The Exploring Climate Cooling Programme is an international research initiative funded by the UK GovernmentâÂÂs Advanced Research and Invention Agency focused on researching climate engineering approaches designed to mitigate global warming effects.
The programme aims to build an independent evidence base to evaluate whether various approaches to reduce global surface temperatures could ever be feasible, safe, and governable, and to support future decision-making about those approaches. It investigates techniques that fall within the broader scientific field of solar geoengineering, as well as approaches such as Arctic sea ice thickening.
Exploring Climate Cooling Programme director Professor Mark Symes expressed the opinion that the mounting risk of climate tipping pointsâ such as the potential collapse of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation or massive ice sheetsâ necessitates research into methods that could rapidly cool the planet. Programme leaders, after consulting with hundreds of researchers, claimed that the project was initiated due to the absence of empirical data from real-world physical experiments regarding climate change mitigation efforts, which laboratory simulations and computer models alone cannot provide.
In May 2025, the Advanced Research and Invention Agency (ARIA) allocated ã56.8 million in government funding to the Exploring Climate Cooling programme across 22 research projects. This followed an ã11 million commitment from the National Environment Research Council (NERC) on April 3, 2025, to a complementary initiative to investigate the potential impacts of solar geoengineering interventions. The two funding streams resulted in the United Kingdom becoming among the largest funders of climate engineering science, at a time when United States contributions were predicted to decrease under the second Donald Trump presidential administration.
The programme funds 22 research projects spanning multiple methodologies: computer modelling, monitoring of natural atmospheric processes, and indoor laboratory testing.
It also includes five small-scale outdoor experiments, to provide empirical data which laboratory simulations and computer models alone cannot provide, which include:
ARIA is also funding two monitoring projects related to cirrus clouds, both grounded in observing and measuring existing atmospheric processes to improve our fundamental understanding of cirrus cloud formation.
All outdoor experiments will be scrutinised by an oversight committee chaired by Prof Piers Forster, a leading climate scientist who is the founding director of the Priestley Centre for Climate Futures at the University of Leeds and a lead author for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
ARIA has stated that the programme is not a pathway to deployment of any climate cooling technology, and that determining an approach does not work is considered an equally valid outcome to demonstrating that it does.
All funded project teams have signed an intellectual property pledge committing them to publish all experimental data publicly and to provide royalty-free patent licences for research use.
Critics, including several prominent climate researchers, characterized the solar radiation management experiments to be conducted by the programme as an ill-conceived approach that diverts attention from the essential task of reducing carbon emissions. Senior researchers Michael Mann and Raymond Pierrehumbert characterized the efforts as a "dangerous distraction" from underlying sources of climate change, and akin to "taking aspirin for cancer".