2021 -- H 5135

========

LC000115

========

     STATE OF RHODE ISLAND

IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY

JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2021

____________

A N   A C T

RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- THE GEOENGINEERING ACT

     

     Introduced By: Representatives Bennett, and Price

     Date Introduced: January 25, 2021

     Referred To: House Environment and Natural Resources

     It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:

1

     SECTION 1. Title 23 of the General Laws entitled "HEALTH AND SAFETY" is hereby

2

amended by adding thereto the following chapter:

3

CHAPTER 95

4

THE GEOENGINEERING ACT

5

     23-95-1. Short title.

6

     This chapter shall be known and may be cited as "The Geoengineering Act."

7

     23-95-2. Legislative intent.

8

     (a) To preserve the safe, peaceful uses of Rhode Island's atmosphere for people, the

9

environment, and agriculture, by regulating geoengineering, weather modification and other large-

10

scale activities and prohibiting activities that are harmful.

11

     (b) "Geoengineering" is defined as the intentional manipulation of the environment,

12

involving nuclear, biological, chemical, electromagnetic and other physical-agent activities that

13

effect changes to the earth's atmosphere or surface.

14

     (c) The general assembly finds that geoengineering encompasses many technologies and

15

methods involving hazardous activities that can harm human health and safety, the environment,

16

agriculture, aviation, and the economy of the state of Rhode Island.

17

     (d) It is, therefore, the intention of the general assembly to regulate all geoengineering

18

activities as further set forth by the terms and provisions of this chapter.

19

     23-95-3. Findings of fact.

 

1

     (a) Background. Earthly life, or "Bios", is a system that can be impaired and broken by

2

perturbations such as human activities that are xenobiotic, (i.e., foreign to life). The extant damage

3

from pollutants and other harmful human activities is incalculable, and the state of earth's biotic

4

system is widely reported as catastrophic and in urgent need of protective action.

5

     (b) Scope of geoengineering. Inclusive of solar radiation management (SRM), carbon

6

dioxide removal (CDR), and other technologies, geoengineering activities are diverse, varying

7

greatly in their characteristics and consequences. Geoengineering, defined to include anthropogenic

8

atmospheric activities generally, may involve ground-based, under-water, or atmosphere-based

9

activities, including, without limitation, cloud-seeding and other means of deployment of hazards

10

by aircraft, rockets, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and drones, large balloons, wireless

11

infrastructures, ships or submarines.

12

     (c) All geoengineering activities require state licensing.

13

     (d) SRM activities include, but are not limited to, Stratospheric Aerosol Injection (SAI)

14

such as:

15

     (1) Solar shields or atmospheric sunscreens: Reflective materials are injected into the

16

stratosphere with the intention of increasing albedo. These include, but are not limited to, sulfur

17

dioxide (SO2), sulfuric acid (H2SO4), and aluminum oxide (Al2O3).

18

     (i) Per the journal Geophysical Research Letters, SO2 injected into the atmosphere slowly

19

converts to H2SO4 and produces the adverse effects of ozone layer reduction and radiative heating

20

of the lower stratosphere through reflection and absorption of terrestrial heat. The Federal Clean

21

Air Act is focused on reducing SO2 and H2SO4, the primary components of acid rain. Per the

22

Federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), SO2 penetrates deeply into sensitive parts of the

23

lungs and is harmful to the environment.

24

     (ii) Per the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Al2O3 causes respiratory tract, eye, and

25

skin irritation as well as organ damage and bone abnormalities, particularly with repeated or

26

prolonged exposure; and it may be neurotoxic if absorbed into the brain. Section 313 of the Federal

27

Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA) requires anyone

28

manufacturing, processing, or using Al2O3 to report this activity to the Environmental Protection

29

Agency (EPA). Any aircraft containing a hazardous substance is considered by Section 103 of the

30

Federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA)

31

and by Section 304 of EPCRA as a "facility" required to report any such release into the

32

environment. Whether users deploying substances at stratospheric altitudes do presently comply is

33

unlikely. Following stratospheric release, sulfuric and aluminum oxide particulates fall into the

34

troposphere, blocking sunlight from reaching earth's surface, after which they rain down as acidic

 

LC000115 - Page 2 of 17

1

pollution, harming terrestrial and aquatic life. Acidic precipitation further mobilizes aluminum

2

from both natural sources and the direct anthropogenic releases in SAI and industrial processes.

3

Specifically, environmental acidification mobilizes aluminum from land into aquatic environments.

4

Acid rain dissolves and washes away the nutrients and minerals in the soil which help plants to

5

grow, reduces photosynthesis by removing the waxy cover on leaves, and ultimately kills the

6

aquatic life upon which human life depends.

7

     (2) Carbon black or black carbon releases: Deliberate, atmospheric releases of soot are used

8

to produce artificial weather events, increasing albedo and reflecting sunlight;

9

     (3) Rocket emissions: These include, but are not limited to, black carbon and alumina

10

particles in addition to water vapor, a "greenhouse gas", blocking sunlight and reflecting terrestrial

11

heat;

12

     (4) Cloud brightening: Sodium chloride (NaCl) or sea salt, seawater, nitric acid (HNO3),

13

or other materials injected into clouds make the clouds more reflective, after which the salt and

14

other materials rain out over land areas and freshwater supplies;

15

     (5) Salt flare rockets: Fired into clouds, these rockets trigger rain downpours containing

16

salt, which contaminates freshwater supplies, desiccates surfaces, and makes the atmosphere more

17

conductive;

18

     (6) Cloud-seeding releases of silver iodide (AgI) or solid dry ice, or both, which is carbon

19

dioxide (CO2), the latter increasing levels intended to be decreased;

20

     (7) Cloud cover production: Aerial releases of water vapor, a "greenhouse gas", result in

21

manmade cloud cover, trapping terrestrial heat;

22

     (8) Reflective space mesh mirrors: Wire-mesh mirrors, deployed in space, reduce the

23

amount of direct sunlight reaching earth's surface over small or large areas, depending on their size;

24

     (9) Space sunshades or sunshields: Huge, parasol-like devices reduce the amount of direct

25

sunlight reaching earth's surface;

26

     (10) Planetary sunshades: These largest of SRM operations use particulates to cover, over

27

time, the whole earth, stripping the ozone layer by as much as seventy-six percent (76%) and

28

reducing the amount of direct sunlight reaching earth's surface;

29

     (11) Artificial ionosphere: A sustained, high-density plasma cloud is produced in earth's

30

upper atmosphere; and

31

     (12) Large helium balloons which release atmospheric contaminants such as SO2.

32

     (e) CDR, involving the sequestration, capture, or removal of carbon dioxide consisting of:

33

     (1) Land-based and ocean-based carbon sequestration, also called CO2 geo-sequestration;

34

     (2) Carbon capture or removal, which processes involve capturing what is considered

 

LC000115 - Page 3 of 17

1

"waste" CO2 and depositing it at storage sites;

2

     (3) Biochar, requiring burning huge amounts of biomass such as trees, crops, and solid

3

waste;

4

     (4) Ocean fertilization (OF) by dumping iron filings, lime, and urea in order to sequester

5

CO2, producing detrimental artificial algae blooms and reducing oxygen and needed nutrients; and

6

     (5) Genetically modified CO2-eating, plastic trees.

7

     (f) Additional geoengineering activities requiring state licensing include, but are not

8

limited to:

9

     (1) Ocean-cooling pipes, which, per recent reports, would exacerbate oceanic warming;

10

     (2) Re-icing or cooling the arctic and other areas through artificial means;

11

     (3) Ground-based cloud-nucleating generators;

12

     (4) Weather modification involving the release of sea salt, silver iodide, barium or other

13

particulates to enhance precipitation (rain or snow) in one area, while reducing precipitation in

14

other areas;

15

     (5) Glacier-reflecting blanket deployment, with vast polar areas to be covered with soot;

16

     (6) Nitrogen removal and sequestration;

17

     (7) Evaporation alteration, by spreading of various kinds of film upon large bodies of water;

18

     (8) Water vapor generation using nuclear fission or fusion, contaminating water sources;

19

     (9) Chaff releases, which involve the dispersal of bundles of millions of aluminum-coated

20

silica or glass fibers, often in lengths of one and five-tenths centimeters (1.5cm), two and five-

21

tenths centimeters (2.5cm), and five centimeters (5cm), which spread over hundreds of miles,

22

remain in the air for up to a day, and then fall and break apart purposed to confuse foreign radars

23

and satellite vision. Chaff causes power outages and interferes with air-traffic control, weather

24

forecasting and long-term climate research;

25

     (10) Deployment of radiofrequency/microwave (RF/MW) radiation, or low frequency

26

electric or magnetic fields, other than for safety and aviation communications, by large

27

infrastructures, individual and high-densification antennas at terrestrial surface and at higher

28

altitudes from satellites, or by other means or at other altitudes; and

29

     (11) Intense mechanical vibration or noise other than from an aircraft's propulsion or other

30

physical agents, such as intentional changes to ambient temperature or barometric pressure, or

31

excessive light at night, for any purpose, or inadvertently from other activities.

32

     (g) Aircraft geoengineering activities include those carried out from any type of aerial

33

vehicle, rocket, drone or balloon, which involve the release or deployment of any nuclear radiation;

34

any biologic or trans-biologic agent; any chemical substance or mixture including any chemical

 

LC000115 - Page 4 of 17

1

substances added to the aircraft's fuel emissions; cloud seeding; any electromagnetic radiation other

2

than radar or radio communications necessary for the aircraft's safety; or any other harmful physical

3

agent, shall be subject to regulation including the licensing process, pursuant to this chapter.

4

     (h) Consequences. Documented problems arising from geoengineering activities include,

5

but are not limited to:

6

     (1) Contamination of air, water, and soil, as particulates fall to earth's surface, and other

7

contamination, including by vapors and physical agents, at or below ground or sea level;

8

     (2) Degradation of human, animal, and plant health and productivity, when people and

9

other living organisms are exposed to geoengineering particulates, vapors, and other contaminants,

10

often in violation of the National Environmental Protection Act of 1970 (NEPA);

11

     (3) The acceleration of biodiversity and species losses, especially the loss of endangered

12

and threatened species as identified under the Federal Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA), each

13

of which species has intrinsic as well as human-resource value, and each of which cannot bear, per

14

ESA, further habitat modification or degradation;

15

     (4) Extreme weather, with unprecedented temperatures, fires, wind speeds, precipitation,

16

electrical storms, hurricanes and tornados, resulting in large-scale loss of life, structures and

17

infrastructures; and severe reduction in state, regional, and global food production;

18

     (5) Changes in micro-climates, local weather, and large-scale climates within short time

19

periods, with increased and cascading climate effects and political ramifications;

20

     (6) Global dimming, which decreases vitamin D (calciferol) in humans and animals,

21

causing malabsorption of calcium, magnesium and phosphate; and which reduces photosynthesis,

22

with losses in agriculture and productivity;

23

     (7) Less direct sunlight reaching earth's surface, with fewer winter freezes and higher

24

humidity, resulting in increased molds, mildews, fungi, and other pathogens and pests that develop

25

from such conditions;

26

     (8) Increases in acid rain loads from the airborne injection or releases of sulfur and

27

aluminum oxide, with human, animal, plant, and water-resource degradation;

28

     (9) Changes in distribution patterns and chemical contents of rainfall, resulting in floods,

29

droughts, and the potential for international political conflicts therefrom;

30

     (10) Algal blooms, with adverse impacts upon human health, aquatic systems, and

31

economies;

32

     (11) The near impossibility of restoring de-valued natural resources, with the undermining

33

of state-funded conservation programs;

34

     (12) Increased ultraviolet radiation (UV, including UVA, UVB, and UVC), at earth's

 

LC000115 - Page 5 of 17

1

surface. UV is strongly absorbed by organic materials such as living tissues, with UVC's high

2

energy and small wavelength particularly capable of destroying DNA and reproduction;

3

     (13) Increased combustibility of earth's terrestrial surfaces, by means of fallen particulates

4

with increased incidence of fires;

5

     (14) Significant increases in ambient mechanical vibration and noise pollution, leading to,

6

including, but not limited to, increased incidence of nervous system and cardiac irregularities;

7

     (15) Increased metals content in surface-dwelling and aquatic organisms, producing

8

increased bodily electrical conductivity, with more susceptibilities and damages therefrom;

9

     (16) Extreme harm to vulnerable human subpopulations and to the more vulnerable

10

species;

11

     (17) Significant changes to earth's atmosphere's electric, magnetic, and electromagnetic

12

properties through the induction of high-intensity RF/MW radiation, resulting in extreme and less

13

predictable weather, the desiccation of terrestrial animals and plants, and the reduction of those

14

animal and insect populations dependent for navigation upon electromagnetism;

15

     (18) Visibility impairment and clutter, reducing aviation safety and accelerating the

16

incidence of collision with "space-junk" or "space-debris" particulate matter and balloons;

17

     (19) The delay by decades of the ozone layer's potential recovery;

18

     (20) The financial burden that airborne, reflective, metallic particulates such as chaff must

19

be repeatedly replenished by aircraft release, since their atmospheric time is limited;

20

      (21) Further financial burden, since, per the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, the

21

amount of injected material is much less effective in polluted clouds, requiring the injection of

22

increased amounts of material for cloud-brightening;

23

     (22) Economic losses to various sectors of society and to the state itself, resulting from,

24

including, but not limited to, human health damages, with increased and earlier health care needs,

25

and heightened suffering for those injured or sensitized by prior hazardous exposures, contaminated

26

soils and water supplies, loss of pollinators such as bees and birds, lower crop yields, dead and

27

dying forests, loss of habitats, decline of fisheries, rising pollution cleanup costs, and less solar

28

power production from lack of sunlight reaching earth's surface; and

29

     (23) The potential and ease for enemies, foreign and domestic, to cause harm intentionally.

30

     (i) Response to federal actions. Shirking duties to protect national security, safety, health

31

and the environment, the federal government acted by various means to cause harm through

32

geoengineering, thereby establishing, through the Tenth Amendment of the United States

33

Constitution, the necessity, authority, and obligation of all the states to override destructive federal

34

acts and provisions, correct the federal government, cancel plans for geoengineering and high-

 

LC000115 - Page 6 of 17

1

densification of antennas, and void current contracts presently in place.

2

     (j) In view of these facts, the general assembly declares that geoengineering activities must

3

be strictly regulated by the state through a licensing process, within which an environmental and

4

economic impact report (EEIR) from the department of environmental management (DEM), and

5

preliminary, detailed impact reports (IRs) from the state agencies, state offices, departments, and

6

programs included in § 23-95-6, as well as information gathered in public hearings, must guide

7

decision making, pursuant to this chapter.

8

     23-95-4. Definitions.

9

     As used in this chapter, the following words and phrases shall have the following meanings:

10

     (1) "Albedo" means the fraction of incident radiation, such as light and heat, reflected by a

11

natural cloud or by materials injected into the atmosphere.

12

     (2) "Application" means a submitted, written request by any person seeking to implement,

13

conduct or engage in any form of geoengineering.

14

     (3) "Area" means a portion within the confines of the state and its territorial waters,

15

including the atmosphere above it.

16

     (4) "Atmospheric contaminant" means any type of aerosol, chaff, biologic or trans-biologic

17

agent, genetically modified agent, metal, radioactive material, vapor, particulate down to or less

18

than one nanometer in diameter, and any air pollutant regulated by the state, including, but not

19

limited to, those deemed "unnecessary" pursuant to the general laws, xenobiotic (foreign-to-life)

20

electromagnetic radiation and fields, mechanical vibration and other physical agents, or any

21

combination of these contaminants.

22

     (5) "Chaff" means aluminum-coated hair-like silica glass fibers typically dispersed in

23

bundles containing five (5) million to one hundred (100) million inhalable fibers, which fall to the

24

ground in about one day.

25

     (6) "Conditions" means any limitations and safeguards to be placed on an applied-for

26

geoengineering activity that is licensed by the director of the department of environmental

27

management.

28

     (7) "Department or DEM" means the state department of environmental management.

29

     (8) "Director" means the director of the state department of environmental management.

30

     (9) "Geoengineering" means the intentional manipulation of the environment, involving

31

nuclear, biological, transbiological, chemical, electromagnetic or other physical-agent activities

32

that effect changes to earth's atmosphere or surface.

33

     (10) "Impact evaluation report" means the report developed and submitted to the

34

department by an agency, office, department or program in this state that assesses specific, actual

 

LC000115 - Page 7 of 17

1

and potential short-term and long-term effects upon human health and safety, aviation safety,

2

agriculture, biodiversity, coastal conservation, endangered species, energy, environment, fish and

3

wildlife, forestry, habitat, water resources, wildlife, river and ocean purity and the state's economy.

4

Short-term effects shall be effects observed within one year of the activity and long-term effects

5

shall be effects observed within ten (10) years of the activity.

6

     (11) "License" means a license issued by the director pursuant to this chapter to engage

7

in geoengineering or any weather modification activities.

8

     (12) "Person" means any individual, trust, firm, joint stock company, corporation,

9

including a quasi-governmental corporation, partnership, association, syndicate, municipality,

10

municipal or state agency, department program, fire district, club, nonprofit agency, commission,

11

university or college, armed services, department or agency of the state or federal government,

12

international governances or instrumentality thereof, including foreign, domestic and mercenary

13

armed services, or region within the United States

14

     (13) "Physical agent" means an agent other than a substance, including, but not limited to,

15

radiofrequency/microwave and other electromagnetic radiation and fields, barometric pressure,

16

temperature, mechanical vibration and sound.

17

     (14) "Post-activity report" means the report submitted by the licensee to the director

18

following a licensed geoengineering activity.

19

     (15) "Release" means any activity that results in the issuance of contaminants such as the

20

emitting, discharging or injecting of one or more nuclear, biological, trans-biological, chemical, or

21

physical agents into the ambient atmosphere, either once, intermittently, or continuously.

22

     (16) "Stratosphere" means the region of the upper atmosphere extending upward from the

23

edge of the troposphere to about thirty (30) miles or fifty kilometers (50 km) above the earth.

24

     (17) "Troposphere" means the region of the lowest layer of the atmosphere, six (6) miles

25

or ten kilometers (10 km) high in some areas and as much as twelve (12) miles or twenty kilometers

26

(20 km) high in others, within which there is a steady drop in temperature with increasing altitude

27

and within which nearly all cloud formations occur and weather conditions manifest.

28

     (18) "Weather modification and control" means changing or controlling, or attempting to

29

change or control, by artificial methods, the natural development of any or all atmospheric cloud

30

forms and precipitation forms which occur in the troposphere.

31

     23-95-5. Geoengineering policy - Rules and regulations.

32

     (a) Procedure. Due to the potential for significant harm, any contemplated geoengineering

33

activity shall require the submission of a written license application to request a license to engage

34

in a specific type of geoengineering activity on one or more specified dates during a period of time

 

LC000115 - Page 8 of 17

1

not to exceed five (5) days. The following shall apply:

2

     (1) Every submitted license application shall be made a public record within twenty-four

3

(24) hours of submission;

4

     (2) A license shall not be used for any activity other than the activity specified in the

5

license. The license shall constitute a contract between the department and the licensee;

6

     (3) The department shall review each application submitted under this chapter; and

7

     (4) The director shall have the power to;

8

     (i) Grant or deny a license;

9

     (ii) Modify the conditions of a license; or

10

     (iii) Revoke a license for cause;

11

     (5) A licensee must file a post-activity report, including the hour and minute of each aspect

12

of the activity.

13

     (b) Evaluation.

14

     (1) A proposed geoengineering activity must first be evaluated by the department and every

15

applicable agency, office, department and program in this state, including, but not limited to, an

16

evaluation of the following factors:

17

     (i) Transboundary effects;

18

     (ii) Impacts of reduction of sunlight reaching earth's surface;

19

     (iii) The planned methods of release, dispersal, or other deployment of substances or

20

physical agents into the environment including the atmosphere; and

21

     (iv) The potential and actual, direct and indirect effects upon humans and other living

22

organisms, populations, ecosystems, agriculture, human structures, aviation and the state's

23

economy.

24

     (2) To obtain a license under this chapter, an applicant must show proof of environmental

25

health and safety and that the applied-for activity shall produce zero hazardous emissions.

26

     (3) Prior to granting or denying an application under this chapter, the department shall:

27

     (i) Solicit and obtain, within a reasonable amount of time as determined by the department,

28

impact evaluation reports from the various agencies, offices, departments and programs in the state;

29

and

30

     (ii) Hold at least four (4) public hearings and comment periods on the proposed activity,

31

which shall be announced on the department's publicly accessible internet website.

32

     (c) Regulatory oversight. The department shall promulgate rules and regulations for the

33

implementation of this chapter, including, but not limited to, the following:

34

     (1) Granting or denying applications submitted under this chapter, which shall be decided

 

LC000115 - Page 9 of 17

1

on a case-by-case basis; and

2

     (2) Soliciting and obtaining impact evaluation reports, holding hearings and providing a

3

commenting period as required under subsection (b)(3) of this section.

4

     (d) Public comment. The department shall seek public comment for any proposed activity

5

for which an applicant has submitted an application under this chapter, which shall include, but not

6

be limited to, comments of the following communities:

7

     (1) Persons with disabilities;

8

     (2) Medical, health-care and public health science professionals; and

9

     (3) Environmental science, agricultural, astronomy, coastal, conservation, ecology, fishing,

10

forestry, meteorology and oceanographic professionals.

11

     23-95-6. License application.

12

     (a) Process. The department shall promulgate a written application to conduct

13

geoengineering activities in Rhode Island. A person seeking to implement, conduct or engage in

14

any form of geoengineering within or above any area of the state shall submit to the director the

15

written application for a license.

16

     (b) Application. The application promulgated under subsection (a) of this section shall

17

require the following information as well as other information as required by the director:

18

     (1) A detailed description of the contemplated activity, including the purposes, scope,

19

methods, materials, physical agents and timing of the activity;

20

     (2) The following information, which shall be included in the materials and physical agents

21

requirement under subsection (b)(i) of this section:

22

     (i) Sources, sizes, amounts and concentrations of all materials and the precise chemical

23

formulas of any substance or mixture to be used in the activity;

24

     (ii) The resulting product during and following deployment of a substance or mixture listed

25

under subsection (b)(2)(i) of this section;

26

     (iii) The biological or transbiological materials used in the activity, along with any potential

27

interactions of the materials and physical agents during and following deployment of the materials

28

during the activity; and

29

     (iv) The wavelengths, modulation characteristics and rates, intensities and concentrations,

30

directionalities, reflection and duration specifications of any type of electromagnetism or other

31

physical agent to be deployed or potentially emitted, intentionally or inadvertently, during the

32

activity;

33

     (3) Proof of safety and environmental health during and following the activity, with

34

substantiating scientific evidentiary documents from independent sources;

 

LC000115 - Page 10 of 17

1

     (4) The names, educational and professional backgrounds and qualifications of any

2

individual person to be involved in the activity, along with any prior employment and business

3

ownership of the person;

4

     (5) The name and number of any aircraft or other vehicle that may be used for the activity;

5

and

6

     (6) An electronic copy of the application.

7

     (c) Distribution of application. The department shall distribute a copy of each application

8

to the following:

9

     (1) The department of health;

10

     (2) Disability Rights Rhode Island (DRRI);

11

     (3) Division of agriculture within the department of environmental management;

12

     (4) Office of air resources within the department of environmental management;

13

     (5) Office of water resources within the department of environmental management;

14

     (6) The water resources board;

15

     (7) The coastal resources management council;

16

     (8) University of Rhode Island coastal institute;

17

     (9) The office of energy resources;

18

     (10) The soil and conservation office;

19

     (11) The state conservation committee;

20

     (12) The state parks & recreation program;

21

     (13) The division of fish and wildlife outdoor education;

22

     (14) The Fisherman's' Alliance;

23

     (15) Rhode Island Farm Bureau;

24

     (16) Rhode Island Dairy Farms Cooperative;

25

     (17) Rhode Island Beekeepers Association;

26

     (18) Rhode Island Audubon Society;

27

     (19) Rhode Island Wild Plant Society;

28

     (20) Rhode Island airport corporation; and

29

     (21) The Rhode Island emergency management agency.

30

     (d) Fee. The application process requires that a one thousand dollar ($1,000) fee be paid

31

into a public trust which shall be set up for the purpose of this chapter.

32

     (e) Background check. The department shall require a criminal background check from

33

each participant in a potential geoengineering activity.

34

     (f) Impact evaluation report.

 

LC000115 - Page 11 of 17

1

     (1) An agency, office, department or program that receives a copy of an application from

2

the department shall acknowledge receipt of the application to the director within one day of

3

receiving the application.

4

     (2) Within two (2) weeks, or other period as determined by the director, the agency, office,

5

department or program shall publish on the agency's, office's, department's or program's publicly

6

accessible internet website an impact evaluation report citing all actual and potential impacts of the

7

proposed activity, both short-term and long-term impacts as respectively defined within one year

8

and within ten (10) years.

9

     (3) Each impact evaluation report shall include a recommendation to allow, disallow, or to

10

allow in a qualified way the proposed activity.

11

     (4) The director shall publish each impact evaluation report receipt received by the

12

department on the department's publicly accessible internet website.

13

     (5) The director shall set, and publish on the department's public accessible internet

14

website, dates and times for public hearings on any and all health, environmental, agricultural and

15

economic impacts.

16

     (g) Impact evaluation report response.

17

     (1) The department shall prepare an impact evaluation report evaluating the environmental

18

health and economic impacts of a proposed geoengineering activity.

19

     (2) In preparing the impact evaluation report under subsection (g) (1) of this section, the

20

department shall consider all actual and potential public health and safety, environmental,

21

agricultural and aviation safety consequences and economic impacts within one-year and ten-year

22

(10) periods, which consequences and impacts may result from the proposed activity.

23

     (3) The department shall weight bodily security and health more heavily than economic

24

interest.

25

     (4) The department shall include in the impact evaluation report, prepared under this

26

section, the factual and legal information presented at any pertinent hearings held by the

27

department, including, but not limited to, the Ninth Amendment of the Constitution of the United

28

States protection of individual rights to privacy and freedom from assault in one's home and on

29

one's body.

30

     (5) The impact evaluation report prepared under this section shall be published on the

31

department's publicly accessible internet website.

32

     (6) Following publication of the impact evaluation report under subsection (g)(5) of this

33

section, the director shall allow online commentary to the impact evaluation report for a period of

34

two (2) weeks prior to making a final decision on the application.

 

LC000115 - Page 12 of 17

1

     (h) New information. The director shall supplement the environmental and economic

2

impact by the department and correcting any misinformation in the impact evaluation report.

3

     (i) Decision. The director shall render a decision to grant or deny a license after producing

4

the department impact evaluation report response and the following shall apply:

5

     (1) The department shall deny an application if any of the following is true:

6

     (i) An applicable impact evaluation report recommends that the applied-for activity be

7

disallowed; or

8

     (ii) An applicant has not proven within seven (7) calendar days the validity of evidence

9

submitted under this chapter that the applied-for activity is harmful.

10

     (2) The director shall deny an application, or, if applicable, issue a cease-and-desist order

11

to halt a geoengineering activity where the activity has been approved by a municipality of the state

12

if the following is true:

13

     (i) An agency, department office or program or member of the public produces evidence

14

to the department that the activity is harmful or involves a hazardous emission; and

15

     (ii) The applicant or person involved in the geoengineering activity has not disproven the

16

evidence within seven (7) calendar days.

17

     (3) The cease-and-desist order shall have the authority of a court order and any violation

18

shall be punished pursuant to law.

19

     (j) Federally approved programs. Where a geoengineering activity or public process for a

20

geoengineering activity that the department has deemed hazardous has been approved, explicitly

21

or implicitly, by the federal government, the department shall issue a notice to the appropriate

22

federal authority that the hazardous activity cannot lawfully be carried out within or over the state

23

of Rhode Island, pursuant to the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

24

     (k) International programs. An international body that funds or engages in a geoengineering

25

activity deemed to be hazardous by the department shall be prohibited in perpetuity from both

26

engaging in and applying to engage in geoengineering activities in or above the state of Rhode

27

Island.

28

     (l) Agreement. Upon granting a license under this chapter, the director shall provide the

29

applicant an agreement potentially to be executed, which shall require the following:

30

     (1) A detailed report of the department's limitations and safeguards placed upon the

31

activity;

32

     (2) A detailed report to be submitted to the department by the licensee after completion of

33

the activity, along with the steps to be taken to track effects and assure prompt public disclosure of

34

any observations and objections; and

 

LC000115 - Page 13 of 17

1

     (3) Proof of bonding and insurance for the activity and indication of understanding of the

2

potential for adverse consequences if the terms and conditions are violated or not fulfilled.

3

     (m) Execution of the agreement. The director shall execute the agreement and issue the

4

license to the applicant if the director finds the applicant's bonding and insurance and other required

5

information to be accurate and comprehensive.

6

     (n) Timing of geoengineering activity. Upon receipt of the license, the licensee shall inform

7

the department of precisely when the atmospheric activity shall begin, which must be no earlier

8

than fourteen (14) calendar days from the issuance of the license.

9

     (o) Appeal. A person aggrieved by a decision of the director may, within ten (10) calendar

10

days, appeal a decision pursuant to chapter 35 of title 42.

11

     23-95-7. Penalties for violations.

12

     An unlicensed person who engages in a geoengineering activity which requires a license

13

under this chapter or who fails to comply with the decision of the director, or any person who uses

14

an unmarked or unidentified aircraft or other vehicle to carry out a geoengineering activity:

15

     (1) Shall be guilty of a felony and shall pay a fine of not less than five hundred thousand

16

dollars ($500,000) or be imprisoned for not less than two (2) years, or both;

17

     (2) Shall be guilty of a separate offense for each day during which violative activity has

18

been conducted, repeated or continued; and

19

     (3) Shall be deemed in violation, and subject to the penalties of chapter 23 of this title.

20

     23-95-8. Enforcement.

21

     (a) Public announcement. The department shall post advertisements in newspapers of

22

general circulation and on the department's public accessible internet website to encourage the

23

public to monitor, measure, document and report present, potential and past incidents that may

24

constitute geoengineering activity.

25

     (b) Reporting.

26

     (1) An individual who presents evidence of geoengineering activity shall email or

27

otherwise provide in written form to the department of environmental management or the state

28

police, the following:

29

     (i) Evidentiary photographs, with each separately titled as an electronic or hard-copy

30

document, with the respective location from which, and, if the content is from other than a

31

measuring device, the direction in which the photo was taken, with its time and date; and

32

     (ii) Collected samples with photographs, lab tests, microscopy, spectrometry, and other

33

forms of evidence shall similarly be submitted in writing to the department or state police.

34

     (2) A public official who receives information under this subsection and has reason to

 

LC000115 - Page 14 of 17

1

suspect violative activity based on evidence presented by an individual must, directly or through a

2

designee, report in writing within twenty four (24) hours all documentary and supportive evidence

3

to the department.

4

     (c) Reports involving physical agents.

5

     (1) A report to the department of excessive electromagnetic radiation or fields in any part

6

of the spectrum, including light and ionizing radiation, or of intense mechanical vibration, noise or

7

other physical agent, with evidence, including possible photographs or audio recordings, and

8

measurements of the physical agent, shall trigger within two (2) hours a state agency's emergency

9

measurements of peaks with the appropriate, calibrated meter or other forensic device both at and

10

near the reported location.

11

     (2) Radiofrequency/microwave radiation measured at and near the reported location by any

12

state employee at peak in excess of ten (10) microwatts per meter squared (μW/m2), or an emission

13

from a wireless telecommunications facility (WTF) with and effective radiation power (ERP) in

14

excess of forty (40) milliwatts (mW), given the 1996 Telecommunications Acts' preemptions

15

clause, 47 U.S.C. § 332 (c)(7)(B)(iv), leaving operations of such facilities within the regulatory

16

authorities of state and local officials; or low-frequency AC electric fields in excess of 1 volt per

17

meter (V/m) or magnetic fields in excess of 1 milliGauss (mG); or added transients in the electrical

18

wiring, also called "dirty electricity," which must be filtered; or ionizing radiation in excess of 0.02

19

milliSievert per hour (mSv/h); or any vibration, noise or other physical agent exceeding official

20

limits, guidelines or standards, shall trigger:

21

     (i) The department's immediate communication of the requirement of the owner of each

22

tower, antenna, other wireless telecommunications facility, other facility deploying energy-

23

demanding emissions, or other source of emissions at or near the reported location, to produce

24

records of all data collection on the extant operators at one or more sites near where xenobiotic

25

electromagnetism and fields, mechanical vibration, or other physical agents are or have been

26

detected.

27

     (ii) The department's immediate communication of the requirement of the owner and/or

28

operator of the facility, utility or other service at or near the reported location to provide within one

29

business day all data collection records up to that date and time of electrical usage at or near the

30

reported location.

31

     (iii) The department's order to cease operations of all antennas on the measured structure

32

other than those needed for police, fire, emergency services and aviation safety; and

33

     (iv) The department's evaluation within twenty four (24) hours of the owner's performance

34

in causing the cessation of all operations except those activities exempted under subsection

 

LC000115 - Page 15 of 17

1

(c)(2)(iii) of this section.

2

     23-95-9. Rules and regulations.

3

     The director shall promulgate rules and regulations to implement the provisions of this

4

chapter, including, but not limited to, rules and regulations governing the license application

5

process for geoengineering activities and the contents of the application.

6

     SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage.

========

LC000115

========

 

LC000115 - Page 16 of 17

EXPLANATION

BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL

OF

A N   A C T

RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- THE GEOENGINEERING ACT

***

1

     This act would establish a procedure and process to prohibit the intentional manipulation

2

of the environment by means that are known as "Geoengineering" and would require that a person

3

seeking to engage in a geoengineering activity must meet health, safety, and environmental

4

requirements in order to procure a license from the director of the department of environmental

5

management (DEM) for any such activity.

6

     This act would take effect upon passage.

========

LC000115

========

 

LC000115 - Page 17 of 17