Geoengineering debate grows
Dane Wigington’s March 28 briefing spotlighted rising public concern about geoengineering and called for more transparency on large‑scale weather modification projects. (youtube.com) The episode underscores growing scrutiny that could translate into regulatory and reputational risks for climate interventions. (youtube.com)
GeoengineeringWatch published “Global Alert News, March 28, 2026 — #555” on March 28, 2026 as an entry on its site and episode feed. (geoengineeringwatch.org) Dane Wigington is listed as the lead researcher and owner of GeoengineeringWatch and operates a separate personal channel and program feed. (geoengineeringwatch.org) ( ) Wigington’s personal YouTube channel shows a substantially larger subscriber base than the GeoengineeringWatch branded channel — his channel lists about 260,000 subscribers while the GeoengineeringWatch channel lists roughly 7,780 subscribers. (youtube.com) ( ) Wigington gave video testimony to Wyoming legislators in late 2025 and his materials were cited in committee proceedings that drew public attention to atmospheric-modification claims. (geoengineeringwatch.org) ( ) Wyoming’s draft “Clean Air and Geoengineering Prohibition Act” (26LSO-0211 / HB0012) was filed as legislation and its full text is available on the state legislature site. (wyoleg.gov) That bill failed a House introduction vote 24–38 on Feb. 9, 2026 after committee debate and amendments earlier in the process. (legiscan.com) ( ) Local reporting and independent fact‑checks note that the “chemtrails” claims linked to Wigington’s advocacy remain classified by mainstream outlets as a debunked conspiracy theory and that legislative activity reflects public concern rather than judicial validation. (wyomingpublicmedia.org) ( ) The March 28 episode and related installments are reposted across multiple platforms — GeoengineeringWatch’s site, BitChute mirrors, podcast feeds on Podbean and Rumble uploads — expanding reach beyond a single video host. (bitchute.com) ( )