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International responses to weather modification

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 May 2009

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Abstract

In the past few decades we have been improving our understanding of the weather system and exploring ways to modify it. Over sixty countries have experimented with modifying the weather. The new technology of weather and climate modification will raise important political problems which will demand new responses from the international community. Whether states will be able to establish the cooperative measures necessary to develop and manage new technology depends upon whether there are sufficient incentives to do so. This article analyzes the historical patterns of international cooperation in meteorology, and then plots against several time horizons projected developments and capabilities in weather modification technology and the potential problems emerging from using the technology. It derives a tentative picture of the responsibilities demanded, compares the likely responses with those needed, and assesses whether they will be adequate for the problems projected.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The IO Foundation 1975

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References

1 National Academy of Sciences, Weather and Climate Modification: Problems and Prospects, (Washington, D.C., 1966), vol. 1, p. 4Google Scholar.

2 National Academy of Sciences, Weather and Climate Modification (Washington, D.C., 1973)pp. 34Google ScholarPubMed.

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14 In July 1973, the Senate voted 82–10 in favor of a resolution that the US should seek a treaty prohibiting “the use of any environmental or geophysical modification activity as a weapon of war.” S. Res. 71, Congressional Record, 07 11, 1973, pp. S. 1301–2Google Scholar.

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18 The text of the Statement on the Environment appears in The New York Times, July 4, 1974, p. 2, col. 8.

19 For the text of the convention, see UN Document A/C.1/L.675, September 24, 1974. The revised resolution as adopted by the UN First Committee is UN Doc. A/C.l/L.675/Rev. 1, November 20, 1974.

20 Zhukov, G. P., Vasilevskaya, E. G., and Lukin, P. I., Legal Aspects of the Utilization of Artificial Satellites for Meteorological and Radio Communication Purposes (NASA, Washington, D.C., 03 1971), p. 80Google Scholar.

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22 The text of the recommendations appears in United Nations Conference on the Human Environment, Report to the Senate by Senator Clairborne Pell and Senator Clifford Case, 92nd C, 2nd Sess., October, 1972.

23 Report of the Governing Council of the United Nations Environment Programme on Its Second Session, Nairobi, 11 to 22 March 1974, UNEP/GC/26, April 10,1974.

24 Zhakov, Vasilevskaya, and Lukin, pp. 76–84.

25 The text of the Declaration appears in supra note 22.