Oh for Pete’s sake, can’t you just leave us alone? These people couldn’t pour water out of a boot if there were instructions on the sole.
A team of researchers in California drew notoriety last year with an aborted experiment on a retired aircraft carrier that sought to test a machine for creating clouds.
But behind the scenes, they were planning a much larger and potentially riskier study of salt-water-spraying equipment that could eventually be used to dim the sun’s rays — a multimillion-dollar project aimed at producing clouds over a stretch of ocean larger than Puerto Rico.
The details outlined in funding requests, emails, texts and other records obtained by POLITICO’s E&E News raise new questions about a secretive billionaire-backed initiative that oversaw last year’s brief solar geoengineering experiment on the San Francisco Bay.
They also offer a rare glimpse into the vast scope of research aimed at finding ways to counter the Earth’s warming, work that has often occurred outside public view. Such research is drawing increased interest at a time when efforts to address the root cause of climate change — burning fossil fuels — are facing setbacks in the U.S. and Europe. But the notion of human tinkering with the weather and climate has drawn a political backlash and generated conspiracy theories, adding to the challenges of mounting even small-scale tests.


Geo-engineering is a scary concept to begin with! It isn’t the same as relatively innocuous things like river dams or cloud seeding for rain. The latter gets conflated with contrails and ‘chemtrails’ whatever those are or aren’t! We’ve learned over the past 70 years that dams (and possibly cloud seeding) are complicated including downside risks.
That’s why I’m kind of aghast that people who run hedge funds, hotels, and social media companies are getting so far out of their lane messing with geo-engineered cloud cover over large areas of the earth! Thanks for linking to that Politico article. It listed who was responsible for funding the failed project. Usual cast of characters: James Simons foundation, Hyatt Hotel chain heir cousin of the Illinois governor, a Google exec, a retired Facebook exec, another quant hedge fund, and a cryptocurrency billionaire, among others.
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