The United Kingdom government is ready to approve experiments that seek ways to attenuate sunlight and divert it to combat “fugitive climate change,” says a report on Wednesday.
According to him Daily TelegraphScientists are considering a series of possible options for climate control with government approval:
Outdoor field tests that could include injecting aerosols into the atmosphere or illuminating clouds to reflect the sun, are the bee considered by scientists as a way of preventing fugitive climate change.
Aria, the Advanced Government Invention Research and Financing Agency, has reserved £ 50 million for projects, which will be announced next week.
Professor Mark Symes, director of the Aria program (Advanced Research and Invention Agency), is informed by the Telegraph To have confirmed that there will be “small outdoor experiments controlled in particular approaches.”
“We will announce who we have given funds in a few weeks and when we do, we will be clear when any outdoor experiment could take place,” he said.
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“One of the missing pieces in this debate were the physical data of the real world. Models can only tell us a lot. Everything we do will be safe by design. We are absolutely committed to response research, including responsible outdoor.”
The professor continued to say that security will be important, adding that “we have solid requirements around while experiments and reversibility and we will not finance the release of toxic substances to the environment.”
He Telegraph The Geo -Endeniery Projects that see the artificial alter the climate have proven to be controversial, and critics argue that they could bring harmful effects.
This has been observed previously when scientists sought to “mitigate the sun” as a way of protecting the surface of the earth.
As Breitbart News reported, the aerosols of solar attenuation related to the atmosphere of the Earth have been proposed as a method.
In 2018, Harvard and Yale University research was published in a called magazine Environmental Research Letters Which proposes to use a technique called stratospheric aerosol injection to fight climate change.
The technique of proposing would see the scientists who launched sulfate parts to the lower stratosphere of the earth at altitudes up to 12 miles high.