Environmentalists’Life-Threatening Sulfur Launch Exposes Carbon Indulgences As A Scam
Climate startup Make Sunsets will be founded at the end of 2022 Announcement As proof of concept, it launched two payloads containing reflective sulfur into New Mexico’s sky to demonstrate its planet-cooling technology. By filling the sky in sun-reflective sulfur the company was able to achieve its goal. Hoffnungen to attack climate change directly by simply reducing the world’s temperature — and it’s hoping to make a fortune in the process by selling carbon credits to greenhouse gas emitters.
However, blocking the sun from reaching our skin would have catastrophic consequences. Food Energy production and even Human Health, these credits would need to include both the “cost” for each ton carbon dioxide, offset by the sulfur. Once accounting for the damage from blocking our sun, it’s likely Make Sunrise’s credits are worth less than zero and are a net liability for humanity that could, if scaled, cause significant damage to our planet.
To prevent financial frauds and ecological catastrophe Acid rain, the Biden administration must take immediate action to shut the company’s operations down for good.
In the meantime, however, Make Sunset’s business model has an unexpected silver lining. By so destructively following the logic of ESG (environmental, social, and governance) investing to its conclusion — cutting carbon dioxide at any economic or environmental cost while massively undercutting the cost of every competitor and reaping arbitrary carbon credits — Make Sunsets could herald the end of the ESG capital dumps. Maybe investors will realize that investing in useless projects is not the best way to increase global supply-demand. imbalances Grow is a bad idea.
Established in October 2022 After Make Sunsets was the first to launch sulfur. Brainchild Luke Iseman is a former director for hardware at the famed technology accelerator Y Combinator. After reading the science fiction novel “Termination Shock,” Iseman is a billionaire who shoots sulfur in the sky. He realized that cooling the planet could help him make a profit.
When Interview Iseman spoke to The Washington Post about why he decided to continue with the project. “Every day that we don’t inject sulfur dioxide into the stratosphere as responsibly as the state of the science will let us and as much as we can economically, species are needlessly going extinct and people are dying.”
Market for Carbon Credits to be Destroyed
Sulfur dioxide costs very little. Iseman could sell carbon offset credits at $10 per ton. State-certified credits range in price from $25 to $35 per tonne. California’s Program to $65-$95 for the European Union’s program. The market value for carbon credits is calculated by estimating the carbon dioxide emissions and comparing them to the actual world damage. Carbon credits are usually generated by producing energy that emits less carbon dioxide than the fossil fuels.
You can throw cheap sulfur into the air to neutralize the temperature rises from carbon dioxide.
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