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'The Strange and Totally Real Plan to Blot Out the Sun and Reverse Global Warming'

In a 2023 pitch to investors, a "well-financed, highly credentialed" startup named Stardust aimed for a "gradual temperature reduction demonstration" in 2027, according to a massive new 9,600-word article from Politico. ("Annually dispersing ~1 million tons of sun-reflecting particles," says one slide. "Equivalent to ~1% extra cloud coverage.")

"Another page told potential investors Stardust had already run low-altitude experiments using 'test particles'," the article notes:




[P]ublic records and interviews with more than three dozen scientists, investors, legal experts and others familiar with the company reveal an organization advancing rapidly to the brink of being able to press "go" on its planet-cooling plans. Meanwhile, Stardust is seeking U.S. government contracts and quietly building an influence machine in Washington to lobby lawmakers and officials in the Trump administration on the need for a regulatory framework that it says is necessary to gain public approval for full-scale deployment....



The presentation also included revenue projections and a series of opportunities for venture capitalists to recoup their investments. Stardust planned to sign "government contracts," said a slide with the company's logo next to an American flag, and consider a "potential acquisition" by 2028.
By 2030, the deck foresaw a "large-scale demonstration" of Stardust's system. At that point, the company claimed it would already be bringing in $200 million per year from its government contracts and eyeing an initial public offering, if it hadn't been sold already.


The article notes that for "a widening circle of researchers and government officials,
Stardust's perceived failures to be transparent about its work and technology have triggered a larger conversation about what kind of international governance framework will be needed to regulate a new generation of climate technologies." (Since currently Stardust and its backers "have no legal obligations to adhere to strenuous safety principles or to submit themselves to the public view.")


In October Politico spoke to Stardust CEO, Yanai Yedvab, a former nuclear physicist who was once deputy chief scientist at the Israeli Atomic Energy Commission. Stardust "was ready to announce the $60 million it had raised from 13 new investors," the article points out, "far larger than any previous investment in solar geoengineering."


[Yedvab] was delighted, he said, not by the money, but what it meant for the project.
"We are, like, few years away from having the technology ready to a level that decisions can be taken" — meaning that deployment was still on track to potentially begin on the timeline laid out in the 2023 pitch deck. The money raised was enough to start "outdoor contained experiments" as soon as April, Yedvab said. These would test how their particles performed inside a plane flying at stratospheric heights, some 11 miles above the Earth's surface... The key thing, he insisted, was the particle was "safe." It would not damage the ozone layer and, when the particles fall back to Earth, they could be absorbed back into the biosphere, he said. Though it's impossible to know this is true until the company releases its formula. Yedvab said this round of testing would make Stardust's technology ready to begin a staged process of full-scale, global deployment before the decade is over — as long as the company can secure a government client. To start, they would only try to stabilize global temperatures — in other words fly enough particles into the sky to counteract the steady rise in greenhouse gas levels — which would initially take a fleet of 100 planes.


This begs the question: should the world attempt solar geoengineering?

That the global temperature would drop is not in question. Britain's Royal Society... said in a report issued in early November that there was little doubt it would be effective. They did not endorse its use, but said that, given the growing interest in this field, there was good reason to be better informed about the side effects... [T]hat doesn't mean it can't have broad benefits when weighed against deleterious climate change, according to Ben Kravitz, a professor of earth and atmospheric sciences at Indiana University who has closely studied the potential effects of solar geoengineering. "There would be some winners and some losers. But in general, some amount of ... stratospheric aerosol injection would likely benefit a whole lot of people, probably most people," he said. Other scientists are far more cautious. The Royal Society report listed a range of potential negative side effects that climate models had displayed, including drought in sub-Saharan Africa. In accompanying documents, it also warned of more intense hurricanes in the North Atlantic and winter droughts in the Mediterranean. But the picture remains partial, meaning there is no way yet to have an informed debate over how useful or not solar geoengineering could be...

And then there's the problem of trying to stop. Because an abrupt end to geoengineering, with all the carbon still in the atmosphere, would cause the temperature to soar suddenly upward with unknown, but likely disastrous, effects... Once the technology is deployed, the entire world would be dependent on it for however long it takes to reduce the trillion or more tons of excess carbon dioxide in the atmosphere to a safe level...

Stardust claims to have solved many technical and safety challenges, especially related to the environmental impacts of the particle, which they say would not harm nature or people. But researchers say the company's current lack of transparency makes it impossible to trust.





Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader fjo3 for sharing the article.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Meta Plans New AI-Powered 'Morning Brief' Drawn From Facebook and 'External Sources'

Meta "is testing a new product that would give Facebook users a personalized daily briefing powered by the company's generative AI technology" reports the Washington Post. They cite records they've reviwed showing that Meta "would analyze Facebook content and external sources to push custom updates to its users."


The company plans to test the product with a small group of Facebook users in select cities such as New York and San Francisco, according to a person familiar with the project who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private company matters...

Meta's foray into pushing updates for consumers follows years of controversy over its relationship with publishers. The tech company has waffled between prominently featuring content from mainstream news sources on Facebook to pulling news links altogether as regulators pushed the tech giant to pay publishers for content on its platforms. More recently, publishers have sued Meta, alleging it infringed on their copyrighted works to train its AI models.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Found Slide

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Slide

date stamped on slide, November 27, 1986. Handwritten on slide: "Chef and host Larry Clawson -- Larry's Apt. -- Phoenix"

Found Kodachrome Slide

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Kodachrome Slide

date stamped on slide July 1980

Hanazono Shrine , Shinjuku. November 2018.

mikeleonardvisualarts posted a photo:

Hanazono Shrine , Shinjuku. November 2018.

Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

KNRM haalt recordbedrag op bij jaarlijks benefietgala

NOORDWIJK (ANP) - De Koninklijke Nederlandse Redding Maatschappij (KNRM) heeft tijdens haar jaarlijkse benefietgala in Noordwijk 1.848.000 euro opgehaald. Dat is ruim 30.000 euro meer dan vorig jaar en daarmee een nieuw recordbedrag. Het was de negentiende keer dat het benefietgala werd georganiseerd. Er schoven 650 gasten aan.

Het gala werd gepresenteerd door Humberto Tan. Edsilia Rombley, Veldhuis & Kemper en Davy Keys traden op. Aan het einde van de avond werd de opbrengst symbolisch overhandigd aan KNRM-directeur Jacob Tas, die op dat moment werd omringd door een aantal van de ruim 1500 vrijwilligers die betrokken zijn bij de KNRM. De KNRM zegt het opgehaalde geld te besteden aan investeringen die de veiligheid van al deze vrijwilligers zullen verbeteren.

De 45 reddingsstations van de KNRM komen jaarlijks ruim 2500 keer in actie, waarbij ruim 3500 mensen worden gered.


Even tot hier plaatst panelen terug naast begraafplaats Margraten

Het televisieprogramma Even tot hier heeft naast de Amerikaanse militaire begraafplaats Margraten de twee panelen teruggeplaatst die eerder deze maand door de Amerikaanse beheerder werden verwijderd. De panelen belichten de rol van 'zwarte bevrijders' in de Tweede Wereldoorlog. Ook maakten presentatoren Niels van der Laan en Jeroen Woe zaterdag aan het einde van hun uitzending bekend dat zij rondom de teruggeplaatste panelen ook een aanvullende "tentoonstelling" laten bouwen.

Die aanvullende tentoonstelling heeft de vorm van een wandelroute langs andere panelen, waarop volgens Van der Laan en Woe "alle discriminerende acties van de regering-Trump" uit de doeken worden gedaan.

NRC bracht eerder deze maand naar buiten dat de beheerder van de begraafplaatsen, de American Battle Monuments Commission (ABMC), twee informatieborden over de rol van zwarte soldaten uit de permanente tentoonstelling van het bezoekerscentrum in Margraten had verwijderd. De gemeente Eijsden-Margraten en de provincie Limburg vroegen de ABMC om de informatieborden terug te plaatsen, maar de Amerikanen weigerden dat. De beheerder liet aan de NOS weten dat de verhalen over de strijd voor gelijkheid, die Afro-Amerikaanse soldaten tegelijkertijd in eigen land en binnen het leger voerden, niet langer binnen "de herdenkingsmissie" passen.

De makers van Even tot hier besloten daarop net buiten het grondgebied van de begraafplaats een tentoonstelling te bouwen "met het eerlijke verhaal over de zwarte helden en over Trump", aldus Woe. Ze gaven de tentoonstelling de satirische naam 'MAGA haten' bij Margraten. De opening werd in de uitzending verricht door "nazaten" van de zwarte soldaten.


Autumn colors

gaussnewton has added a photo to the pool:

Autumn colors

Autumn in Nezu Shrine

World Thru Lenz has added a photo to the pool:

Autumn in Nezu Shrine

Na de klimaattop in Brazilië overheerst de teleurstelling: het uitfaseren van fossiele energie blijft voorlopig taboe

Gastland Brazilië had er vertrouwen in: ook zonder de Verenigde Staten moesten er op de klimaattop concrete stappen worden gezet om klimaatverandering tegen te gaan. Maar van die hoge verwachtingen kwam weinig terecht.