According to reports, researchers at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) are planning to release 6,000 gallons of a liquid solution of sodium hydroxide, a component of lye, into ocean waters 10 miles south of the home of the Obamas this fall – and they will also add chemical colorings to the solution to make it visible.
The purpose of these chemical dumps is to lower the acidity of surface water much "like a big tablet of Tums," to quote the Wall Street Journal. In turn, this will supposedly absorb 20 metric tons of CO2 from the atmosphere and store it in the ocean, or so we are told.
"When you have heartburn, you eat a Tums that dissolves and makes the liquid in your stomach less acidic," said Adam Subhas, an associate scientist at WHOI and principal investigator of the project.
"By analogy, we're adding this alkaline material to seawater, and it is letting the ocean take up more CO2 without provoking more ocean acidification. Everything that we're seeing so far is that it is environmentally safe."
The cost of the project is a whopping $10 million, and the money is coming from, you guessed it: U.S. taxpayers via the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), as well as two philanthropies and several private donors.
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Because sodium hydroxide is a chemical, its release, especially in extremely high volumes, will need to be approved by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which is likely a shoe-in under the current regime.
(Related: According to the corporate media, all those heart attacks, blood clots and deaths occurring in those who are "fully vaccinated" for the Wuhan coronavirus [COVID-19] are actually being caused by climate change.)
Another environmentally unfriendly project by startup Stardust Solutions has begun in Israel. It involves blasting "tiny reflective particles" into the air at 60,000 feet to reflect sunlight away from the earth in order to "cool" the atmosphere.
For many years, this was called chemtrails or geoengineering – and mainstream society claimed it was a "conspiracy theory" – but they are now calling it "solar radiation management," or SRM.
Yanai Yedvab, Stardust's CEO and former deputy chief scientist at the Israel Atomic Energy Commission, is refusing to publicly disclose what these "tiny reflective particles" actually are because he says the formula is a proprietary secret.
After collecting $15 million from two investors, Yedvab conducted a number of low-level aerial tests using "white smoke" to simulate the path of the particles as they blast into the skies, but within an indoor environment. Soon, the particles will be released outdoors using much larger-in-scale dispersion technology.
As many warned would happen, all this climate tinkering is reaching a fever pitch to the point that environmental destruction is a certainty once all of these projects launch and expand in both scale and scope.
"It very easily becomes an excuse for not doing all the things that we already can do and that we know will work," warns Dan Jorgensen, Denmark's minister for global climate policy, about the slippery slope of all this environmental and climate manipulation.
"When we start interfering with nature, we risk it also having many very negative consequences that we cannot control and that we cannot foresee."
More of the latest news about the climate pseudoscientists who are destroying the planet in order to "save" it can be found at FakeScience.news.
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