https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4473753

Authors Karen Bradshaw
<https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=1357245>

Arizona State University (ASU) - Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law
Monika Ehrman
<https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=2108430>

SMU Dedman School of Law


*Posted: 18 Jun 2023*
Abstract

This Article is the first to identify that companies and agencies
systemically modify climatic airspaces through wildfire smoke emissions,
weather modification (cloud seeding to cause rain), and solar
geoengineering. Climate modification is not a conspiracy theory or a
hypothetical: it is happening and it is changing weather patterns. Yet,
climate modification is almost wholly unregulated. Further, it is also not
recorded or tracked in systemic ways. That is to say, even government
agencies do not have comprehensive records of whether, how often, or how
much climate modification is occurring. The data is simply not gathered,
aggregated, or stored. As a result, major indicators that ¬rely on climatic
conditions—including the Environmental Protection Agency climate
accounting—systemically overlooks the effects of human-caused climate
manipulation when accounting for changes in weather and air quality over
time.

This lack of regulation is a serious problem: climate accounting fails to
measure virtually unregulated activities undertaken by a mix of public and
private actors. Without accurately accounting for these activities,
scientists and agencies may be understating the effect of climate change on
historical factors, including CO2 emissions levels and rainfall. Such
misinformation may lead to dramatic misstatements about the severity of the
climate emergency, an environmental justice disaster that
disproportionately affects communities of color. Inaccuracies in climate
accounting stemming from the lack of data about climate modification also
blinds policymakers to opportunities to slow or reverse anthropocentric
climate change through measuring, accounting for, and regulating human
manipulation of airspace.

How is it possible that the leading federal agency accounting for climate
change is failing to account for changes to airspace? Law as a whole [or,
“The legal system as a whole,” etc.] systemically overlooks and
underregulates human manipulation of “invisible” natural resources which
are diffuse, invisible to the naked eye (and thus difficult to detect),
lacking commercial value, and seemingly outside centralize human control.
>From pollution to fish populations, underground water sources to oil and
gas flares, even the agencies tasked with regulating invisible resources
find it nearly impossible to detect, measure, and account for human inputs
into natural systems.

These examples illustrate a broader theoretical point: climate and
environmental policy analysis and solutions are hamstrung by the
limitations inherent in modern Western conceptions of property. This
Article demonstrates how an emerging model of multidimensional
property—derived from interdisciplinary discussions of overlapping property
rights, mismatched property rights, and landscape-level resources—can
improve the framing of climate change and other ecological problems, and
thus improve the available outcomes.

This Article makes at least three contributions to environmental law,
natural resources law, and property law literatures. First, it identifies
the crucial problem of climate manipulation, which is currently unregulated
and not included in climate accounting. Second, it develops a theory of
invisible resources which are difficult to measure, detect, and regulate
but nevertheless affect the human environmental in vitally important ways.
Finally, it demonstrates how a new model of multidimensional property can
extend concepts of property rights and regulation into invisible airspaces,
making currently unregulated climate mitigation the subject of oversight
and regulation.

The real-world importance of addressing this crucial oversight cannot be
overstated: Agencies must use all tools at their disposal to understand and
address the climate emergency.

Keywords: wildfire, geoengineering, climate, modification, emissions, EPA,
cloud seeding, regulations


*Source: SSRN*

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