https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/26/climate/geoengineering-conspiracy-theorists-skeptics.html

*Author*
Christopher Flavelle

*26 September 2024*

Around the country, people with a deep distrust of government want to
preemptively ban the use of aerosols to reduce heat from the sun.

At first glance, what happened in Tennessee’s legislature this spring
seemed a bit odd.

Republican lawmakers introduced a bill to ban solar geoengineering —
putting aerosols into the atmosphere to block some of the radiation from
the sun. As climate change drives up temperatures on Earth, there is
growing interest in geoengineering as a way to cool the planet. But it’s
still largely theoretical, with no evidence that anyone in Tennessee is
planning to try it.

The main witness to testify in support of the ban was a physician without
any apparent qualifications in atmospheric science, who falsely claimed
geoengineering was happening nationwide. Democrats derided the bill as
ridiculous and tried to amend it with mentions of Yetis, Bigfoot and
Sasquatch to prove their point.

Yet the ban sailed through the legislature. Governor Bill Lee, a
Republican, signed it, making Tennessee the first state to outlaw
geoengineering.

Behind the scenes, the bill was the result of lobbying by activists known
in Republican circles from their efforts fighting vaccine mandates


“We used the connections and the rapport that we had built over the last
couple of years in medical freedom,” Danielle Goodrich of East Tennessee
Freedom, which calls itself a “group of Patriots, Momma Bears, Conservative
Christians,” explained on a podcast.
BUYING TIME
A series on the ways humans are starting to manipulate nature to fight
climate change.
Silicon Valley Renegades Pollute the Sky to Save the Planet
Sept. 25, 2024
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/25/climate/rogue-solar-geoengineering.html>
They’ve Got a Plan to Fight Global Warming. It Could Alter the Oceans.
Sept. 23, 2024
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/23/climate/oceans-rivers-carbon-removal.html>
This Scientist Has a Risky Plan to Cool Earth. There’s Growing Interest.
Aug. 1, 2024
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/01/climate/david-keith-solar-geoengineering.html>
Warming Is Getting Worse. So They Just Tested a Way to Deflect the Sun.
April 2, 2024
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/02/climate/global-warming-clouds-solar-geoengineering.html>
Can We Engineer Our Way Out of the Climate Crisis?
March 31, 2024
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/31/climate/climate-change-carbon-capture-ccs.html>

For years, the debate over geoengineering has mostly been limited to
academics and environmentalists. They agree that climate change is an
existential threat but differ about whether humans should look at trying to
blunt it by manipulating natural processes.

Some, including the prominent geophysicist David Keith, say geoengineering
could save lives, and outdoor experiments are necessary to understand the
benefits and risks. Others, including the nonprofit Friends of the Earth,
say geoengineering distracts from the urgent need to cut the pollution that
is heating the planet. And they worry about a lack of international rules
<https://www.solargeoeng.org/> to ensure that it’s deployed safely and
fairly.

Now, those critics have been joined by groups from a very different corner
of American society: vaccine skeptics, conspiracy theorists and
organizations like East Tennessee Freedom, which appears motivated by a
deep distrust of government rather than by what Ms. Goodrich called the
“supposed climate crisis.”

These new geoengineering opponents are finding support from hard-right
Republicans. Since January, lawmakers in more than a half dozen other
states have introduced similar legislation to preemptively ban
geoengineering.

“The politics of geoengineering is really weird,” said Benjamin Day, a
senior campaigner on the Climate & Energy Justice team at Friends of the
Earth. He said it was odd to share a goal with groups who seem to be trying
to discredit the government and reflect what he called a “detachment from
the truth.”


[image: A person stands for a portrait in dark green foliage.]
“The politics of geoengineering is really weird,” said Benjamin Day, a
senior campaigner with the Climate & Energy Justice team at Friends of the
Earth.Credit...Ann Hermes for The New York Times

The fear and misinformation around geoengineering was on display earlier
this year in Alameda, Calif., where scientists sprayed water vapor mixed
with sea salts a short distance off the coast. They were testing a device
that might someday be used to brighten clouds to reflect sunlight back into
space. The Alameda experiment was harmless; the scientists just wanted to
observe how the particles moved through the air.

But residents were so worried, they convinced the City Council to shut it
down
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/05/climate/alameda-cloud-brightening-geoengineering.html>,
even though Alameda’s own examination said the experiment posed no danger
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/23/climate/cloud-brightening-geoengineering.html>
to
public health or the environment.

Researchers argue a ban on geoengineering that includes preliminary
experiments would hamstring science. A British science agency said this
month that it would provide $75 million to test geoengineering technologies
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/13/climate/united-kingdom-geoengineering-research.html>,
including outdoor experiments, because without physical tests “there is no
prospect of being able to make proper judgments” about
whethergeoengineering is feasible and safe.

“As pressure grows to geoengineer the planet, we damn well better have the
science to understand as well as we can what the benefits might be and what
the downsides might be, before decisions are made,” said Fred Krupp,
president of the Environmental Defense Fund, which this year committed
millions to fund geoengineering research
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/10/climate/edf-solar-geoengineering-research.html>
.
[image: A person in a pink shirt sits among a sea of desks with plush red
chairs behind them.]
Karen MacBeth, a former member of the Rhode Island House of
Representatives, in the seat she previously held. Credit...Christopher
Capozziello for The New York Times

The national campaign to ban geoengineering can be traced back to Rhode
Island in 2014, when a lawmaker looked to the sky and saw a conspiracy.

Karen MacBeth, a state representative and educator, introduced a bill that
would fine or imprison anyone who knowingly engaged in geoengineering
within Rhode Island, arguing it could damage soil, water and air quality.
She believes she was the first state lawmaker in the country to propose
such a ban.

The text of Ms. MacBeth’s bill
<https://legiscan.com/RI/text/H7655/id/972976> listed what it said were
geoengineering’s potential harmful side effects, including changes in
precipitation patterns, increased acid rain, harm to the Earth’s ozone
layer and less effective solar panels.

In an interview, Ms. MacBeth, who left office in 2017, attributed her
concern about geoengineering to something not mentioned in her bill: She
believed that someone was already using airplanes to deliberately emit
chemicals into the air.

“As a child, you would look up and see these big clouds and bright blue
skies,” Ms. MacBeth said. “And then all of a sudden, I started to see these
streaks coming from planes that didn’t disappear.”

She worried the streaks came from a harmful substance. “It’s now happening
worldwide,” she added.

Ms. MacBeth’s beliefs are better known as the “chemtrails” conspiracy
theory, which posits that airplanes are secretly emitting dangerous
chemical trails, as opposed to water vapor naturally released as
condensation from planes’ engines, which turns to visible trails of ice
crystals in the cold air. There is no evidence supporting the chemtrails
theory, which has attracted many followers through social media.

“Some people say it’s the local government, or the United States. Other
people say there’s a secret world organization behind it,” said Sijia Xiao,
a postdoctoral researcher at Carnegie Mellon University, who wrote a
peer-reviewed
paper <https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/3479598> about the conspiracy
theory. “Some people say it’s for poisoning the population. Some people say
it’s for modifying the weather.”


A Democrat turned Republican, Ms. MacBeth repeatedly filed her legislation,
never getting a vote on it. After she left office, other Rhode Island
lawmakers picked up her cause and kept reintroducing the bill.

The campaign against geoengineering got a boost after June 2023, when the
White House, directed by Congress, released a federal research agenda for
solar geoengineering
<https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Congressionally-Mandated-Report-on-Solar-Radiation-Modification.pdf>.
The Biden administration made clear that federal research into
geoengineering remains limited. But the report said outdoor experiments,
combined with computer models and lab studies, could be valuable.
[image: A person in a bright pink shirt holds a phone showing a photograph
of streaks in the sky over a neighborhood.]
Ms. MacBeth shows a photo of streaks left by airplanes, which she worries
contain harmful substances.Credit...Christopher Capozziello for The New
York Times

That was enough to flood X with derisive posts
<https://x.com/RobSchneider/status/1675409271130058752?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1675409271130058752%7Ctwgr%5E411c18f7115c2402f35c8d75368af8fc00251c95%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.foxnews.com%2Fus%2Fbiden-admin-gets-burned-after-considering-study-block-sun>
 and provoke headlines in conservative media like
<https://www.foxnews.com/media/white-house-report-signals-openness-manipulating-sunlight-prevent-climate-change>
“White
House Report Signals Openness to Manipulating Sunlight to Prevent Climate
Change.”

Since January, Republican lawmakers have introduced legislation to ban
geoengineering in New Hampshire, Tennessee, Kentucky, South Dakota,
Minnesota, Ohio, South Carolina and Pennsylvania. Most of those bills
resemble the legislation introduced in Rhode Island.
∴

Many of the activists and lawmakers who want to ban geoengineering display
a libertarian streak.

Jason Gerhard, a state lawmaker who sponsored a bill to ban geoengineering
in New Hampshire, says the federal income tax is applied too broadly, and
served 12 years in prison after being convicted of supplying weapons to a
couple involved in a standoff with federal marshals over unpaid taxes. He
ran for sheriff this year in Merrimack County, N.H., promising to
investigate geoengineering. “People are tired of the intentional polluting
of our skies. No more geoengineering!” Mr. Gerhard wrote on X.
<https://x.com/JasonGerhardNH/status/1832800344218161551>

Doug Mastriano, the Republican Pennsylvania state senator who lost his bid
for governor in 2022 despite an endorsement from Donald J. Trump,
introduced a bill to ban geoengineering in his state in June. Mr.
Mastriano, a Christian nationalist and subscriber to QAnon conspiracy
theories, said in a news release
<https://senatormastriano.com/2024/06/26/pa-must-protect-people-and-nature-from-polluting-atmospheric-experiments/>
that
“the potential for irreparable harm to life and property resulting from
solar geoengineering justifies an outright ban.”

His office did not respond to a request for comment.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who ended an independent bid for the White House
last month, has also voiced concerns about geoengineering, saying in a
statement that it can have “serious unforeseen ecological consequences.”

During an episode of his podcast last year called “Are Chemtrails Real?
<https://podcasts.apple.com/be/podcast/are-chemtrails-real-with-dane-wigington/id1552000243?i=1000602210082>,”
Mr. Kennedy said the issue of climate change had been “hijacked” by the
World Economic Forum and Microsoft founder Bill Gates.

“They’re doing the same thing to us that the pharmaceutical industry does,
which is they aggravate the problem, and then sell us the solution,” Mr.
Kennedy said. “And of course the solution that they want for climate are
more social controls, and then the big solution of geoengineering projects
— which of course Bill Gates is funding all over the world.”

A spokesman for Mr. Gates declined to comment.
[image: A person siting at a table with microphones, documents, and
notebooks as they speak to a panel of government officials out of frame.]
Denise Sibley testifying in support of the Tennessee legislation to ban
solar geoengineering in March.Credit...Tennessee General Assembly

The campaign’s sole success so far has been Tennessee. The witness who
testified most often in support of the ban was Denise Sibley, an internist
in Johnson City, Tenn., and a founder of the group that became East
Tennessee Freedom.

Dr. Sibley told lawmakers that geoengineering was happeningacross the
country, and cited as evidence the White House report, which says no such
thing.

Republicans praised her. “I do appreciate your coming to us with this,”
said Janice Bowling, a state senator. “I have been hearing about this from
constituents for quite a time, and the fact that it is taking place over
Tennessee.”

Frank Niceley, another Republican lawmaker, said “this will be my wife’s
favorite bill of the year. She has been worried about this, I bet 10 years.
It’s been going on a long, long time.”

The Tennessee ban
<https://wapp.capitol.tn.gov/apps/BillInfo/Default.aspx?BillNumber=HB2063&GA=113>
prohibits
the “intentional injection, release, or dispersion, by any means, of
chemicals, chemical compounds, substances, or apparatus within the borders
of the state into the atmosphere with the express purpose of affecting
temperature, weather, or intensity of the sunlight.”

That would include cloud seeding, a decades-old practice in which chemicals
are injected into clouds to trigger precipitation. Augustus Doricko, chief
executive of a cloud seeding company, testified that the legislation would
prevent farmers from using a common tool.

“If you’re in favor of depriving farmers in Tennessee from having the best
technology available in other states, I would ask you to vote for the bill
as it is,” Mr. Doricko told lawmakers.

Lobbying for the bill’s passage was Ms. Goodrich, the anti-vaccine
activist, who described a nationwide anti-geoengineering campaign on a
podcast called “Rebunked.” <https://www.boomplay.com/episode/7094570>

Ms. Goodrich said that geoengineering was government overreach, similar to
vaccine mandates.

“They’re experimenting on us without our consent,” she said on the podcast.
“We went from being dirty germ emitters during Covid, to now we’re dirty
carbon emitters. And you know, both of these things are false, and they’re
looking to infringe on our rights.”


Ms. Goodrich said East Tennessee Freedom got model legislation from a woman
named Jolie Diane, who runs a website called Zero Geoengineering. “Jolie is
an amazing wealth of information,” Ms. Goodrich said.

She credited Ms. Diane for getting bans introduced in New Hampshire,
Kentucky and South Dakota, among other places.

Ms. Diane said in a statement that she was “not at liberty to disclose the
specifics” of her interactions with state lawmakers. Ms. Goodrich and Dr.
Sibley did not respond to requests for comment.

On her Zero Geoengineering website, Ms. Diane warns against other perceived
threats, including vaccine mandates, fifth-generation wireless
connectivity, known as 5G, and genetically modified crops.


Ms. Diane’s efforts to ban geoengineering around the country appear to date
from at least 2018, when she gave a presentation at a Rhode Island library.
In a recording of that presentation
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3OhYU0y1MwU>, Ms. Diane said that
chemicals were being sprayed by the military, the Central Intelligence
Agency and the “deep state.”

“We’re using this bill as a model and a template when we go to different
states,” Ms. Diane said at the event. “We adapt it for the different
states, to make it specific. And now they have hope too.”

*Source: NewYork Times*

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