I think that a bigger issue is what to do with all that power we'd be able to theoretically generate with a functioning solar shade.
Build a microwave transmitter to destroy beam the power to Earth.
Ninja'd! I was wondering about how that works though. I guess the theoretical microwaves are of a frequency that passes particularly efficiently through the atmosphere, losing little energy to heat generation. But the microwaves we use in cooking get intercepted by water vapor, right? So I'm idly curious if there's a wavelength that dodges that issue, or if we just put the receivers in arid location.
also
I do believe that the UN would at least attempt to fairly use such a device without abusing it. For say . . . sanctions. I believe they wouldnt do that.
I think the UN would absolutely use this against nations violating human rights and international law. And then perform humanitarian missions to mitigate the harm done to the local populace, as they do with sanctions today. Economic sanctions are already a deadly weapon, but I believe the UN generally wields them responsibly.
A successful plan could also include large shipments of food being shipped into the most affected countries, while countries not at all affected could grow extra.
Exactly, I think this would be fundamental to the plan, ah, getting off the ground. And not getting nuked. Nations were threatening first-strikes over SDI defense systems, it would take an impressive feat of international cooperation for this to happen. Not an impossible future, though.
I think that a bigger issue is what to do with all that power we'd be able to theoretically generate with a functioning solar shade.
Artificial fossil fuels or fusing elements for long-term energy production - fabricating useful fuel sources for long-term space exploration.
Actually, a lot of that could probably occur easier up in space anyway.