https://www.technologyreview.com/s/614991/the-us-government-will-begin-to-fund-geoengineering-research/amp/?__twitter_impression=true

The US government has approved funds for geoengineering research
NOAA will get at least $4 million for a research program, which will
include efforts to assess “climate interventions.”
by James Temple December 20, 2019
The US government has for the first time authorized funding to research
geoengineering, the controversial idea that we could counteract climate
change by reflecting heat away from the planet.

The $1.4 trillion spending bills that Congress passed this week included a
little noticed provision setting aside at least $4 million for the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to conduct stratospheric monitoring
and research efforts. The program includes assessments of “solar climate
interventions,” including “proposals to inject material [into the
stratosphere] to affect climate.”


President Donald Trump is expected to sign the sweeping appropriations
bills on Friday.

In a related move, California Congressman Jerry McNerney on Thursday
introduced a bill that would enable NOAA to set up a formal program to
carry out this “climate intervention” research.

The full text of the bill isn't yet available, and McNerney’s office didn’t
immediately respond to inquiries from MIT Technology Review. But the
primary aims would include improving our basic understanding of
stratospheric chemistry, and assessing the potential effects and risks of
geoengineering.

It would also grant NOAA oversight authority to review and report on
experiments proposed by other research groups, says Kelly Wanser, an
advisor on geoengineering research efforts and executive director at
SilverLining, who consulted with McNerney’s office on details in the bill.

A growing number of academic research groups are exploring various ways to
cool the planet as the threat of climate change grows, including injecting
reflective particles into the stratosphere or spraying saltwater into the
sky to brighten coastal clouds.

But there are concerns that using such tools could have dangerous
environmental side effects, and that even suggesting them as solutions
could ease pressure to cut the greenhouse gas emissions driving climate
change.

In a statement, Rep. McNerney asserts that the federal government should
take the lead in this controversial field, noting that other research
efforts are already moving forward.

A team of Harvard researchers has been preparing to conduct one of the
first outdoor experiments related to geoengineering, by launching a balloon
that would spray a small amount of particles into the stratosphere. At
least in part because there isn’t a US-government-funded research program
in place, Harvard took the unusual step of creating its own external
advisory committee to ensure that the researchers take steps to limit
environmental risks, seek outside input, and operate in a transparent way.

McNerney previously introduced legislation directing the National Academy
of Sciences to propose a geoengineering research agenda and oversight
guidelines. It, in turn, established a committee that’s set to release its
recommendations next year.

Since emissions cuts alone likely can’t prevent dangerous levels of climate
change, public funding for geoengineering research is “overdue,” Jesse
Reynolds, an environmental law and policy fellow at the University of
California, Los Angeles, said in an email.

“We need to know more about solar geoengineering’s capabilities,
limitations, and risks so that future decisions will be informed ones,” he
added.

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