The UK government is poised to approve an experiment seeking ways to eliminate ways to combat “run-control climate change” in order to combat “run-control climate change.”
According to Daily telegraphMany possible options for climate control have been considered by scientists with government approval.
Outdoor field trials, which include injecting aerosols into the atmosphere and brightening clouds to reflect the sunlight, are considered by scientists as a way to prevent outrageous climate change.
Aria, the government’s advanced research and invention funding agency, has set aside £50 million for projects to be announced in the coming weeks.
Professor Mark Symes, a highly advanced research and invention organization, is a program director at ARIA. Telecommunications We confirmed that there was a “small controlled outdoor experiment on a particular approach.”
“We’re going to announce who we’ve funded in a few weeks, and we’ll make it clear that there could be outdoor experiments,” he said.
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“One of the missing parts of this discussion was physical data from the real world. The model can convey a lot to us. Everything we do will be safe by design. We are absolutely committed to responsible research, including responsible outdoor research.”
The professor said safety is important, adding, “There are strong requirements for time-length experiments and their reversibility and we will not fund the release of toxic substances to the environment.”
Telecommunications Geography engineering projects that attempt to artificially change the climate have proven controversial, with critics claiming it could potentially damage.
This has been attracting attention earlier when scientists began to “dark the sun” as a way to protect the Earth’s surface.
As reported by Breitbart News, Sun Dimming Aerosols are released into the Earth’s atmosphere.
In 2018, research from Harvard and Yale University scientists Published In a journal called Environmental Survey Letter It proposes the use of a technique called stratospheric aerosol injection to combat climate change.
In the proposed technology, scientists launch sulfate particles into the Earth’s low stratosphere at an altitude of 12 miles.





