"The atmosphere has no walls."

Rogue Nation

The way things are going, it's hard to imagine developed nations around the world reducing their consumption of fossil fuels enough to prevent the worst impacts of climate change.

To help protect the planet, many experts argue in favor of geoengineering, or deliberately hacking the Earth by sequestering atmospheric carbon or blocking sunlight. But while these plans may be well-intentioned, reports Business Insider, any country that pursues them without other nations' blessings could inadvertently start a global war.

"[Solar geoengineering] has geopolitical ramifications, unlike carbon capture," University of Waterloo geoengineering researcher Juan Moreno-Cruz told Business Insider. "The threat of war never is out of the question," he added.

Global Decisions

Even if a country tried to implement a local geoengineering solution, it might spread out and impact other areas. They could also have unexpected side effects that make things worse locally and around the world.

"The atmosphere has no walls," Andrea Flossmann, a scientist at the World Meteorological Organization, said in a WMO report. "What you add may not have the desired effect in your vicinity, but by being transported along might have undesired effects elsewhere."

Whether geoengineering is the solution to our worsening climate crisis is still the subject of contentious debates. But if it is, it has to be an internationally-accepted solution, lest downstream effects trigger global warfare.

READ MORE: A rogue country could take planet-hacking into its own hands to alter the climate — and some experts worry it could lead to war [Business Insider]

More on geoengineering: Harvard Scientists to Release Sun-Dimming Sky Chemical in 2019


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