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 ...
In October, Israel-US startup Stardust Solutions announced it had raised $60 million, the largest-ever fundraising round for ...
Stardust sold geoengineering to investors. Now it needs to sell it to the public.
Morning Overview on MSN
Young climate researchers push solar geoengineering to dim sunlight
When the University of Chicago opened applications for its climate systems engineering program in early 2026, the response signaled something that would have been hard to imagine a decade ago: dozens ...
Of the long list of strategies scientists have suggested to combat global warming, solar geoengineering may be among the most controversial. Of the long list of strategies scientists have suggested to ...
The group invited about 30 experts to plan for a likely wave of new funding to study reflecting sun rays. Climate scientists, environmental activists and philanthropists met privately last month to ...
WashU researchers show diamond dust from detonation synthesis absorbs light due to carbon impurities, making it a poor candidate for solar geoengineering.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) — The Tennessee legislature is on track to pass a bill that would prohibit anyone from combating climate change through atmospheric dispersal within the borders of the state.
The National Academy of Sciences released a major report chronicling six techniques to turn the oceans into carbon dioxide vacuums. Reading time 4 minutes The U.S. government has moved one step closer ...
The Impossible Build on MSN
Solar geoengineering explained: Could it save the planet or backfire?
Can we cool the Earth by dimming the Sun? Scientists are exploring solar geoengineering—a controversial climate intervention ...
National weather officials are debunking recent speculation alleging the government is capable of steering hurricanes and severe weather events.Archive video above: Central Florida neighborhoods ...
Here’s the thing about the stratosphere, the region between six and 31 miles up in the sky: If you really wanted to, you could turn it pink. Or green. Or what have you. If you sprayed some colorant up ...
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