News

Marjorie Taylor Greene's announcement in the wake of the Texas floods sparked conversations around cloud seeding and more.
With two recent back-to-back atmospheric rivers slamming Southern California this month, the Santa Ana Watershed Project Authority has been in a holding pattern with its cloud seeding pilot project.
Over 100 people have died in a terrible flood in Texas, and conspiracy theories are once again in the news. Some people are ...
More and more voices, including politicians, say that cloud seeding — or man-made ways of increasing precipitation — caused the deadly floods in Texas. Experts say this is damaging public trust.
Still, claims of weather-control technology, once confined to relatively fringe circles, have gained some traction in the ...
The EPA has announced new online resources to address myths and provide information on contrails and geoengineering of ...
The EPA is trying to fight cloud seeding conspiracy theories. It chose the worst way to do it. Let's start with the facts.
A Tennessee congresman is backing Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene's push to ban "weather modification" in the wake of devastating floods in Texas. What to know.
Cloud seeding gives these clouds a lot more ice crystals (or cloud nuclei). If experts complete seeding at the right time, it leads to more moisture supply, which will eventually create rainwater.
A new cloud seeding operation is scheduled to begin in the St. Vrain watershed this winter. Humans can’t create storms, but when nature does bring them our way, ... Misconceptions.
The Santa Ana Watershed Project Authority cloud seeding pilot project is attempting to show a 5-15% increase in precipitation. That is, if it gets a chance to. Here's a more in-depth look at cloud ...