There are 3 reasons why, we believe, regulation is needed. 1st, in the
future some geoengineering techniques may allow a single country
unilaterally to affect the climate.
2nd, some albeit very small scale geoengineering testing is already
underway.
3rd, we may need geoengineering as a Plan B if, in the event of the
failure of Plan A

  When it comes to influencing a public's perception on issues, TPTB
are very astute at the way they go about it  Most of us are more than
well aware they are well on their way to well past small scale being
underway of geoengineering testing (instead it is a large scale
program way beyond any testing stanges) as they try to pretend as one
of their 2nd reasons
  Many of us are well aware they are into a global operation being
underway and it has been for almost 20 years and their is nothing
small scale about it nor it is only in just a testing phase

  Also take note it is a collaborative effort with the US House of
Representatives Science and Technology Committee  And within the body
of this pdf they also reference geoengineering is not the same as
weather seeding  I haven't read all of it yet

http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmsctech/221/221.pdf


The Regulation of Geoengineering

Summary
Geoengineering describes activities specifically and deliberately
designed to effect a change in the global climate with the aim of
minimising or reversing anthropogenic (that is human caused) climate
change.
Geoengineering covers many techniques and technologies but splits into
two broad categories: those that remove carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere such as sequestering and locking carbon dioxide in
geological formations; and those that reflect solar radiation.

Techniques in this category include the injection of sulphate aerosols
into the stratosphere to mimic the cooling effect caused by large
volcanic eruptions.

The technologies and techniques vary so much that any regulatory
framework for geoengineering cannot be uniform. Instead, those
techniques, particularly carbon removal, that are closely related to
familiar existing technologies, could be regulated by developing
the international regulation of the existing regimes to encompass
geoengineering.
For other technologies, especially solar refection, new regulatory
arrangements will have to be developed.

There are three reasons why, we believe, regulation is needed. First,
in the future some geoengineering techniques may allow a single
country unilaterally to affect the climate.
Second, some albeit very small scale geoengineering testing is already
underway. Third, we may need geoengineering as a Plan B if, in the
event of the failure of Plan A the reduction of greenhouse gaseswe are
faced with highly disruptive climate change. If we
start work now it will provide the opportunity to  explore fully the
technological, environmental, political and regulatory issues.

We are not calling for an international treaty but for the groundwork
for regulatory arrangements to begin. Geoengineering techniques should
be graded with consideration to factors such as trans-boundary effect,
the dispersal of potentially hazardous materials in the environment
and the direct effect on  ecosystems. The regulatory regimes for
geoengineering should then be tailored accordingly. The controls
should be based on a set of principles that command widespread
agreement, for example, the disclosure of
geoengineering research and open publication of results and the
development of governance arrangements before the deployment of
geoengineering techniques.

The UN is the route by which, eventually, we envisage the regulatory
framework operating but first the UK and other governments need to
push geoengineering up the international agenda and get processes
moving.

This inquiry was innovative in that we worked collaboratively with the
US House of Representatives Science and Technology Committee, the
first international joint working of this kind for a House of Commons
select committee. We found the experience constructive and rewarding
and, we hope, successful. We are enthusiastic supporters of
collaborative working between national legislatures on topics such as
geoengineering with international reach.  Our Report covering  the
regulation of geoengineering will now dovetail into a wider inquiry
that the House of Representatives Committee is carrying out
on geoengineering. Science, technology and  engineering are key to
solving global challenges and we commend to our successor committee
international collaboration as an innovative way to meet these
challenges

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