Governments consider blotting out sun to ‘fight climate change’
The White House and European Union are considering plans to block sunlight from reaching Earth’s surface to “fight climate change”.
A 44-page report prepared by the White House last week outlined a research plan for how the government can modify the weather — known as geoengineering — to stop global warming. In a process called solar radiation modification (SRM), planes would release certain aerosols into the atmosphere which would deflect the sun’s rays away from Earth. Other methods include releasing large balloons into the stratosphere which block sunlight.
While the White House acknowledged the dangers that would come from blotting out the sun, such as human health and disrupted food supplies, it said those dangers must be weighed against the hazards of “climate change”.
“Climate change is already having profound effects on the physical and natural world, and on human well-being, and these effects will only grow as greenhouse gas concentrations increase and warming continues,” the report said. “Understanding these impacts is crucial to enable informed decisions around a possible role for SRM in addressing human hardships associated with climate change.”
The European Union is also working on a similar research framework, according to BNN Bloomberg, which reviewed a draft of the report.
“The EU will support international efforts to assess comprehensively the risks and uncertainties of climate interventions, including solar radiation modification,” according to the document.
SRM has been heavily advanced by globalist powers like the World Economic Forum (WEF). The WEF has suggested both stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI), which involves releasing sulfates into the atmosphere, as well as “bubble” launches.
“MIT scientists say ‘space bubbles’ could help reverse climate change by reflecting the Sun’s heat away from Earth,” said the WEF in a video last year. “Scientists say cutting out just 1.8% of the Sun’s rays would fully reverse global warming.”
“The bubbles would be manufactured in space by robots. They would form a ‘raft’ about the size of Brazil. This would be placed at a Lagrange point,” the video continued. “That is, a point in space where the Sun and Earth’s gravity balance each other out. This would keep the raft fixed in position.”
“This kind of large-scale physical solution to climate change is called geoengineering. Several such ideas have been proposed, from spraying aerosols into the upper atmosphere to churning up tiny bubbles on the ocean’s surface, all with the aim of reflecting solar radiation back into space.”
The initiative to block the sun is being met with significant pushback, particularly when governments are pushing citizens to use solar energy.
“The EU and Biden now wants to spray chemicals into the air to block out the sun to stop climate change,” tweeted journalist Peter Sweden. “So where is all the solar panels going to get the sunlight from to make electricity? You can't make this up.”