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It’s human nature to want to blame somebody for a tragedy like the Texas floods. But meteorologists have said that the rain ...
Cloud seeding boosts rain by just 5–15% in ideal conditions. Experts clarify it can’t cause devastating floods like the ...
According to the GAO, states with active cloud seeding programs in 2024 are California, Nevada, Idaho, Utah, Wyoming, ...
Two clouds were targeted and dissipated later that day in the cloud seeding operation Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier ...
Florida’s Attorney General James Uthmeier jumped in to amplify the misinformation — citing a newly passed Florida law banning ...
Cloud seeding has been conducted off and in the central Sierra — including the north fork of the Stanislaus River — since the ...
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) announced over the weekend that she plans to introduce federal legislation to ban weather ...
A federal bill calling for a nationwide ban of cloud seeding and other weather modification could end Wyoming’s controversial ...
Regardless, the process cannot create storms out of thin air. Ken Leppert, an associate professor of atmospheric science at ...
A new law bans companies and people from modifying the weather in Florida, including cloud seeding. On July 1, Senate Bill 56 ...
Scientists blame unusually warm oceans, not cloud seeding, for Texas and North Carolina floods. Yet state lawmakers seek to ban geoengineering, though no such projects exist in North Carolina.
A small contingent of lawmakers are blaming silver iodide for extreme weather events, including the disastrous flooding in Texas, but at least they're getting closer to the truth.