Hi guys,
Are they serious? Too much money and time on their hands? This is an interview from UK papers with a scientist
involved in the current geo-engineering projects....
(No mention of the predicted long-term solar hibernation).
Best, Jon 
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Scientist Terrified of
Geoengineering Technology being Developed under Guise of Halting
Global Warming
Posted by The Watcher on December 30, 2014
A prominent climate scientist who's
actively involved in developing technologies to thwart the natural
weather patterns of the globe says he's disturbed by the prospect of
having to make such drastic changes to the common order of things in
order to fight so-called "global warming."
Dr. Matthew Watson from Bristol University in the UK told the
media recently that he's "terrified" by many of the
geoengineering projects currently in the works to thwart man-made
climate change, which is still being hawked by many in mainstream
science as a threat to humanity.
Speaking to the Daily Mail Online, Dr. Watson explained how
futuristic technologies like spraying chemical particles into the sky
to reflect sunlight back into space have the potential to disrupt how
rain falls, how plants grow and how life lives.
Right now, Dr. Watson is working on a $2.8 million project of
this exact nature. The plan is to inject sulfur particles into the
earth's atmosphere with the stated goal of blocking the sun's rays
from reaching Earth, ostensibly to keep the earth from getting too
warm.
"Personally, this stuff terrifies me," Dr. Watson told
reporters. "Whilst it is clear that temperatures could be reduced
during deployment, the potential for misstep is considerable.
"By identifying risks, we hope to contribute to the evidence
base around geoengineering that will determine whether deployment, in
the face of the threat of climate change, has the capacity to do more
good than harm."
Geoengineering will likely cause
irreversible damage to planetary ecosystems
The simplistic nature of such projects
ignores the immense level of irreversible damage that could result
from interfering with the normal functions of the planet. By blocking
sunlight, plants won't be able to engage in photosynthesis, for
instance, which means no more oxygen and no more food.
Similarly, humans won't be able to obtain
natural vitamin D if the sun's rays aren't allowed to penetrate the
atmosphere, triggering an epidemic of vitamin D deficiency and
resultant disease. One proposed method of mitigating
excess carbon dioxide, which many would argue isn't even a real
problem, involves planting and irrigating millions of trees in the
world's deserts. But this would directly counteract the natural
reflection of sunlight from desert sands back into space, contributing
to more warming.
Another proposal involves dumping iron
particles into the world's oceans to supposedly improve the growth of
photosynthetic organisms capable of absorbing carbon dioxide. But this
concept would only further toxify the world's oceans, harming sea
animals in the process.
Sulfur particles will destroy ozone
layer, leaving animals and humans exposed to deadly
radiation
Building upon an earlier idea pioneered by
Dr. Watson, climate scientists are also working on ways to pump sulfur
particles into the sky in order to disperse and reflect sunlight back
into space. But this process threatens to destroy atmospheric ozone,
leaving plants, animals and humans exposed to harmful solar
radiation.
"Geoengineering will be much more
expensive and challenging than previous estimates suggest and any
benefits would be limited," maintains Professor Piers Forster
from the University of Leeds, who has long tracked climate engineering
projects of this type and determined them to be more threatening than
beneficial.
Professor Steve Rayner from Oxford
University, who specializes in the legal and ethical ramifications
of geoengineering, seems to agree. He told the Daily Mail
Online that too little is known about the long-term effects of
geoengineering, including their impact on planetary
ecosystems.
"Mostly it is too soon to know what
any of these technology ideas would look like in practice or what
would be their true cost and benefit," he stated.
Sources for this article
include: