UNIVERSITIES

Involved in Geoengineering Research

The ideas have to come from somewhere. And the research has to be done somewhere. Guess where? From our own government funded institutions of learning where we have seen decades of indoctrination by liberal globalist professors. See how our major universities are behind the research and development of these programs.

  • Harvard University

    • Solar Geoengineering Research Program

      • “The Harvard Project on Climate Agreements has released a volume of 26 briefs that explores a range of topics related to how we might govern the deployment of solar geoengineering. “Solar geoengineering” (SG) refers to the deliberate alteration of the earth’s radiative balance in order to reduce the risks attributed to the accumulation of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.”

      • “The Harvard Solar Geoengineering Research Program (SGRP) was launched in April 2017. Since its establishment, SGRP has supported research resulting in the publication of dozens of peer-reviewed articles on the science and governance of solar geoengineering…”

  • University of Chicago

    • The Institute for Climate and Sustainable Growth

      • “University of Chicago Launches Groundbreaking New Institute to Confront Climate Change”

      • The University of Chicago’s new climate initiative

        • “As the climate crisis has escalated, some experts have suggested that drastic measures like solar geoengineering may eventually become necessary and so should be researched now.”

  • University of Minnesota

  • Cornell University

    • Climate Engineering Program

      • “Our research is focused on climate engineering (also called solar geoengineering and solar radiation management)”

      • “There are many ideas for deliberately modifying the climate (known as Solar Geoengineering, Climate Intervention, or Climate Engineering).  Our team focuses on stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI), which would reflect a small amount of sunlight, cooling the climate and reducing many impacts of climate change.”

      • A Planetary Cooling Hose

        • “Geoengineering may offer a way to pause global warming, providing the time for more permanent solutions to become effective. Erection of a high-altitude hose offers an affordable and near-term approach to deliver sulfur-bearing fluids to the stratosphere in order to perform geoengineering via solar radiation management.”

      • Cornell Chronicle -

        • “A group of international scientists led by Cornell is – more rigorously and systematically than ever before – evaluating if and how the stratosphere could be made just a little bit “brighter,” reflecting more incoming sunlight so that an ever-warming Earth maintains its cool.”

        • “Solar radiation modification – or solar geoengineering, as it is sometimes called – is a potential climate change mitigation strategy that involves injecting sulfate aerosols into the stratosphere so more sunlight bounces off the Earth’s atmosphere.”

  • MIT

    • The Climate Project

      • MIT Technology Review: “For half a century, climate researchers have considered the possibility of injecting small particles into the stratosphere to counteract some aspects of climate change. The idea is that by reflecting a small fraction of sunlight back to space, these particles could partially offset the energy imbalance caused by accumulating carbon dioxide, thereby reducing warming as well as extreme storms and many other climate risks.”

         

  • Columbia University

  • Colorado State University

    • DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL & ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING

      • Graduate Program in Geoengineering

        • “Geoengineering is the study, design, and use of natural geomaterials (soils, rocks), geosynthetic materials, and other types of man-made materials.”

  • University of Washington

    • “An interdisciplinary seminar series exploring the interfaces between the scientific concepts, engineering viability, policy and governance issues, and ethical questions surrounding the deliberate modification of the Earth’s climate system (geoengineering).”

  • University of Missouri

    • Missouri Law Review

      • “Solar geoengineering describes a set of proposed technologies that would limit the harms of climate change by altering Earth’s flows of incoming and outgoing solar energy.1 Of these proposals, stratospheric aerosol injection is the most researched and widely discussed, though many basic technical questions remain unexplored.2 A stratospheric aerosol injection program would spray a reflective aerosol high above in the atmosphere, perhaps using aircraft or balloons.”

      • “The most challenging problems posed by solar geoengineering are not technical or scientific, but rather “social, ethical, legal and political.”

    University of Arizona

    • Geoengineering Certificate Program

      • “This specialized certificate highlights specific geoengineering issues in Arizona and serves as a stepping stone if you are interested in advancing to a master's degree track.”

      • “Geoengineering relates to emerging technologies that can manipulate the natural environment to offset the impacts of climate change.”