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Trump EPA targets two-man geoengineering startup for ‘polluting the air’

April 20, 2025 | by AI

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EPA TARGETS REBEL GEOENGINEERS: The David vs. Goliath Climate Battle You NEED to Know About

When Silicon Valley Disruption Meets Government Regulation

While world leaders talk about climate change, two tech bros are doing something radical about it. But now the EPA is coming down hard on their controversial solution. Who’s right? Buckle up.

“We’re running out of time. If governments won’t act, someone has to.”

Make Sunsets co-founder in leaked company memo

The Hail Mary Climate Hack

Make Sunsets isn’t playing by the rules. Their game-changing (and eyebrow-raising) approach:

  • Weather balloons filled with sulfur dioxide launched to 66,000+ feet
  • Balloons burst, scattering particles that reflect sunlight
  • Sells “cooling credits” based on estimated climate impact
  • Already raised $750K from big-name VC firms

Why This Matters NOW

The science is solid – we accidentally proved sulfur dioxide’s cooling effect when we cleaned up shipping fuels in 2020. Global temperatures spiked immediately after. But here’s the catch:

Danger Zone: These particles could trigger unpredictable weather changes and respiratory issues if they descend. The EPA isn’t wrong to be concerned.

The Hypocrisy Bomb

While the EPA cracks down on Make Sunsets’ 1,715 grams of SO₂, they’re quietly approving coal plants that pump out 650,000 TONS annually. That’s like:

  • 343 MILLION Make Sunsets balloons
  • Enough SO₂ to fill 2,500 Olympic swimming pools
  • The equivalent of 50,000 cars running nonstop for a year

“When the law was written in 1976, no one imagined startups would try to hack the climate. We’re in uncharted territory.”

Environmental Law Professor, Stanford University

The Billion Dollar Question

Is this reckless pollution… or the desperate innovation we need? The numbers don’t lie:

Source SO₂ Emissions
Make Sunsets (single balloon) 1,715 grams
U.S. Coal Plants (annual) 650,000 tons

What Happens Next?

This legal battle could set the precedent for all climate engineering efforts. Will innovation be stifled? Or will reckless experiments be reined in? One thing’s certain – the stakes have never been higher.

🔥 Hot Take: Whether you love or hate their methods, Make Sunsets is forcing the conversation we’ve been avoiding. In the climate crisis, is imperfect action better than no action at all?

Image Credit: Andrea Piacquadio on Pexels

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