https://climatejusticealliance.org/geoengineering/?s=03#Fact-Sheets

(in case of bad link, try:
https://climatejusticealliance.org/geoengineering/ )

GEOENGINEERING 101
Hacking the Planet
Sub Menu
Welcome to a new feature of CJA’s website: Geoengineering 101: Hacking the
Planet.

In this section, we will provide the most up-to-date information about the
false and misleading promise of Geoengineering climate manipulation
schemes, along with campaigns and advocacy that CJA and our members and
allies are undertaking.

The term “Geoengineering” refers to a set of proposed technologies to
deliberately intervene in and alter Earth systems on a mega-scale. It is a
desperate, potentially catastrophic, attempt to manipulate the climate to
roll back some of the effects of climate change. The fossil fuel industry
supports geoengineering because it claims to address climate change without
reducing dependence on the extraction and consumption of coal, oil, and
gas–thereby protecting the industry’s profits.

Over the last two years, CJA has been working with allies around the
world–especially the international ETC group–to keep tabs on developments
in this area. Some of the proposed experiments are dramatic. They sound
exciting and futuristic and are likely to seem attractive to those of us
that appreciate innovation. But they are a deadly distraction, leading us
further from the places we need to go. Geoengineering does nothing to cut
CO2 emissions and it assumes that fossil fuel extraction and use will
remain as it is. It uses flashy ideas to maintain the status quo.

Things are moving fast in this area. There is ever-increasing interest in
the concept of Carbon Capture and Storage, which is a risky and unproven
idea for which most of the proposed technology does not yet exist. Industry
and governments around the world are grasping at this concept, and numerous
groups have sprung up in support of it. In the meantime, companies hoping
to develop atmospheric experiments are approaching state governments and
the U.S. federal government has begun allocating funds to explore these
ideas.

A recent development is the proliferation of groups offering ideas on
“governance” of geoengineering. They are willing to admit that attempting
climate manipulation at the scale proposed is likely to lead to problems
and pushback, and they invite offerings from a variety of geoengineering
proponents as to how to carry out this “governance”. But the rhetoric
around governance is merely a way of legitimating and gaining acceptance
for the practices of geoengineering. It is something to keep an eye on, but
not indulge in.

In 2019, CJA convened the North America Geoengineering Working Group, which
is open to CJA member groups and other organizations that contribute to
building strategy around geoengineering.

We welcome your comments and your questions, and we’d be happy to tell you
more about the NA Geoengineering Working Group. Contact us at:
[email protected]

Geoengineering 101 Fact Sheets
CJA has created this series of fact sheets on Geoengineering under the
title Geoengineering 101: Hacking the Planet, Carbon Capture and Storage,
and Solar Radiation Management. These fact sheets cover the basic
information on geoengineering.




Geoengineering Experiments
Hacking the planet to alter its atmosphere is no longer science fiction.
Several dangerous geoengineering experiments are already underway, with
potentially dire consequences for the earth.

Ocean Iron Fertilization1
 In April of 2017, the international company Oceaneos Environmental
Solutions divulgó announced its plan to carry out an iron fertilization
experiment off the coast of Chile. Describing the process as “ocean
seeding,” the company claims the introduction of iron dust would increase
phytoplankton biomass, which would cause an increase in the commercially
fished Chilean jack mackerel (Trachurus murphyi). As a climate bonus, CO2
would be buried in the ocean floor or remain for extended periods of time
in deep water. Chileans critical of the project insist that the risk is
simply not worth it and that many marine species would die. In 2012, the
same company, operating under a different name, conducted a similar
experiment off the coast of British Columbia, Canada, which was declared
illegal by Canadian authorities.The experiment took place in the territory
of the Indigenous Haida Nation in collaboration with a local company that
wanted to tap into the carbon market. Haida leadership denounced the
experiment for tampering with nature. Ocean interventions of this type
violate both the London Protocol and the Convention on Biodiversity2.

1 https://www.etcgroup.org/content/geoengineering-threatens-oceans
2 FundacionTerram and Millennium Institute for Oceanography, Marine
Geoengineering: A Great Risk for Chile, 2020, pp 4.


Artwork by Heather Thiry


Artwork by Heather Thiry

Cloud Brightening
In May 2020, a small group of Australian geoengineers3 carried out a risky
geoengineering technique – brightening clouds to reflect solar energy back
into space – and presented it as a plan to save the Great Barrier Reef. Led
by researchers from Southern Cross University in New South Wales, the goal
of the experiment was to lower local temperatures and slow the bleaching of
the coral reefs. The experiment was funded by governmental sources, and
more trials have been scheduled,4 also with public funding. The experiment
contravenes the UN Convention on Biodiversity, which in 2010, established a
moratorium on geoengineering activities until “a global, transparent and
effective control and regulatory mechanisms… in accordance with the
precautionary approach can be put in place.”5

3 Scientists trial cloud brightening equipment to shade and cool Great
Barrier Reef, The Guardian, April 17, 2020.
4 Scientists trial world first ‘cloud brightening’ technique to protect the
reef, Sidney Institute of Marine Science, April 16, 2020.
5 ETC Group, The Geoengineering Moratorium Under the UN Convention on
Biological Diversity, November 10, 2010.

SCoPEx
The Stratospheric Controlled Perturbation Experiment (SCoPEx) is a
stratospheric aerosol injection project that would spray water,
finely-ground chalk, and sulfur particles from a high-altitude balloon into
the upper atmosphere to produce a haze aimed at blocking the sun. Backed by
Harvard scientists and money from several foundations, if SCoPEx is allowed
to proceed, it would have the political effect of legitimizing
geoengineering. In 2010, the UN Convention on Biodiversity (CBD) passed a
moratorium that covers SRM experiments like SCoPEx. However, the U.S. is
not a party to the CBD.


Artwork by Heather Thiry


Artwork by Heather Thiry

Ice911
The proposed Ice911 Project wants to experiment on Inupiaq and Gwich’n
territories in the Arctic region by polluting the ice and oceans with tiny
glass beads. The claim is that covering arctic sea ice with very large
volumes of micro-glass beads might slow summer melting of Arctic ice. There
are many unanswered questions about the impacts of this speculative
technology on individual and community health, wildlife, the environment,
and subsistence food ways, let alone reliable evidence that it would work.
Ice911 is a Silicon Valley-based non-profit company led by engineers from
the technology and oil industries. This project would make large-scale
changes to the metabolism of the Earth. Rapid changes to the pattern of ice
flows could impact animal migration as well as local weather patterns.
Instead of protecting indigenous sovereignty, cutting greenhouse gas
pollution, or lifting up traditional indigenous knowledge of how to live in
right relationship with Mother Earth, this project proposes massive
industrial interventions with no way of finding out what the impacts will
be until it is too late.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/geoengineering/CAJ3C-06cPWxS26QODF1t-5MDjti7Cvd2yzCRec1zcp12eDw0dQ%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to