FPIF
Strategic Dialogue |
Global
Warming: The Quick Fix Is In
Pat Mooney |
February 20, 2007
Editor: John
Feffer, IRC |


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Hopes for the Kyoto Protocol are fading, and carbon
trading is a farce. To arrest climate change, industrialized
states can either "bite the bullet" and adopt socially
responsible policies to dramatically cut fossil fuel use and
useless consumption. Or they can hope for a "silver
bullet"—some new techno-fix that might let them continue to
pollute and avoid human extinction. The silver bullet may be
winning.
At the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the
U.S. government is
lobbying for "geoengineering" activities such as
deliberately polluting the stratosphere to deflect sunlight
and lower temperatures. At least nine national governments and
the European Union (EU) have supported experiments to spread
iron filings on the ocean surface to nurture plankton and
sequester carbon dioxide. At least a dozen additional
countries are involved in the modification of stratospheric
weather. Commercial carbon traders are engaging in ocean
fertilization as well. This experimentation by governments and
corporations is taking place in the absence of public
discussion.
Global warming demonstrates that we have already
geoengineered the earth's climate. However, the notion
that we can successfully correct our unintentional
destructiveness with intentional geoengineering seems
far-fetched. For the governments who caused the problem to
experiment together on geoengineering solutions is a grave
miscalculation. To do so outside the UN and without the
participation of the Global South, which bears the brunt of
global warming and would likely bear the risks of
geoengineering, is politically and ethically suspect.
A Brief History of Geoengineering
In 1975, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Newsweek
magazine joined forces to warn of "the Cooling World." It was
the same year that British scientists confirmed a hole over
the ozone layer above Antarctica. Also in 1975, the Soviet
Union and the United States submitted identical draft treaties
to the UN General Assembly prohibiting climate modification as
a military weapon.1
Thirty years later, everybody—including the U.S.
president—was talking about global warming. Scientists warned
that the temperature rise on the Arctic ice cap and on
Siberian permafrost could "tip" planet Earth into an
environmental tailspin. And, the U.S. Congress agreed to study
a bill that would establish a national weather modification
research program.
"Let's quit the debate about whether greenhouse gases are
caused by mankind or by natural causes," George W. Bush proposed
in 2006. "Let's just focus on technologies that deal with
the issue." One of the technological silver bullets the United
States is currently investigating is most commonly known as
geoengineering, which is the intentional and directed
manipulation of the earth and its ecosystems. Geoengineering
includes a wide range of schemes. Blasting particles of sulfur
into the stratosphere is supposed to shield us from the sun's
rays. Dumping iron particles in the oceans is supposed to
nurture CO 2 -absorbing plankton. And blasting clouds with
chemicals is supposed to nudge them into producing rain.
University of Calgary physicist, David Keith, refers to
geoengineering as "an expedient solution that uses additional
technology to counteract unwanted effects without eliminating
their root cause."2
The notion of a technological fix for global warming isn't
new. In the 1940s, Bernard Vonnegut—a well-respected
meteorologist and Kurt Vonnegut's brother—discovered that
silver iodide smoke could cause clouds to give up their
rain.3 His discovery kick-started serious
government efforts to manipulate the environment. Until then,
cloud-seeding had been the preserve of crackpots and con
artists. By 1951, however, 10% of the United States was under
clouds that had been commercially seeded.4
Governments and industry have a sometimes-ignoble history
tampering with the weather. The CIA's top-secret "Project
Popeye" rainmaking campaign, which began in 1966, ran for
seven years and conducted 2,300 cloud seeding missions over
the Ho Chi Minh Trail during the Vietnam War.5 The goal was to make the trail impassible
and, as a bonus, to drown out North Vietnam's rice crop. While
rains did increase, the Air Force couldn't establish a clear
link to its covert campaign.
Recently, more convincing experiments have focused on "
hygroscopic cloud seeding "—that is, warm-cloud seeding, as
opposed to cold-cloud seeding (glaciogenic). Results from
experiments at the South African National Precipitation and
Rainfall Enhancement Programme earned researchers there the
United Arab Emirates' 2005 Prize for Excellence in Advancing
the Science and Practice of Weather Modification. Other
warm-cloud seeding projects have taken place in the United
States, Thailand, China, India, Australia, Israel, South
Africa, Russia, United Arab Emirates, and Mexico.6 According to the UN World Meteorological
Organization (WMO), at least 26 governments were routinely
conducting weather-altering experiments in 2000.7 By 2003-2004, only 16 WMO member countries
reported weather modification activities, although weather
modification activities are known to have taken place in
several other countries.
Many of the world's military powers remain fascinated with
weather control. A U.S.
Air Force report entitled Weather as a Force
Multiplier: Owning the Weather in 2025 concluded that the
weather "can provide battlespace dominance to a degree never
before imagined," including the ability to thwart an enemy's
operations by enhancing a storm or by inducing drought and
making fresh water scarce. In 2004, two Chinese cities in
Henan province—Pingdingshan and Zhoukou—came close to fighting
when they both tried to alter local weather patterns by
blasting tiny silver iodide particles into the troposphere
(the lowest portion of Earth's atmosphere).8 The city downwind accused the city upwind
of stealing its weather. This hasn't deterred the Chinese
government from promising the International Olympic Committee
that China will use weather modification to guarantee sunny
days for the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
The history of weather modification—both for economic and
military purposes—is unquestionably spotty. Will governments
do any better responding to climate change? The initial
signs are not good. The Guardian recently reported, for
example, that the United States is unhappy with the draft of
an Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report
because of its "focus on the negative effects" of climate
change and its rejection of voluntary agreements. Instead,
U.S. negotiators are pushing for techno-fix strategies to be
given a prominent place in the final report's
recommendations.9
The U.S. message has been: we don't need to change our
lifestyle, just improve our efficiency. New technologies can
supersede belt-tightening and conservation. But this message
hits up against the reality of resource use. Humanity has
consumed more natural resources since World War II than in all
the years before.10 And world energy demand—despite
much-publicized potential improvements in efficiency—is
forecast to jump 60%, from 2002 to 2030, and to require about
$568 billion in new investments every year.11
So, if governments aren't prepared to ask their citizens to
change their lifestyles, is geoengineering a real option? The
concept is rapidly gaining ground.
Sky Change
Paul Crutzen stirred up a tempest in a teapot in August
2006 when he wrote an " editorial
essay" in Climatic Change magazine calling for
active research into the use of "sub-micrometer"-sized
sulfate-based aerosols to reflect sunlight in the stratosphere
in order to cool the earth. Crutzen, a Nobel-prize winning
scientist at the Max-Planck-Institute for Chemistry in Mainz,
Germany, opines that high-altitude balloons and artillery
cannons could be used to blast sulfur dioxide into the
stratosphere, in effect, simulating a volcanic eruption. The
sulfur dioxide would convert to sulfate particles. The cost,
he reckons, would run between $25 and $50 billion per year—a
figure he argues is well below the trillion dollars spent
annually by the world's governments on defense. Crutzen notes
that the price tag doesn't include the human cost of a
half-million premature deaths from particulate pollution.
Such tiny reflective particles could be resident in the air
for two years. Crutzen willingly acknowledges that this is a
risky proposition and insists that it should be undertaken
only if all else fails. He goes on to add that the political
will to do anything else seems to have failed already.
Crutzen's views are extremely controversial among
scientists. However, an editorial in the same issue of
Climatic Change by Ralph J. Cicerone, an atmospheric
chemist and president of the U.S. National Academy of
Sciences, supports further research on Crutzen's
geoengineering proposals. He told The New York Times in
mid-2006: "We should treat these ideas like any other research
and get into the mind-set of taking them seriously."12 Earlier in the year, Cicerone invited
Roger P. Angel, a well-established astronomer at the
University of Arizona, to speak at the Academy's annual
meeting. Dr. Angel has a plan to put trillions of lenses—each
about 2 feet wide but wafer thin—into orbit to deflect
sunlight.13
Between Cicerone's backing and Paul Crutzen's essay, it has
suddenly become politically correct to talk about
geoengineering as a legitimate response to climate change: a
credibility shift that The New York Times called a
"major reversal."14
What goes up, however, still (usually) comes down. Be it
silver iodide, sulfur, or salt spray, the ton of particles
that would need to be regularly blasted into the stratosphere
will find their way back to earth again. All the issues
related to environmental health and safety associated with
particulate pollution, including novel manufactured
nanoparticles, remain relevant for these intentional polluting
schemes. Climate change experts insist that we should
distinguish between unintended pollution and climate
modification schemes that pump particulate matter into the air
we breathe. But our lungs won't know the difference.15 According
to the World Health Organization, more than 4.5 million
people die each year from industrial and vehicle emissions and
from burning fuels indoors. Geoengineering the stratosphere
makes it easier for industry to continue atmospheric pollution
but compounds the potential problem by intentionally
contributing massively to particle pollution.
Sea Change
Not only are there serious proposals on the table to
restructure the stratosphere, governments and industry are
also contemplating major modifications to the ocean surface.
Since 1993, there have been at least 10 documented government
and/or private experiments to "seed" sections of the ocean's
surface to demonstrate the feasibility of iron fertilization
for sequestering carbon and countering global warming.
Additional ocean fertilization experiments are on the drawing
board for 2007.
In October 1993—a year after the Rio Earth Summit—a
U.S.-led expedition (dubbed IRONEX I) carpeted a 64 square
kilometer patch of ocean with iron particles. The location was
the eastern equatorial Pacific about 500 km south of Ecuador's
Galapagos Islands.16 The project was funded by the U.S.
Office of Naval Research and the U.S. National Science
Foundation and involved nine U.S. research institutions as
well as two British universities. The experiment resulted in a
doubling of plant biomass, a tripling of chlorophyll, and a
quadrupling in plant production.17 The researchers emphasized that their
experiments "are not intended as preliminary steps to climate
manipulation."18
Subsequent experiments in iron fertilization were either
inconclusive in their effect on carbon sequestration or had
worrisome results. For instance, a 2002 expedition, funded by
the National Science Foundation and the Department of Energy,
dumped almost three tons of iron particles from the Scripps
Institution of Oceanography research vessel. The results of
this experiment worried many. Dr. Kenneth Coale, chief
scientist on the expedition and director of the Moss Landing
Marine Laboratories in California, told
the science press at the time that iron fertilization
could theoretically sterilize portions of the Pacific.
With so many attempts and inconclusive results, one would
expect governments to move on to something else. However, if
iron fertilization of the ocean can suck up carbon dioxide on
a massive scale, carbon traders will be able to make money on
it. Carbon trading allows companies or individuals to buy the
rights to pollute (i.e., carbon credits) by investing in
projects that are deemed by "experts" to reduce emissions of
carbon dioxide. Many ocean scientists—even those who have
participated in iron fertilization studies in the past—reject
large-scale iron seeding as a means to combat climate change,
and they are distancing themselves from commercial iron
dumping ventures that aim to make money from the carbon
market.
As The Corner House's Larry Lohmann describes in Carbon
Trading, sequestering can be a profitable game of soot
and mirrors. Those involved in iron fertilization, for
example, optimistically
predict annual returns of $100 billion assuming a
sequestration cost of about $6.70 per ton and a carbon-trading
price of perhaps $33 per ton. But even if iron seeding induces
blooms that transfer CO 2 from the atmosphere to the deep sea,
there is no
scientific basis for arguing that it will stay there
permanently. Some scientists assert that the CO 2 reservoirs
will eventually be re-exposed.19 But companies serving the carbon market
need only keep CO 2 out of sight long enough to cash their
checks. If the CO 2 later pops back up to the surface, proving
its source and litigating those responsible could be extremely
difficult.
Critics of industrial-scale iron fertilization schemes
point out that "the oceans' food webs and biogeochemical
cycles would be altered in unintended ways."20 Others note that iron may not be the
ocean's only nutrient "deficiency"—researchers have identified
silicate as a crucial component in carbon export, for
example—but each "correction" to ocean water composition could
have unintended effects. According to U.S. and Canadian
scientists writing in the journal Science, if
carbon-trading schemes make it profitable for companies to
engage in ocean fertilization, "the cumulative effects of many
such implementations would result in large-scale
consequences—a classic 'tragedy of the commons.'"21 Mark Lawrence of the
Max-Planck-Institute in Germany adds that large-scale iron
fertilization could have unintended atmospheric and climatic
impacts—including ozone depletion and intensified ultraviolet
levels on the Earth's surface.22
Future Change
Given the dubious experience with iron fertilization, it
could be tempting for desperate governments to try an
alternative approach: the release of a living organism made
from scratch designed to sequester carbon. This kind of
geoengineering is not as "sci-fi" as we would wish.
Many of the Western Hemisphere's most devastating
hurricanes originate when temperatures rise in the
mid-Atlantic region of the Sargasso Sea. Although the Sargasso
Sea is known for the profusion of seaweed at its surface,
biologists have always regarded the sea as relatively barren.
In 2004, with grants from the Department of Energy, Craig
Venter—the man who led the private sector mapping of the human
genome—steered his yacht into the Sargasso in search of marine
microbes sporting novel genes to improve photosynthesis.
Months later, Venter told
a Washington news conference that he had found 1,800 new
microbial species and at least 1.2 million novel genes,
including photosynthesis genes that could have a major impact
on climate change. With U.S. Department of Energy funding,
Craig Venter is committed to creating a new life form—a
synthetic construct based upon simple microorganisms—that
could be designed to clean up pollution, CO 2, or other
greenhouse gases.
There are other—possibly related—developments. In 2005,
Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) introduced bill
S517 in Congress that would establish a committee to
oversee a national research program on weather modification.
Originally expected to become law before the 2006 hurricane
season, the bill never made it out of committee—and is dead in
the water for now. It unexpectedly ran into some opposition
from the White
House science adviser who was concerned that any
technologies that might be introduced to modify the U.S.
climate would, inevitably, modify everybody else's climate.
In April 2006, the National Science Foundation held its
third Hurricane Science and Engineering Task Force Workshop in
Pensacola, Florida. Among the options under consideration, according
to the meeting's co-chair and meteorologist at the
University of Oklahoma Kelvin Droegemeier, is creating a
biological film over the ocean's surface to divert hurricanes.
Some researchers have lost enthusiasm for the idea of coating
the ocean's surface with an oily film (to restrict evaporation
and mitigate hurricanes) because the film breaks up in
high-wind conditions.23 Ross Hoffman of Atmospheric and
Environmental Research (Lexington, Massachusetts) is using
computer modeling to study how to induce minor changes in
weather conditions (e.g., air temperature or humidity) to
weaken or divert hurricanes away from population centers.
According to Hoffman, who received funding from NASA's
Institute for Advanced Concepts, "the goal is not to change
the climate, but to control the precise timing and paths of
weather systems."24 Hoffman speculates, for example, that
earth-orbiting solar power stations could supply enough energy
to heat the air around a hurricane and adjust the temperature.
Hoffman writes that global weather control "might be
implemented within a few decades" but will require further
breakthroughs in nanotechnology, quantum devices, and other
areas.25
At the end of 2006, when the UN Convention on Climate
Change convened in Nairobi, the Associated Press reported that
geoengineering received a surprising amount of attention. What
most surprised government delegates and civil society
observers was that everybody was taking seriously Crutzen's
proposal for stratospheric hazing or deliberate atmospheric
polluting. Kyoto, according to the wisdom of the meeting, was
on its deathbed, and geoengineering was looking more
reasonable everyday.
The political and ethical dimensions of climate
modification are huge. In a 2005 interview in The Boston
Globe, the director of Harvard's Laboratory for
Geochemical Oceanography Daniel Schrag asked, "Suppose we
could control hurricanes, but stopping one requires an
incredibly hot day in Africa that would burn up all the
crops."26 Schrag goes on, "Let's say you have a
mirror in space. Think of two summers ago when we were having
this awful cold summer and Europe was having this awful heat
wave. Who gets to adjust the mirror?"27
In September 2001, officials with the President's Climate
Change Technology Program invited about two-dozen scientists
to participate in a meeting titled "Response Options to Rapid
or Severe Climate Change." Despite Bush's rejection of the
Kyoto protocol six months earlier, the White House was quietly
checking out its options. One of the organizers of the White
House gathering was Dr. Michael MacCracken, a former senior
scientist at the U.S. Global Change Research Program and,
also, formerly with Lawrence Livermore. "We already are
inadvertently changing the climate," MacCracken told one
science journal, "so why not advertently try to
counterbalance it?"
Fork in the Road
The current U.S. administration and its counterparts in
China and Russia are not likely to shy away from
geoengineering the stratosphere or the ocean in order to save
their oil industries or ward off disaster from their coastal
cities. But they should.
Geoengineering is the wrong response to climate change.
Experimentation that could alter the structure of the oceans
or the stratosphere should not proceed without thorough and
informed public debate on its consequences, and only with UN
authorization. Geoengineering must not be undertaken
unilaterally by any nation. The UN must reaffirm (and, if
necessary, expand) the Environmental Modification Convention
(ENMOD) recognizing that any unilateral modification of
weather or climate is a threat to neighboring countries and,
very likely, the entire international community. The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change should revisit the
concept and practice of carbon trading and replace this
market-based "solution" with direct, measurable standards for
CO 2 emission reduction at source. The industrialized states
must redouble their efforts to reduce their consumption of
fossil fuels and to curtail other wasteful practices that
contribute to global warming.
We've been down this road before. After World War II, the
U.S. military and the Scripps Institution of Oceanography
cooperated on studies that led to the atomic bomb testing in
the Pacific being called "a wonderful oceanographic tool."28 The director of the Scripps
oceanographic program, Roger Revelle, complained that
"ignorance and emotionalism" dominated the discourse about
radioactive waste dumping at sea. We have come to understand
the perils of dumping such materials in the ocean. Let's not
make the same mistakes again.
End Notes
- According to the U.S. State Department (on
its web site, November 28, 2005) the United States and the
Soviet Union introduced identical treaty texts at the UN in
1975, and the treaty came into force on May 18, 1978. The
strongly worded treaty bans all military and other hostile
efforts at environmental modification but does not preclude
beneficial modifications. To date, 51 countries have
ratified the treaty including almost all major OECD and
South governments except South Africa and Mexico.
- David W. Keith, Forthcoming in "Climate
Change Science and Policy," Steven Schneider and Mike
Mastrandrea editors, to be published by Island Press.
- Drake Bennett, "Don't like the weather?
Change it - The weird science of weather modification makes
a comeback," Boston Globe, July 3, 2005.
- Ibid.
- Kate Ravilious, "Kicking up a storm with the
cloud seeders," New Scientist, April 16, 2005, pp.
40-43.
- Ibid. This article adds UAE,
Australia, Israel, Russia, South Africa, and India to the
list of countries using weather modification.
- Daniel Pendick, "Cloud Dancers: Will Efforts
To Change The Weather Ever Attain Scientific Legitimacy?"
Scientific American, 2000, pp 64-69.
- Ravilious, op. cit.
- Ibid.
- Ibid.
- Ibid.
- William J. Broad, "How to Cool a Planet
(Maybe)" New York Times, June 27, 2006.
- Ibid.
- Ibid.
- David W. Keith, "Engineering the Planet,"
forthcoming in Climate Change Science and Policy,
Steven Schneider and Mike Mastrandrea editors, to be
published by Island Press.
- J.H. Martin et al., "Testing the Iron
Hypothesis in Ecosystems of the Equatorial Pacific Ocean,"
Nature, Vol. 371, September 8, 1994, pp. 123-129. See
also: http://www.netl.doe.gov/publications/proceedings/01/carbon_seq/carbon_seq01.html#Session6B
- J.H. Martin, et al., "Testing the
Iron Hypothesis in Ecosystems of the Equatorial Pacific
Ocean," Nature, Vol. 371, September 8, 1994, p. 123.
- Ibid. p. 129.
- Sallie Chisholm et al.,
"Dis-Crediting Ocean Fertilization," Science, Vol.
294, October 12, 2001.
- Ibid.
- Ibid.
- Mark Lawrence, "Side Effects of Oceanic Iron
Fertilization," Science, September 20, 2002: Vol.
297, no. 5589, p. 1993.
- Telephone communication with Prof. Kerry
Emanuel, MIT and Prof. Kelvin Droegemeier, Meteorologist,
University of Oklahoma, January 11, 2007.
- Ross Hoffman, "Controlling the Global
Weather," BAMS, American Meteorological Society, February
2002.
- Ibid.
- Drake Bennett, op. cit.
- Ibid.
- Helen M. Rozwadowski and David K. van
Keuren, eds., The Machine in Neptune's Garden: Historical
Perspectives on Technology and the Marine Environment,
Canton, Mass.: Watson, 2004.
Pat Mooney is the Executive Director of ETC Group. Hope
Shand and Kathy Jo Wetter of ETC Group also contributed to
this article. The full version of the report on which this
essay is based, Gambling with Gaia, is available here.
|
Published
by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a joint project of the
International Relations Center (IRC, online at http://www.irc-online.org/) and the
Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at http://www.ips-dc.org/). ©Creative Commons -
some rights reserved.
Recommended citation: Pat Mooney, "Global
Warming: The Quick Fix Is In" (Silver City, NM and Washington,
DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, February 20, 2007).
Web
location: http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/4006
Production Information: Author(s): Pat
Mooney Editor(s): John Feffer,
IRC Production: Chellee Chase-Saiz,
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| Name: |
Say NO to weather modification |
Date: Feb 21, 2007 |
| This concept is exactly what respected scientist
Edward Teller, the father of the H-Bomb, called for in 1997
while at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories. In a
government sponsored report called Global Warming and Ice
Ages, he suggested the scattering of 1 million tons of
materials into the atmosphere in order to reflect 1% of
incoming sunlight. He states that it would be cheaper to slow
global warming through "stratospheric deployment of oxide
particulates" than to actually slow down greenhouse gases
connected with fossil-fired energy production. The sunscreen
concept is also called for in a major congressional study
titled Policy Implications of Greenhouse Warming, which was
sponsored by the National Academy of Sciences, National
Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine. This
huge study was reported in 1992 and is the textbook on
greenhouse gasses, global warming, policy decisions and
mitigations. In this study, they talk about spraying the
atmosphere with “stratospheric dust or soot” and to “simulate
clouds” in order to mitigate global warming. The study also
suggested dumping iron into the ocean to stimulate plankton
that could potentially eat carbon dioxide. By looking at Moss
Landing Marine Laboratories’ recent dumping of iron in the
ocean to do just that, you can see that these are not just
theories. They are theories in actual use. But the iron theory
backfired when a large amount of fish died. So what are the
unreported consequences of spraying the atmosphere? Ken
Caldeira, also from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories,
is a concerned scientist who said that this type of spray
operation could have grave environmental consequences, could
“destroy the ozone layer” and could cause serious health
concerns. But it seems they cared nothing about Mr. Caldera’s
concerns. Rutgers University climate scientist Alan Robock
worries that an aerosol operation could mean "we wouldn't have
blue skies anymore." Our children are now even being taught
this aerial obscuration concept in our schools. In the level
one science book, "Essential Interactions" by Centre Point
Learning, Inc., a photo of a jet is titled "Particle Air" and
has the caption "Jet engines running on richer fuel would add
particles to the atmosphere to create a sunscreen". This is in
the section titled "5.19 Case Study: Solutions for Global
Warming". In the same section they also show a picture of a
helicopter dumping iron into the ocean as a way to mitigate
global warming, as we mentioned earlier. Again, CNN actually
reported the iron theory being carried out. These are not just
“theories”. Not only do the governmental studies support this
sunscreen theory but there are also actual patents that have
been issued for devices to carry these operations out. One
important patent is the 1994 Welsbach patent issued to the
Hughes Aircraft Co. It is for atmospheric spraying with
aluminum oxide to reduce global warming by “seeding” and
reflecting 1% of incoming sunrays. It so happens that aluminum
consistently turns up in chemtrail related lab test results.
Another patent worth mentioning is the 1975 US Navy patent
which is for a “contrail generation apparatus for producing
powder contrails. In the summary section it clearly states
“the term 'contrail' was adopted for convenience in
identifying the visible powder trail". It appears they are
still using the word “contrail” for convenience. The people
carrying out these types of operations will never use the word
“chemtrails”. They use terms such as aerial obscuration,
persistent contrails, or sky soot. But Dennis Kucinich did use
the word “chemtrails” in the Space Preservation Act of 2001 in
which he tried to ban chemtrails and other space-based
weapons. He wrote the bill, also called H.R. 2977, while he
was the head of the U.S. Arms Oversight Committee. The bill
calls for a ban on space-based weapons and a ban on the types
of operations that we’re seeing happen now. In section 7 of
the bill, “chemtrails” is considered an exotic weapon.
Space-based weaponry is another likely reason that these
operations are occurring. As is stated in the Air Force study
Owning the Weather in 2025, it is a major advantage to modify
the weather and cause rain or drought for the enemy. They also
find that the spraying of certain chemicals in the skies
assist to jam radar and tele-communications systems. They go
on to say that these activities could have tremendous
potential in times of military aggression and are proud of the
fact that these tactics could also have enormous psychological
potential, which would be just as beneficial as causing
drought or constant rain (page 35). The study even goes on to
say that “one major advantage of using simulated weather to
achieve a desired effect is that unlike other approaches, it
makes what are otherwise the results of deliberate actions
appear to be the consequences of natural weather phenomena”
(page 36). Former naval physicist, weather modification expert
Ben Livingston reports weather modification is a tool used in
warfare. "He seeded clouds and dramatically increased rainfall
in his theater of war, creating impassably muddy roads,
slowing down the Vietnamese and Korean troops, and saving
lives and entire towns from occupation." Dr. Rosalie Bertell
(Ph.D., biometrics) confirms that "US military scientists are
working on weather systems as a potential weapon." These
operations are also advantageous to the HAARP, which stands
for ‘High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program’. HAARP is
a highly funded research project in Alaska focusing on
altering and manipulating the atmosphere for weather and
military dominance. The radio waves emitted by HAARP can be
used to super-heat and lift the ionosphere or can be reflected
off the atmosphere. Nick Begich, MD, states that HAARP can
also be used to alter brain waves and falls into the
military's classification of non-lethal weapons. Dr. Nick
Begich goes into detail of how this technology works in Angels
Don't Play This HAARP: Advances in Tesla Technology. In a the
video titled Haarp: Holes in the Heavens, Rich Garcia, AFRL
(Air Force Research Laboratory) Directed Energy Directorate,
says "HAARP can paint lines in the sky." Dual use technology
is very common in the research and development field, and
HAARP is state of the art technology. The US has a long
history of spraying chemicals on innocent people in this
country. The Freedom of Information Act has allowed us to
access information about these experiments, including the
spraying of biological agents over San Francisco in 1950 to
see who got sick. This is just one example of many. Captain
Joyce Riley stood before a group of government officials last
year in Louisiana where the military was determined to conduct
open air germ tests, against the vociferous will of the
people. She boldly told them that the only acts of terrorism
ever conducted on American soil have been perpetrated by our
own government. There are many more examples in the history of
aerial spray operations that you can read about on the website
Chemtrails911.com. In 1997 and again in 2000, U.S. Title 50,
Section 32 was actually revised to allow for exceptions in
conducting experiments on unwitting citizens. Unfortunately,
the goals of this activity aren’t known with absolute
certainty because when high level officials are asked about
these spray operations, they answer that what we are seeing is
just “normal”. When concerned pilots and Air Force personnel
ask their superiors questions relating to these operations,
their concerns are met with replies like “this information is
on a need-to-know basis” or they are given special
misinformation to make them think they are doing this for the
good of the people. They are also told that speaking out on
this issue will violate national security and that they will
be held accountable. These operations cause us to have great
concerns. We do not like being part of a secret spray
operation without our consent. We are very worried about the
health implications of spraying chemicals that are on the OSHA
hazardous list. According to the Journal of American Medical
Association Lung cancer, cardiopulmonary mortality, is a
result of long-term exposure to fine particulate air
pollution. According to Aajonus Vonderplanitz, Ph.D. in
several laboratory analyses, the composition of chemtrails
revealed many harmful substances. In Erfurt, Germany mortality
increased in association with fine and ultrafine particles in
the air. If this is truly being done to mitigate global
warming as Nobel Prize laureate Paul Crutzens and Tom Wigley,
Senior Scientist at National Center for Atmospheric Research,
among others are currently advocating. Don’t be fooled into
thinking that this is for our own good as Lowell Wood the
Pentagon's top weaponeer and the protege of Edward Teller,
would have you believe that geoengineering the climate is
inevitable and it is to help save humanty and the planet. Dont
buy the lies. This is not for our own good! We are breathing
in their chemical compounds and unexplained illnesses are
occurring. Yes, global warming is an issue, but we should not
jeopardize our health and freedoms because the fossil fuel
industries irresponsiable behaviors. Richard Alley, Penn State
paleoclimatologist, says geo-engineering "is not something you
can do for twenty or thirty years, then quit," he says. "It's
a techno fix we'd become dependent on." Ken Caldeira, a senior
scientist at the Carnegie Institution's Department of Global
Ecology at Stanford, says as a long-term strategy "it's nuts."
A 'sunscreen' solution is only a band-aid and isn't a solution
at all. The massive health problems and risks involved largely
outweigh any possible benefits. Weather Modification should
never be used for warfare and to do so is a violation of a
1976 United Nation' Treaty. These operations cause harm to the
American people, create irreversible damage to our environment
and pose a grave threat to our national security. These spray
operations need to be stopped immediately.
| |
| Name: |
William Coleman |
Date: Feb 23, 2007 |
| Pat Mooney's "policy article" suggesting that
too many quick fixes have been proposed to address global
warming (Global Warming: The Quick Fix Is In, Feb. 20),
contains information that is hugely myopic and ill-informed.
This is especially unfortunate as policy makers and the
general public come to grips with new strategies necessary to
avoid wholesale chaos in the face of global change.
Especially with respect to the health of the ocean, and to
the interdependence of ocean-and-atmosphere, Mooney's rant
against use of iron to fight global warming forgets to mention
some startling basic facts: that iron micronutrients are a
critical ingredient of ocean plankton productivity, that
availability of iron in the open ocean is down by 25-30% in
the past three decades (Steitz, Gregg 2003), and that plankton
productivity has also diminished by an average of 15%
worldwide (Gregg 2003, Behrenfeld 2006). This means that 3-5
billion tons of atmospheric CO2 are no longer being taken up
via open-ocean photosynthesis -- a substantial portion of the
6 billion tons of human-caused greenhouse gas emissions
generated every year.
The loss of plankton productivity was discussed in the
early 1990s (Hader et al 1991). It turns out that plankton
make up half of the planet's primary productivity but, in the
face of increasing concentrations of atmospheric CO2 --
affecting ocean temperature, acidity, fertility, food
production, and even the creation of oxygen generated to the
atmosphere -- plankton decline is a little known fact that has
enormous implications for us all.
One leading ocean scientist incorrectly referenced by
Mooney, Kenneth Coale, has inherited the legacy of pioneering
researcher John Martin and has been one of the first to
acknowledge that by mimicking the natural deposition of
micronutrient iron to the ocean, ocean plankton productivity
may be restored. Coale's colleagues Ken Johnson and Dave Karl
have point by point refuted the arguments of other researchers
(Science 296, 2002) who worry about the power of iron to
stimulate plankton growth and explicitly get in the way of
well meaning attempts to apply the results of their own
research.
Iron enrichment is a very simple concept: Responsibly
restoring parts per trillion of iron, at appropriate scale and
in select locations of the open ocean, means that ocean
ecosystems may be bolstered even in the face of continuing
pressure brought on by mismanagement and global change.
Restored plankton populations means, ultimately, more fish to
feed hungry human populations at a time when fish protein is
in diminishing per capita supply (UNEP 2005).
With all that's at stake, isn't such politicing on the part
of narrow minded scientists more than a little out of line?
Can't we take what has been learned and apply it to the
benefit of human beings as well as other species? It doesn't
take much to ensure that iron nutrient restoration is done
responsibly: we must simply create stringent performance
standards defining how this should be done, and include
third-party observers to oversee measurement, monitoring, and
reporting protocols. This same approach has been expressed as
a partnership between government and the private sector, in
land-based forests and across the world's croplands, for
decades. The idea that we can't reasonably restore and manage
the oceans is simply myopic heat-seeking rhetoric.
More to the point, the consequences of not trying are
simply too dramatic. Policy makers have an obligation to
consider any and all solutions that could contribute to the
absolute about-face society must make as we face the twin
hammers of climate change and ocean collapse.
William Coleman Planktos Inc. Foster City, California
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