Climate crisis solution?

A startup is attempting to combat climate change by seeding the skies with sulfur dioxide鈥揻illed balloons. Mount Holyoke鈥檚 Kevin Surprise says scientists think the venture is full of holes.

Solar geoengineering, the idea that humans can hack the atmosphere to slow global warming, is getting the cold shoulder from scientists, even as Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and venture capitalists continue to pump it up.

One startup company dedicated to turning down the sun鈥檚 heat recently made an international splash by launching unsanctioned balloons in Mexico to release sulfur dioxide and reflect back some of the sun鈥檚 rays before they heat the Earth. The Mexican government stepped in, and the company is now working back in the states. spoke to Kevin Surprise, lecturer in environmental studies, about the feasibility of the venture.

鈥淚 have not seen a single person in the field say this is a good idea,鈥 he said.

According to , the United Nations Environment Programme is calling for a 鈥渇ull-scale global review鈥 of the technology and a 鈥渕ultinational framework for how it should be governed,鈥 despite having issued a report in February which found that the technology is not yet safe or viable.

Surprise, who was a signatory on an calling to stop the normalization of solar geoengineering as a way to address climate change, says one of its biggest issues is the fact that the approach does not address the underlying causes of global warming and may, in fact, exacerbate them.

鈥淲here is a discussion of the political and economic interests that will actively work to use solar geoengineering to expand fossil fuels and maintain other polluting activities that enrich the wealthy and corporations?鈥 he said.

Surprise was also interviewed on an episode of Vox鈥檚 podcast 鈥溾 titled 鈥淏lock the sun, save the earth?鈥 

鈥淚t鈥檚 rooted in a very Silicon Valley way of thinking about problems,鈥 he said. 鈥淗ack the planet rather than going through the hard work to get to the root of the problem.鈥 Surprise noted that the very reforms that may be needed to reduce production of planet-warming gasses may threaten the economic elite.

Furthermore, he told Vox, in the geopolitical reality we face today, maintaining the alliances and infrastructure to support a global solar geoengineering project in the long term is not realistic.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know why we would want to embark on such a risky venture in the world that we have now where we can鈥檛 even agree on some of the most basic measures to deal with climate change,鈥 he said.

鈥淚f we do not draw down carbon and reduce carbon dioxide emissions,鈥 the underlying issue will continue to worsen, he said. 鈥淸If we] mask the warming effect with solar geoengineering, we are setting ourselves up for a really dangerous situation that is often referred to as the 鈥榯ermination shock.鈥欌

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