"Next month, a Silicon Valley engineer plans to head out on a snowmobile from Barrow, on the northern tip of Alaska, to sprinkle reflective sand on a frozen lake to try to stop it from melting.
It’s part of a journey that began in 2006, after Leslie Field watched the climate change documentary “An Inconvenient Truth” and felt like she’d been “hit by a big fat truck.” Now, she hopes to gather global support to cover more than 19,000 square miles of sea ice – an area about the size of Costa Rica – with a thin coating of tiny floating silica spheres, which she claims will help reduce the world’s rising temperatures.
The cost estimate? $1 billion a year."
Katherine Ellison reports for Reveal March 22, 2018.
SEE ALSO:
"Will The World Ever Be Ready For Solar Geoengineering?" (Chemical & Engineering News)
"What on Earth? Why Climate Change Skeptics Are Backing Geoengineering"
Source: Reveal, 03/26/2018