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Bill Gates is accused of not being a true philanthropist as he allegedly uses his wealth to gain control over seed banks worldwide. By giving small amounts of money, he gains control over the CJR system and other seed banks. He then promotes technologies for patenting, further solidifying his control over the world's seeds. Gates also coined the term "net zero" to address climate issues, but critics argue that it doesn't mean reducing emissions or stopping pollution. Instead, it implies finding other people's land to compensate for environmental damage.

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Bill Gates is supporting a controversial climate change solution called solar geoengineering. This involves injecting light-reflecting particles into the stratosphere to create a chemical cloud that blocks sunlight and cools the Earth. Thousands of planes would be used to distribute these particles globally. However, this approach is highly risky and uncertain, as scientists admit they don't know the potential consequences. Despite this, Bill Gates, a socially awkward billionaire from Seattle, is taking it upon himself to change the planet. This experiment could have significant impacts on our environment, including our oceans.

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Bill Gates supports a high-altitude experiment for solar geoengineering to cool the Earth by injecting light-reflecting particles into the stratosphere. This controversial method mimics a volcanic eruption but poses risks like famine, flooding, and weakened monsoons. It could impact crop production and visibility by creating a hazy, white sky.

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In 2009, the US government discussed the pros and cons of chemtrails, also known as solar radiation management and aerosol injections. They acknowledged that spraying chemicals into the sky would result in blank white skies but also create beautiful sunsets. In 2022, Luke Iseman founded a company called Make Sunsets, which received significant funding. A year later, NOAA signed a 200-year contract with Make Sunsets to spray chemicals worldwide to block the sun and reduce global temperatures. Interestingly, the contract does not mention creating sunsets but focuses on temperature reduction.

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Bill Gates is accused of not being a true philanthropist, as he allegedly takes control of seed banks worldwide by giving small amounts of money. He also promotes technologies for patenting, further solidifying his control over seeds. Gates has coined the term "net zero" to address climate issues, but critics argue that it doesn't mean reducing emissions or pollution. Instead, he suggests finding other people's lands as offsets for carbon emissions. The speaker claims that Gates has acquired land in America and now seeks more for carbon offset purposes. This is the concept of "net zero" being pushed in climate discussions.

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Bill Gates is funding a controversial project to cool the Earth by creating a chemical cloud in the stratosphere. This solar geoengineering experiment could have unknown consequences on crops and the environment. Critics, including Michael Shellenberger, warn of the dangers and lack of international governance. Concerns about Gates' influence and intentions are raised, questioning the need for such drastic measures when climate change trends are improving. Calls for taxing tax-exempt nonprofits like Gates' foundation are made to address their societal impact.

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Gates supports a controversial plan to cool the Earth by creating a chemical cloud through solar geoengineering. This involves planes releasing light-reflecting particles into the stratosphere to block sunlight, similar to a volcanic eruption's cooling effect. Countries may turn to this as a desperate measure to combat climate change impacts.

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Kadama Systems, backed by Bill Gates and other investors, aims to reduce carbon dioxide by chopping down and burying trees. This method, supported by scientists, can help combat global warming. The US Forest Service plans to thin out 70 million acres of western forests over the next decade, extracting over 1 billion tons of biomass. Instead of selling the timber, Kadama Systems proposes burying the wood to create carbon offsets. Bill Gates is financing this business venture.

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Speaker 0 asserts that Bill Gates is not a philanthropist because he “gives a little bit of money to take over entire sectors.” They say Gates works on seed, with the big seed banks described as the “CJR system.” The claim is that “he gives a million here, but he takes all the seeds of that system, the ICRISAT system.” They assert that all of the world’s seed banks are now controlled by Gates through this method. The summary continues: Gates “finances the Swalbat seed bank,” then “he creates patent systems.” He is said to develop and promote technologies for patenting, including gene editing technologies and digital sequence technologies, thereby controlling the seeds of the world. They claim Gates “destroys the international system that controls the country’s rights to their seed,” naming the Convention on Biological Diversity and the FAO treaty on seed. They say he “destroys and undercuts them so that all the seeds of the world are his seeds,” and that he can be the Newman Santo on a global scale. Later, it is asserted that Gates is “the biggest farmland owner of America.” The speaker contends Gates coined a term, “net zero,” and that Gates says climate problems can be solved by net zero. They insist it doesn’t mean emission reductions; rather, “we will con” [likely "we will con" is a fragment] and that we will absorb pollution via “offsets” on other people’s lands. The claim is that Gates “flies a private jet and has all the private jet services of the world.” They say he bought “all the land in America,” but he “wants our land for carbon offsets.” The overall assertion is that this is the climate strategy described as net zero, and that it constitutes a “land grabber” approach through carbon offsets.

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Investors, including Bill Gates, have backed Kadama Systems, a company aiming to reduce carbon dioxide by cutting down and burying trees. This approach is supported by scientists as a means to combat global warming. The US Forest Service plans to thin out 70 million acres of western forests, primarily in California, over the next decade, extracting over 1 billion tons of biomass. Instead of selling the timber, the idea is to bury the wood, which is considered a more effective solution. This approach is seen as a business opportunity.

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I offset personal emissions by spending $10 million yearly on various projects like electric heat pumps and solar panels. I avoid less proven methods like tree planting, which some believe can solve the climate crisis, but I disagree. We need to rely on science, not myths.

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Kadama Systems, backed by Bill Gates and other investors, aims to reduce carbon dioxide by chopping down and burying trees. This method, supported by scientists, can help combat global warming. The US Forest Service plans to thin out 70 million acres of western forest, mainly in California, over the next few decades, extracting over 1 billion tons of biomass. Instead of selling the timber, Kadama Systems proposes burying the wood to create carbon offsets. Bill Gates is financing this business venture.

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Bill Gates reportedly purchased 25,000 acres of land west of Phoenix and Buckeye, Arizona, for over $80 million to build a smart city called Belmont. Other far-left billionaires, including the owner of diapers.com, are allegedly involved. Coincidentally, there's been an increased risk of wildfires in the areas surrounding the proposed site. Insurance companies are now allegedly canceling wildfire policies in those areas.

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I spend $10 million a year offsetting personal emissions by buying electric heat pumps for low-income housing and installing solar panels. I avoid less proven methods like tree planting. Some believe trees alone can solve climate change, but that's nonsense. Are we guided by science or ignorance?

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Kadama Systems, backed by Bill Gates and other investors, aims to reduce carbon dioxide by chopping down and burying trees. This method, supported by scientists, can help combat global warming. The US Forest Service plans to thin out 70 million acres of western forest, mainly in California, over the next few decades, extracting over 1 billion tons of biomass. Instead of selling the timber, Kadama Systems proposes burying the wood to create carbon offsets. Bill Gates is financing this business venture.

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Some Canadians express skepticism online about investing in carbon management and ask why we don’t just plant more trees. This transcript explains what carbon management is, why we’re investing in this technology, and why planting trees alone won’t be enough to meet our goals. Carbon capture utilization and storage, or CCUS technologies, are safe and powerful tools to reduce harmful emissions from industrial processes like steel, cement, oil, and gas production, which are essential to our economy but often require high temperature and complex chemical reactions that produce CO2. CO2 is a greenhouse gas with a significant impact on climate change. Newer carbon dioxide removal technologies can even capture CO2 directly from the air, which is the only way to permanently address CO2 that has already been emitted. Once captured, carbon can be compressed and transported to use safely in things we’re already familiar with, like concrete. And now technology is helping us go even further, turning what could have once been pollution into cleaner fuels and chemicals. CO2 can also be stored deep underground in stable rock formations, including some of the same ones that once held oil and gas. In Canada, we have great natural geology for this, which keeps the carbon safely stored for the long term out of our air and out of our environment. While trees are a powerful natural climate solution, planting alone won’t be fast or large scale enough to handle all of Canada's emissions, especially in sectors that are tough to decarbonize, like cement or steel. For example, to match the 6,600,000 tons of CO2 that SaskPower's Boundary Dam Unit 3 has captured since 02/2014, we would have to plant between two hundred and twenty and four hundred and forty million trees and wait for them to grow over decades to reach the full carbon absorption. That’s why carbon management needs to be part of the climate solution. According to the International Energy Agency, reaching net zero emissions globally without carbon management is virtually impossible. That’s why countries around the world, Norway, Japan, The United Kingdom, and Australia, are all significantly investing in carbon management just like Canada. With continued investment, carbon management is helping to build stronger industries, attract global capital, and position Canada as a leader in low carbon technology. Investing in carbon management supports our climate goals and long term prosperity by reducing emissions while creating good jobs and supporting Canadian industries. It’s a win win. It’s a smart solution for a cleaner, stronger Canada. Remember, energy solutions equals Canada as an energy superpower.

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Bill Gates just last year in September created a deal with the 3 Mile Island Nuclear plant to reopen it just power Microsoft's data centers. You have the same thing going on with Google who's doing nuclear energy. I think they have a plant going up in Oak Ridge, Tennessee where the other nuclear incident happened. You have Amazon, they're building nuclear reactors at Hanford, and many other places. Meta just announced a twenty year deal as well with a nuclear facility for theirs. And so what you have is essentially they're they're going to be obviously absorbing all of this energy for themselves.

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Bill Gates supports a high altitude experiment for solar geoengineering to cool the Earth by injecting light-reflecting particles into the stratosphere. This method mimics a volcanic eruption but poses risks like mass famine, flooding, and drought. It may weaken monsoons and affect crop production in India, China, and Africa, while also potentially eradicating blue skies.

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Humans only produce 3% of the CO2 in the Earth's atmosphere. However, the Canadian government has implemented two carbon taxes to collect money from its citizens. They also aim for net zero emissions by 2050, but if CO2 levels drop below 0.0155%, all plants will die. Canada has 318 billion trees and produces 672 megatons of CO2. To capture Canada's CO2, it would require 25.7 billion trees. Each year, a hardwood tree can absorb up to 48 pounds of CO2. Therefore, Canada is already at net zero. It's important to note that this information is not typically taught in high school science classes.

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According to government data, Australia emits nearly 500 million metric tonnes of carbon dioxide annually. However, research shows that the country's 24 billion trees alone absorb 453 million metric tonnes of carbon dioxide each year. This figure doesn't even account for other plant life, like mangroves, which can absorb 50 times more carbon dioxide than a standard tree. Given these findings, it seems counterintuitive for the government to prioritize cutting down trees for solar farms when nature has already provided a solution.

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Speaker 0: Gates argues that our future thriving depends on science and technology. He mentions Beauverre, a feed additive for cows that is supposed to reduce methane but reportedly makes cows sick. Gates is also involved in stratospheric geoengineering via Scope X to dim the sun. A headline notes: “Bill Gates venture aims to spray dust in the atmosphere to block the sun. What could go wrong?” This was reported by Harvard and environmentalists protested, leading to its shutdown. Scientific American reported on this: “High profile engineering experiment shuts down.” Harvard shut it down, but the effort migrated to the UK, where it is described as a “secretive government unit planning to dim the sun.” The UK project is ARIA, the Advanced Research and Invention Agency, modeled after DARPA in the US. The difference is DARPA is military; ARIA is a public-private venture pursuing things “impossible to prove that are safe and effective,” like spraying things into the sky. There is concern about harms and potential climate catastrophe, as they actually implement. ARIA’s funding is reported as £800,000,000 over five years, with £184,000,000 allocated for 2025-2026. In comparison, DARPA in the US was given £4,000,000,000 in the same period. The bottom line is that ARIA is described as “running fast and loose, operating like a speculative venture capital firm with public money” and there is a lack of accountability. The UK government website states ARIA will be “a small body with minimal administrative capacity” and that it will “remove the burden of processing Freedom of Information requests,” i.e., no FOIA access. ARIA is pursuing climate interventions because climate models show warming, but climate models are said to “run hot,” potentially exaggerating impacts of global warming. The idea of stratospheric geoengineering from ARIA rests on a contested premise. Speaker 1: During a conference at Cambridge’s Center for Climate Repair, Robert Chris, an independent researcher, discusses five UK geoengineering trials funded to combat global warming and has written a book on geoengineering policy. He discusses stratospheric geoengineering but notes concerns about failures to control carbon emissions and argues some consider it necessary to avert ecosystem and societal collapse, perhaps solar geoengineering as the price for inadequate climate response. Speaker 2: Others push back, saying climate interventions interfere with nature, and that humanity already interferes with nature. They argue the Anthropocene implies a permanent responsibility to manage the climate system. Another speaker notes that “we now have a permanent responsibility to play God,” criticizing the move to influence Earth and the atmosphere. There is critique of academic authorship and power, and a call to reduce human population to 1800 levels to solve the problem. Speaker 0: A UK petition gathered over 160,000 signatures urging the government to “make all forms of geoengineering affecting the environment illegal,” prompting a government response that “the government is not in favor of using solar radiation modification and has no plans for deployment.” Nevertheless, ARIA reportedly aims to advance such work. ICANN (an organization) has monitored this since it has challenged both UK and US representations on geoengineering. ICANN highlights that unlike other programs that limit to computer modeling, ARIA’s plan “will conduct outdoor experiments to test and validate sun blocking methods.” ICANN has pushed petitions in California as well. Speaker 0: ICANN has pressed the EPA to probe a geoengineering startup, Making Sunsets, which purportedly releases sulfur dioxide. EPA demands answers from the company following legal letters from ICANN. Lee Zeldin labeled the venture as deploying criteria air pollutants to earn cooling credits, underscoring regulatory concerns. ICANN emphasizes vigilance over governments—public or private—attempting to dim the sun and its potential impact on life.

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Kadama Systems, backed by Bill Gates and other investors, aims to reduce carbon dioxide by chopping down and burying trees. This approach has received $6.6 million in seed funding. Scientists also support the idea of burying trees to combat global warming. The US Forest Service plans to thin out 70 million acres of western forest, primarily in California, over the next decade, extracting over 1 billion tonnes of biomass. Instead of selling the timber, the focus is on burying the wood to create carbon offsets. Bill Gates is financing this business venture.

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Gates supports a high-altitude experiment for solar geoengineering to combat climate change. This method involves planes releasing light-reflecting particles into the stratosphere to create a cooling effect similar to a volcanic eruption. The controversial idea aims to cool the Earth by blocking sunlight from reaching the surface.

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Bill Gates doesn't see himself as someone who made bad software, but as someone in control of the solar system. He is backing sun dimming technology to reflect sunlight out of the Earth's atmosphere, causing global cooling. Harvard University scientists are testing this technology by spewing calcium carbonate dust into the atmosphere. Bill Gates is backing the first high-altitude experiment of this radical climate change solution, creating a massive chemical cloud to cool the earth. This is called solar geoengineering.

TED

The Billion-Dollar Pollution Solution Humanity Needs Right Now | Stacy Kauk | TED
Guests: Stacy Kauk
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Stacy Kauk, head of sustainability at Shopify, discusses the need for significant investment in carbon removal to combat climate change. Shopify aims to become carbon-neutral and has committed at least $5 million annually to carbon removal solutions. To scale this effort, they launched a nearly $1 billion advanced market commitment (AMC) fund called Frontier, encouraging innovation and collaboration in carbon removal technologies. Successful examples include Climbworks, Running Tide, and Heirloom, showcasing diverse approaches to capture carbon dioxide.
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