Stardust sold geoengineering to investors. Now it needs to sell it to the public.
Ian McEwan’s recent novel, What We Can Know, is set in a semi-underwater Britain in the year 2119. A few decades on from a ...
Can we cool the Earth by dimming the Sun? Scientists are exploring solar geoengineering—a controversial climate intervention ...
Stardust Solutions released safety principles as part of its effort to assuage concerns over the role of commercial interests ...
The first-of-its-kind report draws on more than 350 peer-reviewed studies to conclude human microplastic exposure is ‘continuous and global’ A new major report has revealed the vast scale of ...
The report also found that some climate technology could actually make microplastic exposure worse.View on euronews ...
"None of us knows what they are hoping to put into the stratosphere — for a profit." The post $60 Million Startup Says It’s ...
WashU researchers show diamond dust from detonation synthesis absorbs light due to carbon impurities, making it a poor candidate for solar geoengineering.
Climate skeptics are claiming that responses from ChatGPT prove aircrafts are spraying nefarious "chemtrails" used to ...
Claims that Bill Gates is “dimming the sun” have spread widely online, but available evidence shows that no such real-world operation is underway, with the controversy rooted instead in funding for ...
We’re sleepwalking into ecocide. Like it or not, Starlink may one day be our last resort ...
Last month, climate scientist and author Kate Marvel resigned from her position at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies ...