Climate Weapons: The Future Threat of Modern Warfare
- May 22
- 1 min read
A new academic study has raised concerns over the possible emergence of “climate weapons” as a future form of weapons of mass destruction. The research explores how advanced technologies could potentially influence weather patterns, earthquakes, floods, droughts, and other environmental systems as part of modern warfare strategies.
The study highlights controversial global research facilities such as the American HAARP project, Europe’s EISCAT system, China’s FAST radio telescope, and Russia’s SURA facility. While these projects officially focus on atmospheric and ionospheric research, they have long been linked to theories surrounding weather manipulation and environmental control.

According to the research, climate weapons are considered part of a broader category known as “geophysical weapons,” which include atmospheric, hydrospheric, lithospheric, biospheric, and ozone-based technologies capable of triggering large-scale environmental disruptions.
The author warns that future conflicts may rely less on traditional military attacks and more on advanced technologies capable of disrupting agriculture, infrastructure, economies, communication systems, and public stability through environmental changes

Although there is currently no confirmed evidence proving operational climate weapons exist, the study argues that rapid technological advancements and the growing number of extreme climate disasters worldwide continue to fuel global concern over the potential militarization of environmental systems.

Source: Bartłomiej Terebiński, “Climate weapons – a new weapon of mass destruction?” Scientific Journal of the Military University of Land Forces, Volume 56, Number 3 (2024), Pages 43–60. DOI: 10.5604/01.3001.0054.7573.
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