Thoughts on Geo Engineering?

Thoughts on Geo Engineering?

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STe_rsv4

Original Poster:

877 posts

110 months

It has been confirmed that the UK will go ahead with a £50m Geo Engineering experiment to try and "dim the sun"

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/bl...

Before 2020 I would have called anyone out for even suspecting this was a thing as a bit nutty but nothing since then really surprises me anymore (grade 3 tin foil hatter these days wink )

Now call me cynical, but the spraying of millions of tonnes of chemicals / particulates into the atmosphere doesn't sound like the safest thing that can effect humans / animals and flora. Not to mention, we live in a country with far not enough sunny days and I would prefer not to live under a grey haze.

Has this government gone absolutely barking mad allowing this?

Edited by STe_rsv4 on Wednesday 30th April 10:55

simon_harris

2,026 posts

46 months

They have been already doing this for years, they know exactly what is going to happen and how bad it is for us

  1. chemtrails
  2. 5g
  3. lizzardpeeple

P-Jay

10,972 posts

203 months

I'm no scientist, but this has all the hallmarks of a law of unintended consequences fk up.

Hoofy

78,320 posts

294 months

P-Jay said:
I'm no scientist, but this has all the hallmarks of a law of unintended consequences fk up.
That was my immediate thought. But never fear, if it goes wrong, we can have a new Dodgy Cloud Tax bestowed upon us.

Terminator X

17,239 posts

216 months

Also millions of solar panels required for Net Zero whilst "dimming the Sun" spin

TX.

otolith

60,690 posts

216 months

Trash_panda

7,659 posts

216 months

P-Jay said:
I'm no scientist, but this has all the hallmarks of a law of unintended consequences fk up.
Nah, it'll be global warming causing this catastrophic fk up, not man made meddling

Tim330

1,212 posts

224 months

I read the headline and thought at first it was like the film Sunshine but adapted a little, oops.

vixen1700

25,626 posts

282 months

I mentioned this last week in the sauna and nobody was even slightly aware of it. In fact one woman said it was a good thing as her skiing had been st the last couple of years. confused

Personally, I think people should be up in arms about even the thought of this.

Skeptisk

8,798 posts

121 months

STe_rsv4 said:
It has been confirmed that the UK will go ahead with a £50m Geo Engineering experiment to try and "dim the sun"

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/bl...

Before 2020 I would have called anyone out for even suspecting this was a thing as a bit nutty but nothing since then really surprises me anymore (grade 3 tin foil hatter these days wink )

Now call me cynical, but the spraying of millions of tonnes of chemicals / particulates into the atmosphere doesn't sound like the safest thing that can effect humans / animals and flora. Not to mention, we live in a country with far not enough sunny days and I would prefer not to live under a grey haze.

Has this government gone absolutely barking mad allowing this?

Edited by STe_rsv4 on Wednesday 30th April 10:55
Just because British scientists are involved does not mean that the plan is to reduce sunlight above the UK. The problem is global warming, not British warming.

Yes diddling with the atmosphere is probably not a great plan…but we are doing that anyway with burning of fossil fuels. Geo Engineering is a last resort if we can’t shift to green energy fast enough.

croyde

24,520 posts

242 months

It's the next step to Terraforming Mars.

tegwin

1,657 posts

218 months

STe_rsv4 said:
Now call me cynical, but the spraying of millions of tonnes of chemicals / particulates into the atmosphere doesn't sound like the safest thing that can effect humans / animals and flora. Not to mention, we live in a country with far not enough sunny days and I would prefer not to live under a grey haze.

Has this government gone absolutely barking mad allowing this?

Edited by STe_rsv4 on Wednesday 30th April 10:55
If you read the entire info from the funding organisation you will see that they have no intention of spraying millions of tonnes of chemicals anywhere as part of the projects.
Looks to me like they are doing the sensible thing and investigating the science and engineering behind the hypothesis in order to provide future decision makers with facts about how safe or not it would be. one of many strands of research that helps inform decisions.

Would you prefer that no research be done atall so we remain ignorant of the possibilities and their consequences?

Tisy

380 posts

4 months

Skeptisk said:
Yes diddling with the atmosphere is probably not a great plan…but we are doing that anyway with burning of fossil fuels. Geo Engineering is a last resort if we can’t shift to green energy fast enough.
confused

Umm, they've been harping on about burning coal and needing to shut down all coal power stations for decades because global warming and we all gonna die. What does burning coal produce a stload of? Sulfur dioxide. So sulfur dioxide very bad and need to stop immediately to save planet.
But now they're gonna load up a bunch of 777s with...... sulfur dioxide and spray it all over the globe and us, because now apparently sulfur dioxide is good for planet.

confused

It's all a massive load of bks and obvious to anyone with more than a couple of brain cells.

STe_rsv4

Original Poster:

877 posts

110 months

tegwin said:
STe_rsv4 said:
Now call me cynical, but the spraying of millions of tonnes of chemicals / particulates into the atmosphere doesn't sound like the safest thing that can effect humans / animals and flora. Not to mention, we live in a country with far not enough sunny days and I would prefer not to live under a grey haze.

Has this government gone absolutely barking mad allowing this?

Edited by STe_rsv4 on Wednesday 30th April 10:55
If you read the entire info from the funding organisation you will see that they have no intention of spraying millions of tonnes of chemicals anywhere as part of the projects.
Looks to me like they are doing the sensible thing and investigating the science and engineering behind the hypothesis in order to provide future decision makers with facts about how safe or not it would be one of many strands of research that helps inform decisions.

Would you prefer that no research be done at all so we remain ignorant of the possibilities and their consequences?
In bold - My cynicism from the Covid debacle somehow prevents me from believing this would be the governments correct course of action.
Im thinking more "act first, worry about the consequences later"