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UK government to approve geoengineering experiments to block sunlight in effort to curb climate change despite alarming risks

Multiple reports suggest that the UK will grant approval for solar geoengineering experiments to block sunlight to curb climate change, despite uncertainty and surprising risks.

Telecommunications The externally conducted geo-engineering experiment aimed at combating climate change is expected to be carried out by advanced research and inventive agencies, and is reported to be published in the coming weeks.

The experiment is said to be one of the most expensive solar power projects in history.

In February 2021, the UK government announced the creation of advanced research and invention institutions. Self-proclaimed The “independent research institution funding high-risk, highly-reward scientific research” agency is led by “a well-known and world-leading scientist who is given the freedom to identify and fund transformative science and technology.”

The UK government said that Alia “helps strengthen the UK’s position while shaping the national efforts to accumulate better through innovation.”

The UK government has pledged approximately $1 billion in funds to the most inspiring inventors to turn transformative ideas into new technologies, discoveries, products and services.

British technology news site uktn Previously, he said, “We are inspired by DARPA, a US government research and development agency that played a pivotal role in developing technologies such as GPS, drones, and weather satellites.”

Aria was officially released in January 2023.

The experiments include geoengineering of the Sun. There, particles are injected into the air, deflecting some of the solar radiation into space, with the aim of lowering the Earth’s surface temperature.

Professor Mark Sims, program director at Aria, said the looming threat of climate change is a strong reason to study controversial solar power.

“One of the missing parts of this debate was physical data from the real world,” Symes told The Telegraph. “Models can tell us a lot.”

“Everything we do will be safe by design.”

“There are strong requirements for time-length experiments and their reversibility and we will not fund the release of toxic substances to the environment,” emphasized Symes.

This study includes “small controlled outdoor experiments on a specific approach.”

Symes noted that the agency is making it clear when outdoor experiments could be carried out.

“The risks are immeasurable.”

Guardian Possible experiments reported that “we may include sucking up sunlight reaching the Earth’s surface by firing clouds of reflective particles into the atmosphere or by using a seawater spray to brighten the clouds more.

New York Times In September 2024, the experiment reported that “injecting aerosols such as sulfur dioxide into the stratosphere or shooting submarine aerosols into the lowland ocean clouds to reflect more sunlight from Earth.”

“Every time a naturally occurring sulfur in jet fuel flys, it is released into the lowest stratosphere, causing a small cooling effect,” said Dr. Sebastian East Ham, a senior lecturer at Sustainable Aviation at Imperial College London, telling the Telegraph.

“In the same way, the country’s countrail causes accidental ciliary cloud corrections, but in this case it accidentally causes curls rather than preventing or thinning them,” explained East Ham. “This shows the fact that it is theoretically possible. [to cool the planet] Although we use current technology, there are many practical questions that we need to answer before doing it on a large scale. ”

The experiment is said to be one of the most expensive solar power projects in history.

According to The New York Times, ARIA will be awarded approximately $75 million to “exploring ideas to determine whether any of those ideas actually work, including outdoor experiments to investigate ideas for artificially cooling a planet.”

As reported by Blaze News in November 2024, billionaire Bill Gates is digging into solar power to stop the sun.

However, solar power projects to change the climate have been highly scrutinized due to the negative side effects and unintended consequences that may arise from real experiments.

a study Released in December 2024, it has shown that solar experiments can cause more contamination, damage the ozone layer and increase mortality from skin cancer.

Columbia University Climate School It’s attracting attention In April 2024, research has shown that stratospheric aerosol injections can weaken the stratospheric ozone layer, alter precipitation patterns, and affect agriculture, ecosystem services, marine life and air quality. Furthermore, the impact and risks vary depending on the way and location of deployment.

The United Nations Environment Programme was released in February 2023 Report Regarding the potential risks and consequences of correcting solar radiation, including fraudulent motives from fraudulent conditions.

“A variety of concerns about SRM were raised in the report, including a scenario in which if SRM was deployed unilaterally by a rogue or non-state actor, like private companies, it could introduce a set of new complex geopolitical or security threats.”

Lilifour, the International Center for Environmental Law, CNN In 2023, “Just because we are desperate, solargeo engineering won’t be a good idea because the risks are so immeasurable.”

Last month, the Florida Senate passed a bill banning geoengineering and weather correction activities.

Blaze Media recently delved deep into cloud seeding and weather manipulation. You can read this here.

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