New Industrial Sector
Solar Radiation Management
Big Business Invests in Geoengineering
For chemtrails, formerly derided as a “conspiracy theory”, the official term geoengineering has now become established. This means nothing more than large-scale interventions in the ecosystem to “save the climate”. Even many staunch supporters of anthropogenic climate change warn against such manipulations, because the effects are impossible to predict given the complex interrelationships of the Earth’s spheres. In the USA, some states have already banned by law the spraying of aerosols in the upper layers of the atmosphere (stratosphere) (previously reported in raum&zeit). But geoengineering has now grown into a considerable technological-industrial complex, into which billions in investments have already flowed. It was therefore only a matter of time before a new business model would emerge from it. One example is the Israeli-American startup Stardust Solutions, which would like to reduce solar radiation on Earth (Solar Radiation Management, SRM). A financing round has raised 75 million US dollars for the project so far. The main investors are Lowercarbon Capital, a climate fund from Wyoming, Exor (the holding company of the Italian Agnelli family) and companies such as Future Ventures, Attestor and Earth.now. Stardust’s core technology is based on powder-fine particles that reflect the sun’s rays. The principle is similar to the temporary cooling by ash after strong volcanic eruptions. It is scheduled to start in April 2026. The powder, which is spread in the stratosphere at an altitude of 18 kilometers, is not intended to damage the ozone layer, cause acid rain and not accumulate in ecosystems, plants, animals and humans. Governments are to be offered a “controllable option” against climate change. Stardust CEO Yanai Yedvab describes the project as a “safe and responsible option for solar reflection”. The company wants to patent the process and is conducting intensive public relations work in trade magazines to establish its integrated systems for production, distribution, infrastructure and monitoring. In the long term, Stardust hopes for government contracts for global missions. The technique is unregulated and risky. Disturbed weather patterns that could lead to crop failures would still be relatively harmless consequences. A whole chain of “collateral damage” up to the triggering of geopolitical conflicts could be set in motion. It can also be assumed that Stardust Solutions will further inflate the SRM investment bubble for private players. Yedvab speaks of an “important step in the evolution of this field”. It should be clear that such industries are financed exclusively by state money (i.e. taxes). No one would voluntarily spend their hard-earned money on such insane projects. (DS)
Source: https://tkp.at

An Exclusive Translated Article for P2P Supporters
From the Monthly Publications of P2P
Published February 2026
From an article in raum&zeit, Volume 44, Nr. 259, Jan/Feb 2026
Translation & redaction by: Carolyn L. Winsor, P2P Consulting
© Copyright 2026, raum&zeit, Wolfratshausen, Germany
AI Digital and online translation assistance utilized.


