Impact of climate change induced by global weather engineering technology of "chemtrails" on plant protection

Other Title(s)

تأثيرات التغيرات المناخية المستحدثة على مستوى كوكب الأرض بالهندسة المناخية بتقنية "كيمتريل" في وقاية النبات

Author

al-Husayni, Munir Muhammad

Source

Arab Journal of Plant Protection

Issue

Vol. 36, Issue 1 (30 Apr. 2018), pp.80-85, 6 p.

Publisher

Arab Society for Plant Protection

Publication Date

2018-04-30

Country of Publication

Lebanon

No. of Pages

6

Main Subjects

Botany

Abstract EN

Weather engineering scientists developed a new chemtrail technology applied by jets in the stratosphere for decreasing the global warming.

It is based on building synthetic chemical clouds of aluminum oxide as Welsbach particles to reflect the heat coming from the sun back in the upper atmosphere, and thus cooling the air on earth.

The applied aerosol mixture contains also nanoparticles of barium monoxide which react with CO2 when reaching the troposphere turning into barium carbonate and bicarbonate leading to minimization of its content in the atmosphere on the long run.

In 2000, the UN approved the first global weather engineering project in the history of mankind to combat the global warming by chemtrail technology for the period from 2000 to 2050.

This project decreased the global warming but induced undesirable climate changes over many areas on the planet that affected the natural balance between pests and their natural enemies.

Thus, it affects strategies of pest control and plant protection in agriculture as well as in forestry, human and veterinary pests as recorded in the last two decades.

These effects could be summarized in the following: 1) Creation of completely new wind directions by induced new air depressions as in 2004 which changed swarm direction of the desert locust autumn generation to invade north Africa for the first time, thus changing its usual control strategy, 2) Dehydration of certain ecosystems through the aluminum oxide as appeared in Australia 2009 destroying range land cattle production and leading to absence of both plant pests and their natural enemies, 3) Charging giant air electric fields leading to more lighting that induced wild fires in dehydrated forests, field crops and range land which were recorded in many countries.

Thereafter, forest pests outbreaks and needs to be controlled until resurgent of their natural enemies, 4) Increasing frequency and empowering the natural disasters by seeding air with precipitation nuclei causing floods that damaged many crops as recoded also in different countries.

Such floods are followed by outbreaks of mosquitoes and transmitted diseases, 5) Cooling upper air layers over warm water areas causing hurricanes, tornadoes, and building heavy snow and hail, the latter has shilling or destructive effect on certain crops and animal production in arid and semi-arid zones as in 2008 in KSA and some Asian countries, and 6) Decreasing air visibility due to suspended chemtrail particles in the air and creation of extreme heat waves when reflecting the heat back to earth by aluminum oxide affecting crops sensitive to high temperatures as well as killing the newly hatched lepidopterous larvae leading to save control measures as in case of the cotton leaf worm in Egypt.

American Psychological Association (APA)

al-Husayni, Munir Muhammad. 2018. Impact of climate change induced by global weather engineering technology of "chemtrails" on plant protection. Arab Journal of Plant Protection،Vol. 36, no. 1, pp.80-85.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-838435

Modern Language Association (MLA)

al-Husayni, Munir Muhammad. Impact of climate change induced by global weather engineering technology of "chemtrails" on plant protection. Arab Journal of Plant Protection Vol. 36, no. 1 (2018), pp.80-85.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-838435

American Medical Association (AMA)

al-Husayni, Munir Muhammad. Impact of climate change induced by global weather engineering technology of "chemtrails" on plant protection. Arab Journal of Plant Protection. 2018. Vol. 36, no. 1, pp.80-85.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-838435

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 85

Record ID

BIM-838435