Robert
on March 12, 2026
7 views
Major Development:
Federal Legislation Targets Geoengineering Head-On
A new bill, H.R. 7452, the Air Quality Act, has been introduced in Congress with the explicit goal of banning geoengineering, stratospheric aerosol injection, cloud seeding, solar radiation management, and all other forms of intentional weather or climate modification across the United States.
Introduced by Congressman Greg Steube (R-FL), the legislation would make it a federal crime to knowingly release or cause the release of any chemical, biological, or physical substance into the atmosphere for the purpose of intentionally altering weather patterns, climate conditions, or the amount of sunlight reaching the Earth's surface.
If passed, the bill would outlaw:
• Cloud seeding (dispersing particles to influence precipitation or storm development)
• Stratospheric aerosol injection (placing reflective particles high in the atmosphere to deflect sunlight)
• Marine cloud brightening (spraying sea-salt aerosols over oceans to increase cloud reflectivity)
• Any other deliberate atmospheric modification technique aimed at solar radiation management or weather control
Violations would carry serious penalties: fines of up to $100,000 per occurrence, up to five years in federal prison, and civil penalties reaching $10,000 per violation.
Each individual act of dispersal would be treated as a separate offense, allowing for potentially significant cumulative punishment.
The bill goes further by repealing all existing federal laws, regulations, executive orders, and licensing frameworks that currently authorize or permit weather modification activities.
It would also prohibit any federal agency and any entity receiving federal funding from conducting, supporting, or participating in research, testing, or deployment of weather modification technologies.
To ensure enforcement, H.R. 7452 directs the FAA to create a public reporting mechanism for aircraft suspected of engaging in modification activities.
The EPA would establish a citizen-reporting portal for suspected violations, with credible reports forwarded directly to the Department of Justice for investigation and potential prosecution.
The effective date is set for 90 days after enactment, meaning swift implementation if the bill becomes law.
This legislation arrives against a backdrop of increasing public concern and documented federal activity.
Official reports have confirmed that the U.S. government has funded and, in some cases, conducted limited research into solar geoengineering techniques, including classified or low-profile projects.
At the same time, large-scale routine aviation emissions, particularly persistent contrails containing metal nanoparticles and sulfur compounds, have been shown in peer-reviewed studies to spread into artificial cirrus cloud layers, influence local temperatures, and alter regional weather patterns, even when not deliberately intended as modification.
A potential point of debate: the bill's language focuses on "knowingly" conducted activities that intend to alter weather or climate.
Critics argue this could leave a gap for unintentional but significant atmospheric effects from commercial aviation.
With thousands of daily flights leaving long-lasting contrails that merge into widespread cloud cover, some experts suggest that meaningful protection of the atmosphere would also require reducing sulfur content in jet fuel or limiting flights through certain humidity and temperature regimes where contrails persist longest.
H.R. 7452 is a bold legislative step toward transparency, accountability, and the protection of our shared atmosphere from intentional large-scale manipulation.
Whether it fully addresses every form of atmospheric interference remains an open question, but it represents one of the clearest attempts yet to draw a hard line.
If you believe the sky above us should remain free of deliberate chemical alteration, now is the time to make your voice heard.
Contact your U.S. Representative and Senators.
Ask them to co-sponsor and support H.R. 7452, the Air Quality Act.
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