Collapse: Earth Overshoot Day

grarpamp grarpamp at gmail.com
Wed Dec 28 21:08:36 PST 2022


Stupid humanity dead set on collapsing itself, next up,
turning Human DNA back into useless goo...


Geoengineering Startup Begins Releasing Sulfur Particles Into
Atmosphere In Attempt To 'Stop Climate Change'

A startup is launching weather balloons capable of releasing
reflective sulfur particles into the earth’s atmosphere, with the
stated aim of combating climate change through solar geoengineering,
while disregarding the negative consequences of such actions.

In solar geoengineering, attempts are made to manipulate the climate
by reflecting more sunlight away from earth. Theoretically, releasing
sulfur and other such compounds is believed to potentially cool down
the planet. Back in 1991, for example, when Mount Pinatubo in the
Philippines erupted, it released large amounts of sulfur dioxide into
the stratosphere that spread around the world and triggered a 1-degree
Fahrenheit cooling for the next 15 months. The California-based
startup, Make Sunsets, is believed to have launched the weather
balloons from Mexico.

In an interview with MIT Technology Review, Make Sunsets CEO Luke
Iseman said that he expects to be characterized as a “Bond villain”
for what the company is doing. But he insists that climate change is a
threat, and that since the world is moving slowly to address the
problem, a more radical solution is needed.

    “It’s morally wrong, in my opinion, for us not to be doing this,”
Iseman said.

    What’s important is “to do this as quickly and safely as we can.”

Make Sunsets is attempting to make revenue out of its efforts, seeking
to sell $10 “cooling credits” for releasing a gram of particles into
the atmosphere. The startup has raised $750,000 in funding. It plans
on raising the sulfur payload in the future as well as using telemetry
devices and other sensors.
Climatic Downsides

A 2018 blog by David Keith, a leading expert on solar geoengineering,
explains that he is opposed to commercial work on such technologies
due to the fact that commercial development cannot achieve the
transparency and trust that is necessary for the world to make
decisions on the matter.

Solar geoengineering must only be done by “transparent democratic
institutions,” he insisted.

    “Solar geoengineering is large-scale climate modification which
inherently has global consequences that are difficult to quantify even
after deployment. DAC [direct air capture] results in emissions
reductions (carbon-neutral synthetic fuels) or net CO2 removal
(sequestration), with local impacts that can be measured with
reasonable accuracy,” he wrote.

In an interview with MIT, Shuchi Talati, a scholar-in-residence at
American University, says that Make Sunset’s actions could end up
negatively affecting scientific study on the matter, even leading to
reduced funding, boosting calls for restricting such studies, and
decreasing government support for it.

    “The current state of science is not good enough … to either
reject, or to accept, let alone implement [solar geoengineering] … To
go ahead with implementation at this stage is a very bad idea,” Janos
Pasztor, executive director of the Carnegie Climate Governance
Initiative, said in an email to the media outlet.

Widespread Dangers

Solar geoengineering can have devastating consequences for human
beings. Such attempts can end up altering the global hydrological
cycle, affecting monsoon activity. This can affect agriculture and
food security.

Reflecting sunlight to cool down the earth might also make people
carelessly pump out more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Excessive
CO2 can cause acidification of the oceans.

Moreover, if solar geoengineering were to be stopped suddenly after
using it for some time, it could lead to global warming at 10 times
more speed.

Solar geoengineering can reduce rainfall on some parts of the earth,
thereby affecting the local ecosystem. This would be particularly
harmful to evergreen forests and tropical ecosystems.

A change in rainfall, for example, can negatively affect vegetation,
which would be bad news for the wildlife that survives on them.


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