Poster's note: this is Google's back translation of an article I wrote in
English for Le Temps, which I'm told is the Swiss-French paper of record.
The back translation is as close as possible to what will be printed. I
don't have a link at present; it's coming out Monday. There may be an
English version available online. As list users are likely aware, as a
matter of policy I don't offer public comment outside the published
literature. However, this is my response to an article written about SATAN
that I was given no opportunity to correct or otherwise discuss with the
journalist, prior to publication. FYI I have done no proactive publicity on
SATAN at all, as the associated paper isn't formally published. I hope the
below article clarifies some widespread misunderstandings about the nature
of this work.

*Geoengineering experiments are essential - but must be regulated*

Andrew Lockley is former honorary research fellow at University College
London

I probably don’t need to convince you of the challenges of climate change.
We are on course to race past 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial, and
will almost certainly pass 2 degrees. As the deadly floods in Pakistan have
shown, even today’s modest changes are wreaking havoc with the global
climate system. That disruption is doing real damage to people’s lives –
often people who have done least to contribute to the problem.

There is a technology that could make a difference: geoengineering.
Specifically, solar radiation modification, which relies on a side effect
of volcanic eruptions. By creating a bright haze in the upper atmosphere,
we can reflect some of the sun’s energy, thereby limiting climate change.
It’s not a solution, but it can give us time, to control emissions and
perhaps clean up some of the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

Recently, while I was an honorary research assistant at University College
London, I collaborated with the European Astrotech company. Together, we
launched a watermelon-sized balloon to an altitude of over 20 km, carried
by a much larger balloon. The small balloon carried a payload of sulfur
dioxide (SO2) into the stratosphere - the first time this has ever been
proven. When this balloon burst, it released this gas which in principle
formed a tiny amount of additional aerosols in the stratosphere. This
experiment was not designed to significantly change the climate - that
would have required about a billion such launches. Nor was it intended to
influence the stratosphere in any detectable way. It was simply a technical
test to determine whether our cheap little balloon could carry gas to the
stratosphere, along with the instruments needed to monitor its
transformation into a bright aerosol.


This project was called the stratospheric aerosol transport and nucleation
experiment - with the provocative acronym SATAN. This striking name
hopefully serves two purposes. Firstly, It highlights the need to regulate
what could ultimately be harmful experiments - if they’re done at expanded
scale and if they are not properly conducted. Secondly, I like to think
that this provocation asks the question as to whether such a small
experiment really is as bad as has sometimes been portrayed. The release of
this amount of SO2 gas is comparable what happens in a normal airline
flight - so the experiment is objectively benign. However, the launch broke
an unwritten and unspoken de facto moratorium on open-air geoengineering
experimentation. The backlash from testing this controversial technology
was expected, but its source was not. Some of my closest colleagues shunned
and denounced me for having the temerity to test this technology for the
first time.

This hullabaloo highlights some systemic problems. While it would be
perfectly sensible to have a global scientific body to regulate such
small-scale tests, no such body exists at present. This means that the
scientists and engineers who choose to run small tests are criticised for a
failure to seek permission - but none can be obtained, because there is
nobody in a position to grant permission. This deadlock  has paralysed
experimentation for a decade or more - in spite of the importance of
advancing this technology. Meanwhile, careless and potentially dangerous
tests can’t be stopped.

Despite being responsible for many scientific advances, academia is a
deeply conservative place. Those who are seen to have broken various
labyrinthine and opaque rules are often chewed up and spat out by the
system. My unusual position as an honorary scholar allows me to take more
risks with my academic reputation than a career academic. I don’t rely on a
university to feed me, and in fact my position lapsed just before the story
of this launch hit the press.

This test was intended to demonstrate a potentially useful piece of
equipment. It was a small scientific and technical step, not a giant one.
Perhaps its most important result is that it forces the academic community
to confront the strange taboo that exists about these experiments: They are
widely, if not universally, recognized as necessary, but there is no
practical way for scientists and engineers to ensure that they have the
proper permissions to perform them. Yet without early experimentation, the
technology will not be developed properly, which may lead to late or
chaotic deployment.


I’m well aware that running this test means I may never hold an academic
position again. If that prompts proper regulation of the sector in which I
have worked unpaid for the past decade, that is a very small price to pay.
Without proper regulation, we have the worst of both worlds: the most
benign experiments are held back by the timidity of researchers, and yet
there is nobody to stop the most egregiously dangerous ones. It is time for
that to change. Geoengineering experiments must be urgently placed in the
hands of an expert scientific regulatory board. Without this we empower
fools and constrain the careful.

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