2021 -- H 5135 | |
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LC000115 | |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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- |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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; |
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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. |
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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. |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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. |
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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. |
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