ENRON and Weather Control

by billder Thursday, Jul. 29, 2004 at 7:40 PM

WHAT THE ENRON RIPOFF WAS REALLY ALL ABOUT...

ENRON and Weather Co...
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For the most part these are old articles...i got the lead from an article i pulled off clifford carnicoms site, its after these links, then I went searching: somebody posted the initial article without a link, a while ago, around 01/03, it bears reading all the way. It obviously is from the time before the big E went kaput. I wonder if it had anything to do with the big E going kaput....if the CT technology was co-opted for surveillance, and other nefarious uses like mass mind alteration, because of, let us say, something like TERROR, then it is not beyond the realm of possibility that enron got shut down to hide all this....there were many small-fry weather control companys like Dyn-O-Mat ffeding off this lopsided insurance, guaranteeing enron or whoever certain weather factors for a price...even being small fry the ops were big bux and a lot of the early stuff went down in Clintons time....I think the initial spraying experiments by these weather companys was a success, meaning nobody squawked, and then way was made to deploy the control technology which govt has been developing now for 5 decades or more....b



http://www.derivativesstrategy.com/magazine/archive/1998/0598fea1.asp

http://www.themanagementor.com/kuniverse/kmailers_universe/finance_kmailers/IF_Weather.htm



http://www.financewise.com/public/edit/energy/weather99/wthr99-newangles.htm

http://www.financewise.com/public/edit/energy/weatherrisk/wthr-derivatives.htm

http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=274195

“"Dyn-O-Mat Taking on Mother Nature". Some of the ABC news article excerpts are recorded below: www.abcnews.go.com/sectio...20924.html

"The Dyn-o-Mat powder consists of a polymer ..." "It's made in cornflake-shaped flakes so it floats and lingers longer in the air to combine with a cloud's moisture."

“Sometime in early October, nine massive jets will take to the skies over southern Florida. Each will carry 16,000-330,000 pounds of an unusual arsenal: cloud-busting powder.”

“Peter Cordani, chief executive of the Riviera Beach, Fla.-based company, Dyn-o-Mat, says that once sprayed into a wet, hovering cloud, the special powder should combine with the moisture and transform into a heavy gel. The gel will then fall harmlessly to the surface and effectively shake out moisture from the cloud."

"We know it can dissipate a cloud," says Peter Ray, a meteorologist at Florida State University who is helping test the product."

''Others have suggested that massive mirrors in space might be used to redirect sunlight and alter weather patterns by heating cool pockets." (My note: heavy concentrations of polymers released into a large enough region of the troposphere would be highly effective at redirecting sunlight - solar energy. Concentrations of contrails would produce similar effects. Reference the USAF article 'Weather as a force multiplier - Owning the weather in 2025' Chapter 4 for some of the mechanics involved with atmospheric heating and cooling - weather control. Also, reference the American Meteorological Society February 2002 news release, listed in this post)

"Such proposals may seem farfetched, but Ross Hoffman concluded in a recent bulletin of the American Meteorological Society that the dream of controlling the weather "is in fact a possibility." (Note: Ross Hoffman is a leading research meteorologist at AER Inc. It is my understanding that Hoffman believes that global weather control can be accomplished by forcing weather changes in the right areas of the world at the right times. Related information is provided below.)



The hype over weather derivatives is being replaced by real deals, and everybody’s scrambling for position.

The viewership of the Weather Channel has always skewed decidedly toward the nerdy. But if the lightning-fast development of the weather derivatives market is any indication, before long the ratings-challenged cable channel could reach a whole new audience financial players around the world who have suddenly become obsessed with occluded fronts, La Niña and other weather arcana that for years had been the exclusive province of people with backyard barometers.

While derivatives historians may quibble over the precise date of the first weather contract some say July 1997, while others say August of that year everyone in the weather business agrees that the market hit the ground running.

There has been an explosion of deals in the marketplace and a tremendous amount of interest on the client side, says Richard Turrin of Paribas’ strategic derivatives group. The industry has seen the birth of a new market in the last year to 18 months, and in the last six months the growth has been exponential.

Houston-based energy giant Enron estimates that between 900 and 1,000 transactions have taken place to date, with the notional value of those deals exceeding .5 billion. Kansas City, Mo.-based Aquila, the unregulated marketing and trading arm of Utilicorp, puts that figure closer to 1,200.

While energy firms are still the most active in the weather business, other industries are getting into the game as well. Enron has already acted as counterparty in deals with manufacturers of snowmobiles and snowblowers, the film industry and the fertilizer industry, and has fielded inquiries from theme parks, golf courses, sports-drink makers, car washes and ski resorts. Aquila boasts transactions with salt producers, ski resorts and other entertainment companies. In addition to the relatively commonplace degree-day deals, says Enron’s Lynda Clemmons, a director at the firm, she has been approached by companies interested in rainfall, snowfall and even barometric pressure contracts.

******* Weather derivatives allow companies to control the effects of the weather on demand for their products. Here are some of the most popular structures.*******

Temperature Contracts

A degree day is the deviation of a day’s average temperature from 65 degrees Fahrenheit. In the summertime, the demand for energy increases with every degree above 65; in the winter, the demand for heat increases for every degree day below 65. There are a number of degree-day products available to energy producers. In most, payment is made for every degree day above or below the strike, with a maximum payout that can range from 0,000 to million or more

Original: ENRON and Weather Control