It sounds barmy, audacious or sci-fi: a tethered balloon the size of  Wembley stadium suspended 20km above Earth, linked to the ground by a  giant garden hose pumping hundreds of tonnes of minute chemical  particles a day into the thin stratospheric air to reflect sunlight and  cool the planet.
But a team of British academics will next month  formally announce the first step towards creating an artificial volcano  by going ahead with the world's first major "geo-engineering"  field-test in the next few months. The ultimate aim is to mimic the  cooling effect that volcanoes have when they inject particles into the  stratosphere that bounce some of the Sun's energy back into space, so  preventing it from warming the Earth and mitigating the effects of  man-made climate change.
Before the full-sized system can be deployed, the research team will  test a scaled-down version of the balloon-and-hose design. Backed by a £1.6m government grant,  the team will send a balloon to a height of 1km over an undisclosed  location. It will pump nothing more than water into the air, but it will  allow climate scientists and engineers to gauge the engineering  feasibility of the plan. Ultimately, they aim to test the impact of  sulphates and other aerosol particles if they are sprayed directly into  the stratosphere.
If the technical problems posed by controlling a  massive balloon at more than twice the cruising height of a commercial  airliner are resolved, then the team from Cambridge, Oxford, Reading and  Bristol universities expect to move to full-scale solar radiation  tests.
The principal investigator, Matthew Watson,  a former UK government scientific adviser on emergencies and now a  Bristol University lecturer, says the experiment is inspired by  volcanoes and the way they can affect the climate after eruptions.
"We  will test pure water only, in sufficient quantity to test the  engineering. Much more research is required," he said, in answer the  question of what effect a planetary-scale deployment of the technology  could have.
Other leaders of the government-funded Stratospheric particle injection for climate engineering (Spice) project  have investigated using missiles, planes, tall chimneys and other ways  to send thousands of tonnes of particles into the air but have concluded  that a simple balloon and hosepipe system is the cheapest. 
The research is paid for by the government-funded Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council.
"The  whole weight of this thing is going to be a few hundred tonnes. That's  the weight of several double-decker buses. So imagine how big a helium  balloon do you need to hold several double-decker buses – a big balloon.  We're looking at a balloon which is possibly 100-200m in diameter. It's  about the same size as Wembley stadium," said the Oxford engineering  lecturer Hugh Hunt in an interview earlier this year.
"This  hose would be just like a garden hose, 20km long and we pump stuff up  the pipe. The nice thing about it is that we can really have a knob, if  you like, which we can control to adjust the rate at which we inject  these particles."
While the October experiment is expected to have  no impact on the atmosphere, it could also be used to try out  "low-level cloud whitening", a geo-engineering proposal backed  financially by Microsoft chairman and philanthropist Bill Gates.
In  this case, fine sea salt crystals would be pumped up and sprayed into  the air to increase the number of droplets and the reflectivity in  clouds. Together, many droplets are expected to diffuse sunlight and  make a cloud whiter.
However, environment groups in Britain and  the US said the government's experiment was a dangerous precedent for a  full-scale deployment that could affect rainfall and food supplies. Even  if the approach successfully cools the planet by bouncing some of the  Sun's energy back into space, it would do nothing for the build up of CO2 in the atmosphere, which leads to increased ocean acidity.
"What  is being floated is not only a hose but the whole idea of  geo-engineering the planet. This is a huge waste of time and money and  shows the UK government's disregard for UN processes. It is the first  step in readying the hardware to inject particles into the stratosphere.  It has no other purpose and it should not be allowed to go ahead," said  Pat Mooney, chair of ETC Group in Canada, an NGO that supports socially responsible development of technology.
Mike Childs, head of science, policy and research at Friends of the Earth UK, said: "We are going to have to look at new technologies which could suck CO2  out of the air. But we don't need to do is invest in harebrained  schemes to reflect sunlight into space when we have no idea at all what  impact this may have on weather systems around the globe."
But the principle of large-scale geoengineering has been backed strongly by Sir Martin Rees, the former president of Royal Society, which in 2009 concluded in a report that it may be necessary to have a "plan B" if governments could not reduce emissions.
"Nothing  should divert us from the main priority of reducing global greenhouse  gas emissions. But if such reductions achieve too little, too late,  there will surely be pressure to consider a 'plan B' – to seek ways to  counteract the climatic effects of greenhouse gas emissions by  'geoengineering'," said Rees.
Members of the British public who were consulted by researchers in advance of the Spice experiment were broadly sceptical.
"Overall  almost all of our participants were willing to entertain the notion  that the test-bed as an engineering test – a research opportunity –  should be pursued. Equally, very few were fully comfortable with the  notion of stratospheric aerosols as a response to climate change," the  Cardiff University-based researchers concluded.
by "environment clean generations" 

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