Mail & Guardian

Government­s silent about geoenginee­ring the climate

- Sipho Kings

There are strange events happening that affect all of us. They involve planes spraying chemicals across the sky and robots tinkering with oceans’ ecosystems. But no government will talk about its manipulati­on of environmen­tal processes that affect the Earth’s climate. Their work has potentiall­y catastroph­ic consequenc­es for humanity.

Unwilling to do much to halt global warming, government­s have turned to geoenginee­ring. This covers anything that changes weather patterns, helps to store carbon emissions, and stops the sun’s rays coming through the atmosphere. The activities range from spraying chemicals into the sky to create rain clouds to putting mirrors in the atmosphere to deflect the sun’s rays. One experiment in Canada — a rare case of these being made public — involved dropping iron filings into the ocean to kill plankton so it would sink to the bottom of the ocean and trap carbon dioxide.

But where climate change begins is in nature — with volcanoes. When they erupt, they have a dramatic effect on global temperatur­es. The 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippine­s dropped global temperatur­es by half a degree in 1992. An eruption in the 1600s of Huaynaputi­na in Peru — the largest recorded volcanic eruption in South America — created half a decade of cold summers on that continent.

Eruptions throw vast quantities of ash and sulphur dioxide into the atmosphere; 5km3 of waste were thrown up by Pinatubo. This waste deflects sunlight and cools the world. Importantl­y, that change happens in a few months when it normally takes centuries for that magnitude of warming or cooling to happen.

A quick-fix such as the Canadian experiment has become attractive to government­s in their quest for an easy solution to runaway global warming. All but one of the hottest years on record have been in this century, with 2016 breaking all previous records. The Paris Agreement has countries committing to keep warming below 2.7°C. But that’s bad news because a 1.5°C increase will make Africa’s interior too hot for farming.

Geoenginee­ring is for the greater goal of cooling the planet. But problems arise when countries tinker with the climate for their own gain. Imagine country A (a big state with a big army) sprays chemicals into the atmosphere to cause the moisture blowing through the sky to fall as rain. That means the moisture meant for country B (a small state with little political muscle) doesn’t materialis­e, and now country B has a drought.

Country B should be able to protest against t his. Treaties regulate anything from bolt sizes to how outer space should be settled but none exists on how countries can geoenginee­r the world around them.

This year’s United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity took a tentative step towards this, asking countries to adopt the precaution­ary principle in the field.

But its official record of decision on “climate change geoenginee­ring” merely asked countries for more informatio­n, noting that “very few” had responded to previous requests. And so there is no oversight on how countries tinker with the world’s climate.

Imagine a scenario i n which country B decides to fight back.

 ?? Photo: Ogie Alcantara/AFP ?? Climate changer naturally: Volcanic debris engulfs a river near Mount Pinatubo, in the Philippine­s in 1991. The volcano caused global temperatur­es to drop by half a degree.
Photo: Ogie Alcantara/AFP Climate changer naturally: Volcanic debris engulfs a river near Mount Pinatubo, in the Philippine­s in 1991. The volcano caused global temperatur­es to drop by half a degree.

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