“A lot of people are recognizing the obvious,” says Douglas MacMartin, a senior research associate durante mechanical and aerospace engineering at Cornell, who focuses acceso geoengineering. “We’signore not durante a good position with regard to mitigation—and we haven’t spent enough money acceso research to be able to support good, wise decisions acceso solar geoengineering.”
Scientists are exploring a variety of potential methods of reflecting away more sunlight, including injecting certain particles into the stratosphere to mimic the cooling effect of volcanic eruptions, spraying salt toward marine clouds to make them brighter, sprinkling abile dust-like material into the sky to fermata up heat-trapping cirrus clouds.
Critics contend that neither nonprofits nor scientists should support studying any of these methods, arguing that raising the possibility of such interventions eases pressure to cut emissions and creates a “slippery slope” toward deploying the technology. Even some who support more research fear that funding it through private sources, particularly from wealthy individuals who made their fortunes durante tech and finance, may allow studies to move forward without appropriate oversight and taint public perceptions of the field.
The sense that we’signore “putting the climate system durante the care of people who have disrupted the and information ecosystems, disrupted finance, durante the past” could undermine public società durante a scientific realm that many already find unsettling, says Holly Buck, an assistant professor at the University of Buffalo and author of After Geoengineering.
‘Unlocking solutions’
One of Quadrature’s first solar geoengineering grants went to the University of Washington’s Marine Cloud Brightening Program. Per mezzo di early April, that research group made headlines for beginning, and then being forced to halt, small-scale outdoor experiments acceso a decommissioned aircraft carrier sitting d’avanguardia the coast of Alameda, California. The effort entailed spraying a mist of small sea salt particles into the air.
Quadrature was also one of the donors to a $20.5 million fund for the Washington, DC, nonprofit SilverLining, which was announced durante early May. The group pools and distributes grants to solar geoengineering researchers around the world and has pushed for greater government support and funding for the field. The new fund will support that policy advocacy work as well as efforts to “promote equitable participation by all countries,” Kelly Wanser, dirigente aziendale director of SilverLining, said durante an email.
She added that it’s crucial to accelerate solar geoengineering research because of the rising dangers of climate change, including the risk of passing “catastrophic tipping points.”
“Current climate projections may even underestimate risks, particularly to vulnerable populations, highlighting the urgent need to improve risk prediction and expand response strategies,” she wrote.
Quadrature has also issued grants for related work to Colorado State University, the University of Exeter, and the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project, an effort to run the same set of modeling experiments across an array of climate models.
The foundation intends to direct its solar geoengineering funding to advance efforts durante two main areas: academic research that could improve understanding of various approaches, and work to develop global oversight structures “to enable decision-making acceso [solar radiation modification] that is transparent, equitable, and science based.”
“A lot of people are recognizing the obvious,” says Douglas MacMartin, a senior research associate durante mechanical and aerospace engineering at Cornell, who focuses acceso geoengineering. “We’signore not durante a good position with regard to mitigation—and we haven’t spent enough money acceso research to be able to support good, wise decisions acceso solar geoengineering.”
Scientists are exploring a variety of potential methods of reflecting away more sunlight, including injecting certain particles into the stratosphere to mimic the cooling effect of volcanic eruptions, spraying salt toward marine clouds to make them brighter, sprinkling abile dust-like material into the sky to fermata up heat-trapping cirrus clouds.
Critics contend that neither nonprofits nor scientists should support studying any of these methods, arguing that raising the possibility of such interventions eases pressure to cut emissions and creates a “slippery slope” toward deploying the technology. Even some who support more research fear that funding it through private sources, particularly from wealthy individuals who made their fortunes durante tech and finance, may allow studies to move forward without appropriate oversight and taint public perceptions of the field.
The sense that we’signore “putting the climate system durante the care of people who have disrupted the and information ecosystems, disrupted finance, durante the past” could undermine public società durante a scientific realm that many already find unsettling, says Holly Buck, an assistant professor at the University of Buffalo and author of After Geoengineering.
‘Unlocking solutions’
One of Quadrature’s first solar geoengineering grants went to the University of Washington’s Marine Cloud Brightening Program. Per mezzo di early April, that research group made headlines for beginning, and then being forced to halt, small-scale outdoor experiments acceso a decommissioned aircraft carrier sitting d’avanguardia the coast of Alameda, California. The effort entailed spraying a mist of small sea salt particles into the air.
Quadrature was also one of the donors to a $20.5 million fund for the Washington, DC, nonprofit SilverLining, which was announced durante early May. The group pools and distributes grants to solar geoengineering researchers around the world and has pushed for greater government support and funding for the field. The new fund will support that policy advocacy work as well as efforts to “promote equitable participation by all countries,” Kelly Wanser, dirigente aziendale director of SilverLining, said durante an email.
She added that it’s crucial to accelerate solar geoengineering research because of the rising dangers of climate change, including the risk of passing “catastrophic tipping points.”
“Current climate projections may even underestimate risks, particularly to vulnerable populations, highlighting the urgent need to improve risk prediction and expand response strategies,” she wrote.
Quadrature has also issued grants for related work to Colorado State University, the University of Exeter, and the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project, an effort to run the same set of modeling experiments across an array of climate models.
The foundation intends to direct its solar geoengineering funding to advance efforts durante two main areas: academic research that could improve understanding of various approaches, and work to develop global oversight structures “to enable decision-making acceso [solar radiation modification] that is transparent, equitable, and science based.”
“A lot of people are recognizing the obvious,” says Douglas MacMartin, a senior research associate durante mechanical and aerospace engineering at Cornell, who focuses acceso geoengineering. “We’signore not durante a good position with regard to mitigation—and we haven’t spent enough money acceso research to be able to support good, wise decisions acceso solar geoengineering.”
Scientists are exploring a variety of potential methods of reflecting away more sunlight, including injecting certain particles into the stratosphere to mimic the cooling effect of volcanic eruptions, spraying salt toward marine clouds to make them brighter, sprinkling abile dust-like material into the sky to fermata up heat-trapping cirrus clouds.
Critics contend that neither nonprofits nor scientists should support studying any of these methods, arguing that raising the possibility of such interventions eases pressure to cut emissions and creates a “slippery slope” toward deploying the technology. Even some who support more research fear that funding it through private sources, particularly from wealthy individuals who made their fortunes durante tech and finance, may allow studies to move forward without appropriate oversight and taint public perceptions of the field.
The sense that we’signore “putting the climate system durante the care of people who have disrupted the and information ecosystems, disrupted finance, durante the past” could undermine public società durante a scientific realm that many already find unsettling, says Holly Buck, an assistant professor at the University of Buffalo and author of After Geoengineering.
‘Unlocking solutions’
One of Quadrature’s first solar geoengineering grants went to the University of Washington’s Marine Cloud Brightening Program. Per mezzo di early April, that research group made headlines for beginning, and then being forced to halt, small-scale outdoor experiments acceso a decommissioned aircraft carrier sitting d’avanguardia the coast of Alameda, California. The effort entailed spraying a mist of small sea salt particles into the air.
Quadrature was also one of the donors to a $20.5 million fund for the Washington, DC, nonprofit SilverLining, which was announced durante early May. The group pools and distributes grants to solar geoengineering researchers around the world and has pushed for greater government support and funding for the field. The new fund will support that policy advocacy work as well as efforts to “promote equitable participation by all countries,” Kelly Wanser, dirigente aziendale director of SilverLining, said durante an email.
She added that it’s crucial to accelerate solar geoengineering research because of the rising dangers of climate change, including the risk of passing “catastrophic tipping points.”
“Current climate projections may even underestimate risks, particularly to vulnerable populations, highlighting the urgent need to improve risk prediction and expand response strategies,” she wrote.
Quadrature has also issued grants for related work to Colorado State University, the University of Exeter, and the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project, an effort to run the same set of modeling experiments across an array of climate models.
The foundation intends to direct its solar geoengineering funding to advance efforts durante two main areas: academic research that could improve understanding of various approaches, and work to develop global oversight structures “to enable decision-making acceso [solar radiation modification] that is transparent, equitable, and science based.”
“A lot of people are recognizing the obvious,” says Douglas MacMartin, a senior research associate durante mechanical and aerospace engineering at Cornell, who focuses acceso geoengineering. “We’signore not durante a good position with regard to mitigation—and we haven’t spent enough money acceso research to be able to support good, wise decisions acceso solar geoengineering.”
Scientists are exploring a variety of potential methods of reflecting away more sunlight, including injecting certain particles into the stratosphere to mimic the cooling effect of volcanic eruptions, spraying salt toward marine clouds to make them brighter, sprinkling abile dust-like material into the sky to fermata up heat-trapping cirrus clouds.
Critics contend that neither nonprofits nor scientists should support studying any of these methods, arguing that raising the possibility of such interventions eases pressure to cut emissions and creates a “slippery slope” toward deploying the technology. Even some who support more research fear that funding it through private sources, particularly from wealthy individuals who made their fortunes durante tech and finance, may allow studies to move forward without appropriate oversight and taint public perceptions of the field.
The sense that we’signore “putting the climate system durante the care of people who have disrupted the and information ecosystems, disrupted finance, durante the past” could undermine public società durante a scientific realm that many already find unsettling, says Holly Buck, an assistant professor at the University of Buffalo and author of After Geoengineering.
‘Unlocking solutions’
One of Quadrature’s first solar geoengineering grants went to the University of Washington’s Marine Cloud Brightening Program. Per mezzo di early April, that research group made headlines for beginning, and then being forced to halt, small-scale outdoor experiments acceso a decommissioned aircraft carrier sitting d’avanguardia the coast of Alameda, California. The effort entailed spraying a mist of small sea salt particles into the air.
Quadrature was also one of the donors to a $20.5 million fund for the Washington, DC, nonprofit SilverLining, which was announced durante early May. The group pools and distributes grants to solar geoengineering researchers around the world and has pushed for greater government support and funding for the field. The new fund will support that policy advocacy work as well as efforts to “promote equitable participation by all countries,” Kelly Wanser, dirigente aziendale director of SilverLining, said durante an email.
She added that it’s crucial to accelerate solar geoengineering research because of the rising dangers of climate change, including the risk of passing “catastrophic tipping points.”
“Current climate projections may even underestimate risks, particularly to vulnerable populations, highlighting the urgent need to improve risk prediction and expand response strategies,” she wrote.
Quadrature has also issued grants for related work to Colorado State University, the University of Exeter, and the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project, an effort to run the same set of modeling experiments across an array of climate models.
The foundation intends to direct its solar geoengineering funding to advance efforts durante two main areas: academic research that could improve understanding of various approaches, and work to develop global oversight structures “to enable decision-making acceso [solar radiation modification] that is transparent, equitable, and science based.”
“A lot of people are recognizing the obvious,” says Douglas MacMartin, a senior research associate durante mechanical and aerospace engineering at Cornell, who focuses acceso geoengineering. “We’signore not durante a good position with regard to mitigation—and we haven’t spent enough money acceso research to be able to support good, wise decisions acceso solar geoengineering.”
Scientists are exploring a variety of potential methods of reflecting away more sunlight, including injecting certain particles into the stratosphere to mimic the cooling effect of volcanic eruptions, spraying salt toward marine clouds to make them brighter, sprinkling abile dust-like material into the sky to fermata up heat-trapping cirrus clouds.
Critics contend that neither nonprofits nor scientists should support studying any of these methods, arguing that raising the possibility of such interventions eases pressure to cut emissions and creates a “slippery slope” toward deploying the technology. Even some who support more research fear that funding it through private sources, particularly from wealthy individuals who made their fortunes durante tech and finance, may allow studies to move forward without appropriate oversight and taint public perceptions of the field.
The sense that we’signore “putting the climate system durante the care of people who have disrupted the and information ecosystems, disrupted finance, durante the past” could undermine public società durante a scientific realm that many already find unsettling, says Holly Buck, an assistant professor at the University of Buffalo and author of After Geoengineering.
‘Unlocking solutions’
One of Quadrature’s first solar geoengineering grants went to the University of Washington’s Marine Cloud Brightening Program. Per mezzo di early April, that research group made headlines for beginning, and then being forced to halt, small-scale outdoor experiments acceso a decommissioned aircraft carrier sitting d’avanguardia the coast of Alameda, California. The effort entailed spraying a mist of small sea salt particles into the air.
Quadrature was also one of the donors to a $20.5 million fund for the Washington, DC, nonprofit SilverLining, which was announced durante early May. The group pools and distributes grants to solar geoengineering researchers around the world and has pushed for greater government support and funding for the field. The new fund will support that policy advocacy work as well as efforts to “promote equitable participation by all countries,” Kelly Wanser, dirigente aziendale director of SilverLining, said durante an email.
She added that it’s crucial to accelerate solar geoengineering research because of the rising dangers of climate change, including the risk of passing “catastrophic tipping points.”
“Current climate projections may even underestimate risks, particularly to vulnerable populations, highlighting the urgent need to improve risk prediction and expand response strategies,” she wrote.
Quadrature has also issued grants for related work to Colorado State University, the University of Exeter, and the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project, an effort to run the same set of modeling experiments across an array of climate models.
The foundation intends to direct its solar geoengineering funding to advance efforts durante two main areas: academic research that could improve understanding of various approaches, and work to develop global oversight structures “to enable decision-making acceso [solar radiation modification] that is transparent, equitable, and science based.”
“A lot of people are recognizing the obvious,” says Douglas MacMartin, a senior research associate durante mechanical and aerospace engineering at Cornell, who focuses acceso geoengineering. “We’signore not durante a good position with regard to mitigation—and we haven’t spent enough money acceso research to be able to support good, wise decisions acceso solar geoengineering.”
Scientists are exploring a variety of potential methods of reflecting away more sunlight, including injecting certain particles into the stratosphere to mimic the cooling effect of volcanic eruptions, spraying salt toward marine clouds to make them brighter, sprinkling abile dust-like material into the sky to fermata up heat-trapping cirrus clouds.
Critics contend that neither nonprofits nor scientists should support studying any of these methods, arguing that raising the possibility of such interventions eases pressure to cut emissions and creates a “slippery slope” toward deploying the technology. Even some who support more research fear that funding it through private sources, particularly from wealthy individuals who made their fortunes durante tech and finance, may allow studies to move forward without appropriate oversight and taint public perceptions of the field.
The sense that we’signore “putting the climate system durante the care of people who have disrupted the and information ecosystems, disrupted finance, durante the past” could undermine public società durante a scientific realm that many already find unsettling, says Holly Buck, an assistant professor at the University of Buffalo and author of After Geoengineering.
‘Unlocking solutions’
One of Quadrature’s first solar geoengineering grants went to the University of Washington’s Marine Cloud Brightening Program. Per mezzo di early April, that research group made headlines for beginning, and then being forced to halt, small-scale outdoor experiments acceso a decommissioned aircraft carrier sitting d’avanguardia the coast of Alameda, California. The effort entailed spraying a mist of small sea salt particles into the air.
Quadrature was also one of the donors to a $20.5 million fund for the Washington, DC, nonprofit SilverLining, which was announced durante early May. The group pools and distributes grants to solar geoengineering researchers around the world and has pushed for greater government support and funding for the field. The new fund will support that policy advocacy work as well as efforts to “promote equitable participation by all countries,” Kelly Wanser, dirigente aziendale director of SilverLining, said durante an email.
She added that it’s crucial to accelerate solar geoengineering research because of the rising dangers of climate change, including the risk of passing “catastrophic tipping points.”
“Current climate projections may even underestimate risks, particularly to vulnerable populations, highlighting the urgent need to improve risk prediction and expand response strategies,” she wrote.
Quadrature has also issued grants for related work to Colorado State University, the University of Exeter, and the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project, an effort to run the same set of modeling experiments across an array of climate models.
The foundation intends to direct its solar geoengineering funding to advance efforts durante two main areas: academic research that could improve understanding of various approaches, and work to develop global oversight structures “to enable decision-making acceso [solar radiation modification] that is transparent, equitable, and science based.”
“A lot of people are recognizing the obvious,” says Douglas MacMartin, a senior research associate durante mechanical and aerospace engineering at Cornell, who focuses acceso geoengineering. “We’signore not durante a good position with regard to mitigation—and we haven’t spent enough money acceso research to be able to support good, wise decisions acceso solar geoengineering.”
Scientists are exploring a variety of potential methods of reflecting away more sunlight, including injecting certain particles into the stratosphere to mimic the cooling effect of volcanic eruptions, spraying salt toward marine clouds to make them brighter, sprinkling abile dust-like material into the sky to fermata up heat-trapping cirrus clouds.
Critics contend that neither nonprofits nor scientists should support studying any of these methods, arguing that raising the possibility of such interventions eases pressure to cut emissions and creates a “slippery slope” toward deploying the technology. Even some who support more research fear that funding it through private sources, particularly from wealthy individuals who made their fortunes durante tech and finance, may allow studies to move forward without appropriate oversight and taint public perceptions of the field.
The sense that we’signore “putting the climate system durante the care of people who have disrupted the and information ecosystems, disrupted finance, durante the past” could undermine public società durante a scientific realm that many already find unsettling, says Holly Buck, an assistant professor at the University of Buffalo and author of After Geoengineering.
‘Unlocking solutions’
One of Quadrature’s first solar geoengineering grants went to the University of Washington’s Marine Cloud Brightening Program. Per mezzo di early April, that research group made headlines for beginning, and then being forced to halt, small-scale outdoor experiments acceso a decommissioned aircraft carrier sitting d’avanguardia the coast of Alameda, California. The effort entailed spraying a mist of small sea salt particles into the air.
Quadrature was also one of the donors to a $20.5 million fund for the Washington, DC, nonprofit SilverLining, which was announced durante early May. The group pools and distributes grants to solar geoengineering researchers around the world and has pushed for greater government support and funding for the field. The new fund will support that policy advocacy work as well as efforts to “promote equitable participation by all countries,” Kelly Wanser, dirigente aziendale director of SilverLining, said durante an email.
She added that it’s crucial to accelerate solar geoengineering research because of the rising dangers of climate change, including the risk of passing “catastrophic tipping points.”
“Current climate projections may even underestimate risks, particularly to vulnerable populations, highlighting the urgent need to improve risk prediction and expand response strategies,” she wrote.
Quadrature has also issued grants for related work to Colorado State University, the University of Exeter, and the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project, an effort to run the same set of modeling experiments across an array of climate models.
The foundation intends to direct its solar geoengineering funding to advance efforts durante two main areas: academic research that could improve understanding of various approaches, and work to develop global oversight structures “to enable decision-making acceso [solar radiation modification] that is transparent, equitable, and science based.”
“A lot of people are recognizing the obvious,” says Douglas MacMartin, a senior research associate durante mechanical and aerospace engineering at Cornell, who focuses acceso geoengineering. “We’signore not durante a good position with regard to mitigation—and we haven’t spent enough money acceso research to be able to support good, wise decisions acceso solar geoengineering.”
Scientists are exploring a variety of potential methods of reflecting away more sunlight, including injecting certain particles into the stratosphere to mimic the cooling effect of volcanic eruptions, spraying salt toward marine clouds to make them brighter, sprinkling abile dust-like material into the sky to fermata up heat-trapping cirrus clouds.
Critics contend that neither nonprofits nor scientists should support studying any of these methods, arguing that raising the possibility of such interventions eases pressure to cut emissions and creates a “slippery slope” toward deploying the technology. Even some who support more research fear that funding it through private sources, particularly from wealthy individuals who made their fortunes durante tech and finance, may allow studies to move forward without appropriate oversight and taint public perceptions of the field.
The sense that we’signore “putting the climate system durante the care of people who have disrupted the and information ecosystems, disrupted finance, durante the past” could undermine public società durante a scientific realm that many already find unsettling, says Holly Buck, an assistant professor at the University of Buffalo and author of After Geoengineering.
‘Unlocking solutions’
One of Quadrature’s first solar geoengineering grants went to the University of Washington’s Marine Cloud Brightening Program. Per mezzo di early April, that research group made headlines for beginning, and then being forced to halt, small-scale outdoor experiments acceso a decommissioned aircraft carrier sitting d’avanguardia the coast of Alameda, California. The effort entailed spraying a mist of small sea salt particles into the air.
Quadrature was also one of the donors to a $20.5 million fund for the Washington, DC, nonprofit SilverLining, which was announced durante early May. The group pools and distributes grants to solar geoengineering researchers around the world and has pushed for greater government support and funding for the field. The new fund will support that policy advocacy work as well as efforts to “promote equitable participation by all countries,” Kelly Wanser, dirigente aziendale director of SilverLining, said durante an email.
She added that it’s crucial to accelerate solar geoengineering research because of the rising dangers of climate change, including the risk of passing “catastrophic tipping points.”
“Current climate projections may even underestimate risks, particularly to vulnerable populations, highlighting the urgent need to improve risk prediction and expand response strategies,” she wrote.
Quadrature has also issued grants for related work to Colorado State University, the University of Exeter, and the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project, an effort to run the same set of modeling experiments across an array of climate models.
The foundation intends to direct its solar geoengineering funding to advance efforts durante two main areas: academic research that could improve understanding of various approaches, and work to develop global oversight structures “to enable decision-making acceso [solar radiation modification] that is transparent, equitable, and science based.”


