33 comments

  • dylan604 6 hours ago

    I guess FloridaMan won't be doing this as they've recently passed legislation to ban this type of stuff. I think this is one of those cases where it was done for the wrong reasons, but it kind of works out in the end

    https://www.tallahassee.com/story/news/politics/2025/06/23/c...

    • delfinom 2 hours ago

      Sounds like florida man needs to ban plants

  • ElevenLathe 6 hours ago

    Rain follows the plow?

    • axiolite an hour ago

      Clever, but no. This is about cloud formation, and doesn't indicate any (significant) increased chances of precipitation.

  • pfdietz 2 hours ago

    Industrial production of isoprene is about 800,000 tons/year. Global emission from plants of the chemical is about 600 million tons/year.

    In the US, the large natural emission of isoprene is why emission control for vehicles shifted to focus on NOx emission.

  • ricardobayes 6 hours ago

    I think I saw this movie

  • fred_is_fred 6 hours ago

    This is exactly backwards from what I would think: "Bright ones at low altitudes generally reflect solar energy away, whereas wispier ones up to 20,000 feet tend to trap heat.". I would have guessed high ones reflect it before it gets lower into the atmosphere.

    • roter 6 hours ago

      The whispey ones are largely transparent to incoming shortwave radiation but largely opaque to outgoing longwave radiation. You just need to put on your ~10 micron wavelength goggles.

    • jvanderbot 6 hours ago

      You might be surprised to learn how much global warming impact from jet aircraft is actually from creating "high-up wispy clouds" in the form of contrails (which are just water vapor).

      • pfdietz 2 hours ago

        Contrails condense from water vapor, but are not themselves water vapor.

        • alliao 2 hours ago

          does it have some kind of nuclei and have water vapour surround it? I'm guessing from impurities of burnt fuel?

          • pfdietz an hour ago

            Particles in the exhaust from incomplete combustion, I think.

  • black_13 7 hours ago

    [dead]

  • bananapub 6 hours ago

    It really does seem like it’s going to be impossible to stop rich lunatics from having a go at geoengineering instead of just actually helping to slash emissions.

    Pretty embarrassing overall for the species.

    • zemvpferreira 6 hours ago

      Cut carbon emissions to zero tomorrow and we’re still in a great deal of trouble. Earth is a lagging system and the damage has been done 10 times over.

      I don’t blame anyone for looking at radical solutions. We’re not putting out the fire by putting the wood back in a pile.

      • sorcerer-mar 5 hours ago

        What about blaming people for grabbing an assortment of different non-wood, non-water objects and throwing them on the fire?

        There’s obviously some need to experiment to see if we can find solutions, but historically our track record for engineering complex systems has not been great.

      • bilsbie 3 hours ago

        [flagged]

    • ch4s3 6 hours ago

      > just actually helping to slash emissions

      The word just here hides a lot of complexity and difficult tradeoffs.

    • zahlman 6 hours ago

      What do you suppose is the net worth of the people spearheading efforts in solar power and electric vehicles?

    • sweettea 4 hours ago

      I mean, we're already having democratized geoengineering: Make Sunsets (https://makesunsets.com/) allows you or anyone else to fund deploying high-altitude clouds for geocooling.

    • mslansn 6 hours ago

      Don't know what rich assholes have to do with it, when all things I've seen proposed hurt poor people the most. Make meat unaffordable, make private transportation unaffordable, make travelling by plane unaffordable, make new clothes unaffordable, and the list goes on forever.

      • MildlySerious 6 hours ago

        That's exactly what rich assholes have to do with it. Why do you believe all the consequence falls onto the working class and the poorest, when the richest have per capita the largest emissions, by whole orders of magnitude?

        Yeah, the changes required are systemic and go from the top all the way to the bottom, and the things you mention are part of that process, but pricing people out of everything without offering an off-ramp is sadistic bullshit, and the only reason it's a thing is because rich people and stock prices have more representation in politics than the poor and the environment.

        • IncreasePosts 4 hours ago

          Who cares about per capita emissions? Billionaires could have 1000x the emissions as normal people, but there are so few of them, cutting their emissions down to zero would have absolutely no impact on climate change.

          • 2 hours ago
            [deleted]
      • tonyedgecombe 6 hours ago

        Do you think carbon emissions are coming from poor people’s consumption?

        Even in the US only half the population will fly in any year and you can be sure it’s not the poorer half.

        It’s not the rich half using public transport, they are only going to benefit from a transition away from private car ownership.

        • throwaway5752 5 hours ago

          Yes. Poorer people buy things made overseas that requires a lot of shipping, and are lower quality that require more frequent replacement. They tend to have more children. They usually have more polluting energy sources. And there are many orders of magnitude more of them than rich people.

          None of this is their fault, but ignoring it isn't good either.

          All aircraft emissions are just 3% of US total. If all rich people (either the top 1% or 10%) reduced their emissions to zero tomorrow we would still not reach reduction targets needed to avoid catastrophic warming.

          Everyone needs to contribute.

          • sorcerer-mar 5 hours ago

            Shipping the things that poor people buy is almost unfathomably eco-friendly.

            Gargantuan slow ships are actually a great way to move stuff.

          • trollbridge 5 hours ago

            I'm a little sceptical of claims like "poor people cause more pollution because they have more children than rich people do".

            • throwaway5752 5 hours ago

              Having a child is on of the most carbon intensive actions any given person can make.

              The numbers are what they are. Rich people have much greater obligation to reduce their emissions. They benefit most from economic activity and they cause the most emissions per capita.

              If there were zero rich people tomorrow we would still have an emissions problem for the climate.

              • bilsbie 3 hours ago

                What if the child is a climate activist?

              • adolph 3 hours ago

                > Having a child is on of the most carbon intensive actions any given person can make.

                What about continuing to live at all? That is a decision people make every moment of the day and are not being held accountable for it at all.

                If there were zero people tomorrow there would be still be an ongoing problem for the climate from the changes wreaked already.

                • thejazzman 2 hours ago

                  You're correct that 24h is not enough time, but wrong to suggest that the world would remain perfectly static instead of changing.

                  There would be dramatic reforestation, algae growth, etc.

                • throwaway5752 an hour ago

                  I indelicately started a contentious topic that didn't have to exist. If I were given a fresh chance, I'd have just said that carbon emissions and the changes they are causing to the planet are a bigger problem than any single economic class or nation.

                  That might have caused some controversy, too, but is closer to what I meant. Your point is well taken, but maybe if I posted differently the ensuing discussion would have been less acrimonious.