ic stem cells; that cen­tre has since fund­ed more than 750 projects. The pro­pos­al for a new cli­mate insti­tute began sim­i­lar­ly, as a reac­tion to White House poli­cies, but its orga­niz­ers say that the con­cept has evolved into a reflec­tive exer­cise about aca­d­e­mics’ respon­si­bil­i­ty to help cre­ate a bet­ter future.

It almost became an inven­to­ry or indict­ment of our­selves,” says Ben­jamin Houl­ton, direc­tor of the John Muir Insti­tute of the Envi­ron­ment at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia, Davis, and chair of the com­mit­tee that is devel­op­ing the insti­tute pro­pos­al. “We real­ized we weren’t doing enough.”

Pan­el mem­bers aim to bring a com­plete plan to the Cal­i­for­nia leg­is­la­ture this year, in the hope of per­suad­ing law­mak­ers to fund the effort. Kam­men says that the institute’s back­ers would like to have the insti­tute up and run­ning by Sep­tem­ber 2018, when Brown is set to host a glob­al cli­mate sum­mit in San Fran­cis­co, California.

But the Cal­i­for­nia ini­tia­tive still faces sig­nif­i­cant chal­lenges. Sev­erin Boren­stein, an econ­o­mist at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia, Berke­ley, warns that aca­d­e­mics will face plen­ty of com­pe­ti­tion for a lim­it­ed pool of cap-and-trade rev­enue. He also notes that efforts to cre­ate such inter­dis­ci­pli­nary cli­mate insti­tutes have strug­gled in the past, large­ly because it’s hard to ral­ly aca­d­e­mics from dis­parate fields around a com­mon goal. Nonethe­less, Boren­stein favours the cli­mate ini­tia­tive, because he sees glob­al warm­ing as an issue on which Cal­i­for­nia can have a tru­ly glob­al impact.

The main way Cal­i­for­nia can con­tribute to deal­ing with cli­mate change is through inno­va­tion,” he says. “We can invent and test the tech­nolo­gies and process­es that will allow the rest of the world to reduce their green­house-gas emissions.”

Ref­er­ence: Nature, 548, 267–268 (doi:10.1038/548267a