https://www.commondreams.org/news/geoengineering

*Author*
Jessica Corbett

*30 January 2025*

*'Geoengineering Fails Again': Coalition Cheers End of Arctic Ice Project*

One campaigner said the cancellation "marks another monumental victory for
our planet and future generations, a victory where Indigenous peoples'
resistance has been central."

Environmental and Indigenous activists declared
<https://handsoffmotherearth.org/resources/press-release-geoengineering-fails-again-arctic-ice-project-shuts-down-over-ecological-concerns/>
Thursday
that "geoengineering fails again," welcoming the shutdown of a project that
aimed to use "a reflective material to protect and restore Arctic sea ice,"
which is rapidly disappearing
<https://www.nasa.gov/earth/arctic-sea-ice-near-historic-low-antarctic-ice-continues-decline/>
as
humanity's reliance on fossil fuels heats
<https://www.commondreams.org/news/alaska-arctic-climate> the planet.

Noting that "we committed to moving forward only if we could conclusively
demonstrate both the safety and effectiveness of our approach," the Arctic
Ice Project team confirmed
<https://www.arcticiceproject.org/a-final-chapter/> in an online statement
that it "will be concluding its research and winding down the organization."

"While our climate impact simulations have shown promising results (with a
new scientific paper forthcoming), recent ecotoxicological tests have
revealed potential risks to the Arctic food chain," the team said. "Our
initial approach was to continue research aimed at addressing these
concerns. Upon further reflection, however, the board decided that the
combination of these new test results with broad skepticism toward
geoengineering, resistance to introducing new materials into the Arctic
Ocean, and the increasingly challenging funding environment (and paucity of
federal research dollars), the most realistic path was to conclude our
research."

"Nature is not a laboratory; it is a living entity we are in relationship
with."

Responding in a Thursday statement, Hands Off Mother Earth Alliance global
coordinator Coraina de la Plaza said that "the cancellation of the Arctic
Ice Project marks another monumental victory for our planet and future
generations, a victory where Indigenous peoples' resistance has been
central. This outcome reflects the power of community advocacy, and while
the fight against geoengineering is far from over, this is a significant
step to continue protecting the Arctic against industry greed and vested
interests."

Panganga Pungowiyi, climate geoengineering organizer at Indigenous
Environmental Network, called the decision "long overdue."

"We are concerned for the community members in Utqiaġvik who were made to
spread football fields of this material onto their frozen lake. For years,
we stood in defense of Indigenous lands and the sacred ice that has
sustained our communities for generations," Pungowiyi explained. "Our
concerns about the reckless use of harmful materials were dismissed, yet we
knew that the health of our ecosystems and the wisdom of our people must
not be overlooked. We continually showed up in defense of free prior and
informed consent
<https://www.un.org/development/desa/indigenouspeoples/publications/2016/10/free-prior-and-informed-consent-an-indigenous-peoples-right-and-a-good-practice-for-local-communities-fao/>,
and made our presence known."

"We continue to state firmly that nature is not a laboratory; it is a
living entity we are in relationship with," the organizer added. "While we
find relief in this victory, we remain vigilant against other forms of
geoengineering that threaten our sacred spaces. Together, we will continue
to educate and empower our communities, standing with our lands, waters,
and air for the generations to come."

Silvia Ribeiro, Latin America director at ETC Group, said that "today we
celebrate the wisdom, experience, and work of Indigenous peoples and
organizations in Alaska that stopped this project and stand in solidarity
with their vigilance against similar experiments that are planned in Arctic
regions."

Mary Church, geoengineering campaign manager at the Center for
International Environmental Law, also framed the development as "a huge
victory for the Indigenous communities at the forefront of resistance to
the industries and vested interests that are polluting the planet and
gambling with our collective future."

"Geoengineering approaches do nothing to address the root causes of the
climate crisis and instead delay real solutions, offering a free pass to
polluters," she stressed. "Following the recent reaffirmation of the global
moratorium
<https://www.ciel.org/news/cbd-cop16-reaffirms-geoengineering-moratorium-fails-fossil-fuel-phaseout/>
on
geoengineering at the U.N. biodiversity summit
<https://www.commondreams.org/news/cop16-biodiversity> in Colombia,
governments need to act to prevent harmful outdoor experiments and the
slippery slope to legitimizing deployment. Instead of betting on highly
speculative techno-fixes, governments must prioritize an urgent and just
transition away from fossil fuels to protect vital Arctic ecosystems."

Benjamin Day, a senior campaigner for climate and energy justice at Friends
of the Earth <https://www.commondreams.org/tag/friends-of-the-earth> U.S.,
also looked to the fight ahead.

"The decision to shut down the Arctic Ice Project completes the
Geoengineering Hype Cycle that we now see so often: Entrepreneurs swoop
into local communities claiming they have a solution to global warming,
assuring everyone it's completely safe and ignoring the red flags raised by
those with deep knowledge of local ecosystems," Day said. "After countless
wasted dollars and press attention, it's revealed the community was right
and geoengineering is not a safe or responsible way to address climate
change."

"Collectively," he argued, "we must stop enabling this cycle and work
towards rapidly and equitably transitioning our communities to sustainable
energy and land-use practices."

The winding down of the Arctic Ice Project comes amid global fears about
what the recent return of Republican U.S. President Donald Trump—who cozied
up <https://www.commondreams.org/news/trump-oil-industry-donations> to Big
Oil executives on the campaign trail and promised to "drill, baby, drill,"
despite the devastating impacts of fossil fuels—will mean for the future of
a planet that last year saw
<https://www.commondreams.org/news/hottest-year-on-record-2024>
record-shattering
temperatures.

Already, Trump has ditched
<https://www.commondreams.org/news/trump-platform-on-energy> the Paris
climate agreement (again), lifted a freeze on new liquefied natural gas
exports, declared a "national energy emergency," and named various fossil
fuel allies to key positions. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee
Zeldin <https://www.commondreams.org/news/lee-zeldin-epa> and
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy
<https://www.commondreams.org/news/department-of-transportation-fuel-economy>
took
their posts earlier this week, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum was confirmed
<https://apnews.com/article/burgum-trump-interior-secretary-energy-a123dea9f2a1f03a1ed95f316593740d>
by
the Republican-controlled Senate Thursday evening, and Chris Wright,
Trump's pick for energy secretary, awaits
<https://www.commondreams.org/news/trumps-cabinet-picks-2025> confirmation.

*Source: Common Dream*

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