Apr 22, 2021
Scientists think they can control weather with lasers
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: geoengineering
A group of researchers in Florida may have found a way to control the weather, through the use of dual lasers.
A group of researchers in Florida may have found a way to control the weather, through the use of dual lasers.
This is not a page from a science fiction novel. “Cloud seeding” is a real practice—in fact, it’s been around for decades. It’s used today to boost precipitation in at least eight states across the western U.S. and dozens of countries around the world.
But there is little evidence to show that the process is increasing precipitation.
More than 100 years ago in his autobiography, Nikola Tesla reflected on the first time he had the idea to control the weather. Now, China is spending billions to prove that weather modification is possible.
Tesla wrote:
Continue reading “Nikola Tesla Predicted that the Weather Could Be Controlled and He Was Right” »
Weather modification, according to the document, would support: forecasts of disasters such as drought and hailstorms, as well as zoning work in agricultural production areas; normal working plans for regions in need of ecological protection and restoration; and emergency response plans to deal with events such as forest or grassland fires, and unusually high temperature or droughts.
The country’s weather modification efforts would support emergency response plans to deal with events such as drought and hailstorms.
You could use haarp to refreeze the antartica.
This carefully documented article on Weather Warfare was first published by Global Research on August 1, 2010.
Continue reading “HAARP: Secret Weapon Used For Weather Modification, Electromagnetic Warfare” »
Circa 2010
A laser has been used to generate small clouds on demand in lab, and real-world experiments suggest this could be a way to call down rain when it’s needed.
People have experimented with cloud seeding for decades in the hope of boosting rainfall, usually by sprinkling silver iodide crystals into clouds high in the atmosphere.
The ability to modify the weather has long belonged in the realm of science fiction, but now a team of scientists in Idaho think they’ve figured out how to make it happen outside a lab.
Should definitely be worked on. Eventually the same stuff could be used to reverse engineer/terraform Venus.
When politicians talk about the Paris Climate Agreement, it’s usually framed in terms of restrictions on emissions for states and businesses. But the Paris Agreement wasn’t just an agreement to regulate — it was also an agreement to innovate. That’s because most experts agree that the world won’t be able to keep global temperature rise below 2 degrees Celsius, unless there’s a way to physically remove CO2 from the atmosphere.
A Swiss startup called Climeworks has made that their goal, developing the most advanced carbon-capture technology to date. VICE News went to Switzerland to see how the technology works and hear how the business plans to tackle climate change. Problem is, what Climeworks is doing isn’t cheap.
Continue reading “Sucking CO2 from the atmosphere could save the planet — but it isn’t cheap” »