The move of the United States to pull out of the international solar alliance (ISA) has given new life to the concept of withdrawal of treaties under international law and its effects on global climate collaboration. The ISA was established in 2015 and is based in India to encourage the use of solar energy by the tropical and sun-rich states. Although, the US had been interacting with the alliance under the sphere of cooperation, its withdrawal signifies its changed priorities of its international energy policies.
The Right to Exit: Can the Laws of Treaties Be Ignored?
By the law of the international treaty, and especially by the Vienna Convention on the Law of treaties (1969), a sovereign state has a right to withdraw under a multilateral treaty upon such a provision being present in the agreement or giving reasonable notice to other parties. The withdrawal of the treaty does not void the treaty but only diminishes the legal obligations of the departing state. Lawyers observe that the climate and energy regime exits usually indicate political rebalancing and not the abandonment of renewable energy objectives.
The effect of this on the International Solar Alliance is that it will expand the pool of participants in related initiatives and ideas. How this will affect the International Solar Alliance is that it will widen the number of players in similar initiatives and ideas.
There are limited effects of the US exit on the projects currently in operation by the ISA, with most of its projects being majorly funded by multilateral funding bodies, development banks, and global south leadership. Nonetheless, the relocation can have an impact on diplomatic momentum and technical cooperation, specifically, on such aspects as the mechanism of financing, collaboration on research, and interaction with the private sector.
Strategic and Diplomatic Position of India.
India, being the host nation and founder leader of the ISA has restated it intentions of enhancing the alliance. Indian officials have stressed that the ISA is still a platform of developing countries, with its core aim being affordable deployment of solar, energy access, and climate resilience. Diplomatic outreach in India is likely to intensify to facilitate continuity, membership increase and win new partners in Europe, Asia and Africa as sources of funding.
There are other implications of climate governance which are broader in scope.
The problem that is brought out is the weakness of multilateral climate institutions in the face of domestic political shifts by major economies. It will be the Indian leadership, according to analysts, that will play a vital role in institutional stability and assure that renewable energy cooperation is not exposed to geopolitical fluctuations.
