https://www.chathamhouse.org/2022/02/geoengineering-reining-weather-warriors

*Geoengineering: Reining in the weather warriors*

A half-forgotten UN convention can be dusted down to mitigate tensions over
modifications of climate and weather

Tracy Raczek

While climate change has been dominating the international agenda in recent
years, efforts to influence the weather and reflect solar heat have
received less scrutiny despite their potential to increase regional
tensions.

Countries are increasingly using technology to change conditions in the
atmosphere, oceans and ice to improve weather to their advantage or lessen
global warming. However, the results of these interventions can cross
borders and what may be good for one country may not be good for its
neighbours.

This is not a hypothetical problem. Iran has already accused Israel of
stealing its water by using cloud-seeding that reduces rainfall over its
territory. China, which already artificially alters its weather over major
cities, plans to be able to modify weather over half its territory by 2025,
to the alarm of neighbours including India. And two Middle East rivals –
the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia – are scaling up rain-making
operations.

The best mechanism for policing such interventions can be found in a UN
convention that dates back to the end of the Vietnam war. The Convention on
the Prohibition of Military or Any Other Hostile Use of Environmental
Modification Techniques, known as the ENMOD Convention, came into force in
1978 and has been ratified by 78 countries, including Russia, the United
States, Britain, China and Germany.

The convention was hammered out between the Cold War superpowers following
ethical concerns about Operation Popeye – a classified cloud-seeding
programme carried out by the US Air Force from 1967-1972 to extend the
monsoon season in Vietnam and Laos so roads would be flooded, hampering
Viet Cong military movements. Civilian lives, local food production and
private property can be damaged or destroyed by this indiscriminate
technology when used in conflict.

As the planet rapidly warms, there is an urgent need to revisit ENMOD. The
agreement states in Article I that signatories are ‘not to engage in
military or any other hostile use of environmental modification techniques
having widespread, long-lasting or severe effects as the means of
destruction, damage or injury to any other State Party’. The ‘or’ is
important. All three criteria – widespread, long-lasting, severe – need not
be met and many weather- and climate-modifying technologies meet at least
one criterion.

ENMOD’s Article II outlines which environmental modification technology is
covered by the convention. Here again a wide net is cast. It includes ‘any
technique for changing – through the deliberate manipulation of natural
processes – the dynamics, composition or structure of the earth, including
its biota, lithosphere, hydrosphere and atmosphere, or of outer space’.
This would cover all weather- and climate-modifying technology currently in
use.

The most ambiguous part of the convention – which needs updating and
clarification – is the matter of intent. The use of this technology for
military or hostile ends is strictly prohibited and violations can be
referred to the UN Security Council. ‘Peaceful purposes’ are, however,
allowed.

But what happens when it is used with purportedly peaceful intent yet
causes harm to a neighbouring country?

This question is all the more difficult as communities and countries look
to weather modification and geoengineering to help protect themselves from
the worst effects of global warming. Hostile and peaceful intended uses of
this technology can become muddled.

The technology falls, generally, into three categories with different
objectives: fertilizing the ocean to increase its uptake of carbon;
brightening clouds or ice to reflect more sunlight back into space and thus
reduce global or local warming; or the most common technology – as seen in
agricultural communities or ski resorts – of injecting aerosols into the
stratosphere to increase rainfall or snow, or to modify a storm.

Such operations are already under way in more than 50 countries, according
to the World Meteorological Organization. Mexico’s Air Force, for example,
has begun cloud-seeding in the past 12 months. The Arctic Ice Project, an
NGO, intends to deploy small hollow glass beads, composed of silicon
dioxide, across parts of the Arctic Sea’s ice and in the Arctic Ocean to
increase reflectivity and slow global warming. Australian universities are
piloting a salt spray over the Great Barrier Reef to reflect more of the
sun’s heat in an attempt to conserve the reef.

Scientists are plagued, however, by the complexities of understanding the
technology’s direct impact and its knock-on effects. In the case of cloud
brightening – a type of solar radiation management – there is uncertainty
over how it might adversely affect ecological systems, agriculture and
global warming.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) notes that cloud
brightening risks depleting the planet’s ozone layer and affecting regional
weather patterns, while doing nothing to reduce ocean acidification.
Moreover, for cloud brightening to effectively reduce global warming, it
would need to be sustained through wars, economic crashes and technological
glitches. Any prolonged interruption would see global warming ricochet up.

In the case of cloud-seeding, there is uncertainty about adverse impacts on
neighbouring countries, some of which are already coping with food or water
security – concerns that will grow for many as the changing climate alters
the distribution, predictability and amount of precipitation.

Three aspects of the technology’s use have particular security
implications. First, the threat that its deployment in one area could
affect another. Second, the difficulty in distinguishing harmful effects on
neighbouring countries from insignificant ones. Last, the ease with which
the technology’s use could be claimed as peaceful yet be covertly applied
to harm an adversary.

As countries deploy this technology, there are questions over which
international framework is best suited to control it in the context of
climate and security.

The answer is ENMOD.

Other UN conventions and forums on the environment and climate, such as the
UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, the UN Environment Assembly, the
IPCC and the UN Biodiversity Convention are essential to address various
aspects of climate change. UN bodies such as the UN Security Council, the
Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court and the International Law
Commission are also essential in addressing how security affects climate
and vice versa.

None of these, however, are mandated to address the use of environment
technologies as a weapon. Only the ENMOD Convention has this mandate.

The timing is propitious as well. Article VIII of ENMOD requires the UN
Secretary-General every 10 years to check with parties to the convention on
the need to review the convention. That time is at hand.

After review failures in 2002 and 2013, the UN Secretary-General is obliged
to inquire again with parties no later than 2023.  If at least 10 respond
positively, the Secretary-General is required to convene a review
conference.

Secretary-General António Guterres should utilize the soft power of his
office to urge parties to support a robust review of the convention. He
should encourage more countries to join the convention, as ever more adopt
environment modifying technology.

It is also crucial that the convention be updated to reflect a common and
contemporary understanding of ‘peaceful’ and ‘hostile’ intent.

In the face of climate change, countries need first and foremost to reduce
emissions and support climate adaptation. Simultaneously, however, they
need to attend to the security implications of geoengineering and weather
modification. Dusting off ENMOD is the place to start.

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