In addition, the impact on the global climate is significant, both in the short and long term. Thermodynamic air currents, especially in the equatorial belt, will probably ensure that the CO₂ load can be reversed. Provided, of course, that large areas can be irrigated, which will also meet with resistance. That is why it will only be possible to a limited extent in a few regions, with Australia at the forefront. There, intensive efforts are being made to find ways of compensating for the constant alternation of droughts and floods.
The improvement in the climate in tropical and subtropical regions will also have a direct and indirect effect worldwide: for example, there will be no reason to leave one’s home country, as huge opportunities will open up, creating a great sense of optimism. (Similar to the building of the first railways, especially in the USA). It is important that small businesses and old trades experience a renaissance. After all, it is the large corporations that have excelled in waging war on nature, as the pursuit of short-term profit has always been more important to them than sustainable economic activity, the dollar in front of their nose more important than the energy and beauty behind it.

It is not just the waste of resources that has grown over decades to produce inferior disposable products with a half-life of a few years (often days or weeks). It is also their customers who do the same, adding to the waste. Not to mention the many components, as everything has to be beautifully complicated. Not to mention the massive criminality that has only been able to reach such proportions due to the greed for these products that entire countries have come under the control of criminal gangs.
So if these companies are consistently kept out of these newly emerging worlds, there can be no more reason for wars, as what we are witnessing now is probably already part of the distribution struggle for increasingly scarce resources.
To achieve this, only bearer share certificates may be issued to private individuals, with a maximum investment amount. The necessary investments should be made exclusively through environmental protection organisations, which would then have the opportunity to issue high-interest securities in addition to donations, which should give these organisations an enormous boost, as they would no longer have to act as annoying supplicants but as sought-after investors. In other words, they can play the role of big business, but without the corruption and cronyism.
It is a common pattern that the same people, with all their capital power, always get access to the best pots. They have the guns and the lawyers against whom the poor are helpless. That is why all contracts must be drawn up very carefully, so that there are no back doors or loopholes through which the greedy can quickly seize power.
These are arguments that should convince anyone who wants to take responsibility for climate protection and at the same time seize opportunities for economic development:
Opening up previously uninhabitable landscapes.
Compensating for dry and wet periods, preventing floods and forest and land fires.
Opportunities for market leadership in the production of hydrogen, combined with the technologies required for this.