Radio
Now Playing
Quickyla Radio — Click to play
Open →
3 min left
Back to News

Cloud seeding may weaken El Niño off Peru, study finds

Cloud seeding off South America’s coast could weaken El Niño by cooling ocean temperatures, a *Science Advances* study found, but risks like "termination shock" and unintended consequences remain unpr

Can we geoengineer ourselves out of an El Niño year?
Scientific American — 8 July 2026
Text:
38 0 0

A controversial geoengineering experiment suggests that brightening clouds off South America’s coast could weaken an incoming El Niño, potentially eas

Read Full Story at Scientific American →
⚡ Quickyla Analysis Original editorial context — not sourced from the article above

Why This Matters

Geoengineering interventions to counteract El Niño represent a high-stakes gamble on humanity’s ability to manipulate Earth’s climate systems. If proven viable, such techniques could redefine climate policy by offering a targeted, albeit experimental, alternative to broad emissions reductions. Yet the very premise of artificially cooling oceans forces a reckoning with whether we’ve entered an era where climate intervention is no longer a last resort, but an early option.

Background Context

El Niño’s economic and ecological toll—from disrupted fisheries off Peru to intensified wildfires in Australia—has long driven efforts to predict its behavior, but not to suppress it. Cloud seeding, a concept first tested in the mid-20th century, has historically been dismissed as too localized for global climate patterns. The shift toward ocean-focused interventions reflects both advances in marine science and a growing desperation to mitigate climate impacts before they worsen.

What Happens Next

Regional experiments, likely led by South American nations most vulnerable to El Niño’s disruption, could accelerate within a decade, testing both feasibility and public acceptance. International oversight will be critical, as unilateral geoengineering efforts risk geopolitical friction or unintended regional climate shifts. The biggest wild card remains whether "termination shock"—a sudden rebound in ocean temperatures post-intervention—would trigger even more extreme weather than the original El Niño.

Advertisement
React:
Sponsored

More to Read

The little red galaxies that may be sending us neutrinos
🌱 Environment
The little red galaxies that may be sending us neutrinos
Phys.org · 13 days ago
China, EU commerce ministers meet amid widening trade imbal…
🌱 Environment
China, EU commerce ministers meet amid widening trade imbalance
France 24 · 14 days ago
After a Weekend of Heavy Rains, Chicago’s Deep Tunnel Is Al…
🌱 Environment
After a Weekend of Heavy Rains, Chicago’s Deep Tunnel Is Almost Full
Inside Climate News · 6 days ago
Why Copart Stock Stumbled Today
⚔️ War & Conflict
Why Copart Stock Stumbled Today
Nasdaq News · 14 days ago
PBM lobby goes on the offensive
🏛️ Politics
PBM lobby goes on the offensive
The Hill · 14 days ago
Trump's final appeal of E Jean Carroll sex abuse case rejec…
⚔️ War & Conflict
Trump's final appeal of E Jean Carroll sex abuse case rejected
BBC World News · 14 days ago
Full view