My take, which I posted about this development on LinkedIn -
The recent $60 million investment in Stardust, backed by Israeli venture capital, signals that the development of Solar Radiation Management (SRM) will now accelerate—and others will soon join the race. For-profit companies are entering a domain that could determine the fate of the planet, and much of this progress may unfold in stealth, beyond public scrutiny or multilateral oversight. The world faces a pivotal truth: the technology to cool the planet is coming, but governance is not. Rapid, transparent, and inclusive global governance must catch up—before commercial interests set the rules.
But governance without representation is hollow. The Global South, especially South Asia, must invest decisively in SRM research and development. The region’s food security, water cycles, and monsoon systems are acutely vulnerable to atmospheric manipulation, yet it remains a bystander in the science and policy shaping its future. Building indigenous SRM capacity is not optional—it is strategic. Without it, decisions will be made elsewhere, creating a new form of climate colonialism, where the South bears the consequences of technologies it neither designed nor controlled.
And the deeper question looms: Should the power to engineer Earth’s climate rest with profit-driven companies? Would humanity ever have trusted private firms to build and sell atomic bombs?
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On Oct 25, 2025, at 12:09 AM, Dr. Soumitra Das <mr.soum...@gmail.com> wrote:
My take, which I posted about this development on LinkedIn -
The recent $60 million investment in Stardust, backed by Israeli venture capital, signals that the development of Solar Radiation Management (SRM) will now accelerate—and others will soon join the race. For-profit companies are entering a domain that could determine the fate of the planet, and much of this progress may unfold in stealth, beyond public scrutiny or multilateral oversight. The world faces a pivotal truth: the technology to cool the planet is coming, but governance is not. Rapid, transparent, and inclusive global governance must catch up—before commercial interests set the rules.
But governance without representation is hollow. The Global South, especially South Asia, must invest decisively in SRM research and development. The region’s food security, water cycles, and monsoon systems are acutely vulnerable to atmospheric manipulation, yet it remains a bystander in the science and policy shaping its future. Building indigenous SRM capacity is not optional—it is strategic. Without it, decisions will be made elsewhere, creating a new form of climate colonialism, where the South bears the consequences of technologies it neither designed nor controlled.
And the deeper question looms: Should the power to engineer Earth’s climate rest with profit-driven companies? Would humanity ever have trusted private firms to build and sell atomic bombs?
On Sat, Oct 25, 2025 at 5:07 AM Aria Mckenna <ar...@globalcoolingproductions.com> wrote:
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Soumitra DasChairman and Executive Director, HCI USAChairman, HCI India
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2. Stardust Solutions raises $60 million to develop a geoengineering system |
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Heatmap’s Robinson Meyer has a big scoop this morning: Geoengineering startup Stardust Solutions is set to announce that it has raised $60 million in venture capital to develop the tools needed to artificially cool the planet by reflecting sunlight away from Earth. The company, led by a team of Israeli physicists, aims to spray aerosols into the atmosphere that will bounce energy from the sun back into space to balance out the effects of greenhouse gases. The technology is on track to be ready by the end of the decade. Lowercarbon Capital led the funding round, which is the company’s second, following a $15 million seed round in 2024. Rob’s story offers a measured assessment of the dangers of potentially geoengineering the atmosphere — and the threat of failing to do so when efforts to mitigate emissions are so far from where they need to be to preserve the climate norms in which humans evolved as a species. In a line that harkens to one of my favorite books, journalist Charles C. Mann’s environmental history of the global trade network that developed after Christopher Columbus’ arrival in the Americas called 1493, Rob notes that “the Earth has not been free of human influence for millennia,” and that “the world has over and over again been remade by human hands.”
“Stardust may not play the Prometheus here and bring this particular capability into humanity’s hands,” Rob writes. “But I have never been so certain that someone will try in our lifetimes. We find ourselves, once again, in the middle of things.” |
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2. Stardust Solutions raises $60 million to develop a geoengineering system |
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Heatmap’s Robinson Meyer has a big scoop this morning: Geoengineering startup Stardust Solutions is set to announce that it has raised $60 million in venture capital to develop the tools needed to artificially cool the planet by reflecting sunlight away from Earth. The company, led by a team of Israeli physicists, aims to spray aerosols into the atmosphere that will bounce energy from the sun back into space to balance out the effects of greenhouse gases. The technology is on track to be ready by the end of the decade. Lowercarbon Capital led the funding round, which is the company’s second, following a $15 million seed round in 2024. Rob’s story offers a measured assessment of the dangers of potentially geoengineering the atmosphere — and the threat of failing to do so when efforts to mitigate emissions are so far from where they need to be to preserve the climate norms in which humans evolved as a species. In a line that harkens to one of my favorite books, journalist Charles C. Mann’s environmental history of the global trade network that developed after Christopher Columbus’ arrival in the Americas called 1493, Rob notes that “the Earth has not been free of human influence for millennia,” and that “the world has over and over again been remade by human hands.”
“Stardust may not play the Prometheus here and bring this particular capability into humanity’s hands,” Rob writes. “But I have never been so certain that someone will try in our lifetimes. We find ourselves, once again, in the middle of things.” |
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Hi Herb,
Thanks again for your thoughtful take — I really value the nuance and perspective you bring to this discussion. I completely agree that Stardust’s entry shouldn’t be condemned. In fact, it’s encouraging to see private capital finally accelerating SRM development, which we may urgently need in the coming years.
My concern, however, is the lack of governance. The primary goal of any private company is to maximize shareholder value — and in an imperfectly competitive market, those profit motives could easily drive suboptimal outcomes if left unchecked. That’s why I emphasized the need for rapid development of transparent governance frameworks — not to slow innovation, but to ensure it unfolds safely, ethically, and equitably.
I also agree with your point about David Keith’s skepticism.
Ultimately, while private-sector participation is positive, the Global South — which will be affected the most — must accelerate its own SRM R&D. Without scientific and policy capacity in the region, decisions will be made elsewhere, which could further deepen existing inequities.
In an ideal world free of special interests and conflicts, we wouldn’t need private companies to tackle a planetary challenge of this magnitude — but since we don’t live in that world, governance and representation become even more critical.
Warmly,
Soumitra
The Stardust funding is good news. Restoring planetary albedo is absolutely necessary to prevent economic and social and environmental collapse. Sunlight reflection will be a major industry in this century, scaling like aviation and petrochemicals did in the last century, as basic planetary security infrastructure.
A commercial lobby is needed to get governments to support an Albedo Accord, taking a narrow approach to governance of rebrightening while efforts on carbon continue to flounder in climate irrelevance. The funding for Stardust can help galvanise this lobby. An Albedo Accord modelled on the Montreal Protocol is the best way forward.
The politico article includes the statement that “The surge of investor enthusiasm for Stardust comes amid stalled political efforts in Washington and other capitals to reduce the use of oil, gas and coal — the main drivers of climate change.” Speaking precisely, it is not true that the “use” of fossil fuels is the main driver. We are now in a situation where the heat from past emissions is causing albedo collapse which in turn is causing much more immediate warming than new emissions. That means cutting new emissions by reducing hydrocarbon energy use cannot by itself slow climate change, destroying the whole rationale of the Paris Accord.
The need for effective climate cooling points to a paradigm shift where startups like Stardust are creating a new rebrightening industry and forcing the construction of governance arrangements. The Royal Society estimate that sunlight reflection is 1000 times better value for money as a cooling investment than renewables strongly supports this perspective.
I remain of the view that opposition to solar geoengineering among climate activists is driven by the commercial interests of the renewable energy industry. Whether directly or indirectly, the need for investor certainty on renewables rollout underpins the whole false moral hazard narrative. That is not a stable or reasonable situation, and it has already caused dangerous delay in commercialising sunlight reflection. I would not be surprised at all to see conservative politicians come out in support of Stardust as a way to extend the challenge to the renewable energy focus of climate policy.
Regards
Robert Tulip
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Soumitra Das
Chairman and Executive Director, HCI USA
Chairman, HCI India

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Dear Herb,
it’s great that Stardust exists. It opens the market, and it will create competition. That’s good.
Not so good is the fact that they try to hide their IP. If you want to provide a public good, which you expect to be paid by the public, you should put your cards on the table and say what exactly you want to do.
Not so good is also the fact that they appear to be a profit-oriented venture. But that, on its own, is acceptable.
Finally - not so good is the combination of the first two points. Are they going to say that they have the IP and henceforth the monopoly to provide that service? That would, IMHO, be a clear NoGo.
Cooling the climate is possibly a business, yes. But it cannot be a a business where somebody gets rich. That would – rightly- infuriate the public. If they do not correct this image, they might create more damage than good.
Regards
Oswald Petersen
Atmospheric Methane Removal AG
Lärchenstr. 5
CH-8280 Kreuzlingen
Tel: +41-71-6887514
Mob: +49-177-2734245
Von: healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com <healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com> Im Auftrag von H simmens
Gesendet: Samstag, 25. Oktober 2025 14:00
An: Dr. Soumitra Das <mr.soum...@gmail.com>
Cc: Aria Mckenna <ar...@globalcoolingproductions.com>; healthy-planet-action-coalition <healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com>; Climate Alliance Healthy <healthy-clim...@googlegroups.com>; Healthy Climate Initiative <healthy-clima...@googlegroups.com>; Planetary Restoration <planetary-...@googlegroups.com>
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