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    DOA at the Royal Inn – Police Return Hours Later for Overdose Call

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    Minford Man Arrested After Brutal Assault on Pregnant Woman

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  • Obituaries
    Jeffrey Pennington

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    Charles J. Wilson, Sr

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    Richard Campbell

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    Paul Maston Wampler

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    Ray Carrington

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    Rita Sue Winters, 87, of High Point, NC

    Rita Sue Winters, 87, of High Point

    Betty Kay Palmer

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    Toby Adam Dryden

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    Loretta Anna McClure

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    Donna Kay Holcomb

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Texas cloud seeding sparks concerns after deadly storms

Is Texas walking a fine line between water innovation and atmospheric intervention?

MJ Brickey & CB Hightower by MJ Brickey & CB Hightower
12 months ago
in National
Source: USA Today

Source: USA Today

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In early July 2025, violent flash floods devastated Central Texas. Torrents of rain swept through communities, claiming at least 80-plus lives. The Guadalupe River overtopped its banks in Kerr County, where emergency responders battled rising waters to reach stranded families in homes and RV parks. Entire towns were submerged in a matter of hours (source: weather.com).
What makes the event all the more charged is its timing: just two days before the deluge, Rainmaker Technology Corporation conducted a licensed cloud seeding operation in the region as part of Texas’s broader strategy to stimulate rainfall amid ongoing drought.
Now, the public, press, and policy circles are asking the same uneasy question: is Texas starting to control the weather—and if so, at what cost?
The Thirst That Shaped a State
Texas has long been at war with its climate. From bone-dry summers and dust-bowl memories to rising population demands and dwindling aquifers, the state has struggled to secure a reliable water supply. In fact, Texas has so desperately sought new water sources that it’s spent years trying to buy water from neighboring states, with limited success.
One of the most well-known standoffs involved Sardis Lake in southeastern Oklahoma. In 2011, the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations sued the state of Oklahoma and Oklahoma City to block efforts to pipe water from Sardis Lake into Texas. The tribes argued that the move violated their treaty rights and cultural stewardship. The litigation culminated in a 2016 agreement that recognized tribal water rights and placed future usage under joint governance (source: NPR StateImpact Oklahoma).
The U.S. Supreme Court also rebuffed Texas in 2013, when the Tarrant Regional Water District tried to force access to Oklahoma’s share of the Red River under the terms of the Red River Compact. The Court unanimously ruled against Texas, asserting Oklahoma’s sovereign right to control its water within state borders (source: Native Times).
Attempts to access water from Hugo Lake for the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex also failed when the Oklahoma legislature passed a moratorium on out-of-state water sales, triggering another federal lawsuit that underscored the increasingly fraught politics of interstate water sharing(source: Wikipedia/Hugo Lake).
As climate stress worsens, Texas has found itself boxed in—legally, geographically, and climatically. Its inability to acquire external water rights has forced it to turn inward… and upward.
Weather as Infrastructure
Cloud seeding, which involves injecting substances like silver iodide into clouds to enhance rainfall, has been used in Texas for decades. But never before has it been so politicized—or so visible. In 2025, the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) authorized multiple seeding programs, including operations by Rainmaker Technology Corporation, which now conducts aerial seeding across West Texas, the Gulf Coast, and the southern plains (source: TDLR).
These operations are part of a broader movement, especially in rural counties, to extract water not from land but from the atmosphere itself.
“Given the constraints on importing water and the uncertainty of natural rainfall, seeding offers us a tactical option,” said a TDLR spokesperson in a recent briefing. While the science behind cloud seeding is still debated, some studies estimate a 10–15% increase in rainfall from targeted efforts. That’s enough to matter in a state where every drop counts.
But the July floods have cast a long shadow on these operations.
A Deluge of Consequences
The tragedy that followed Rainmaker’s July 3 flight has shaken confidence in weather modification practices. While meteorologists emphasize that existing storm systems and tropical moisture were likely primary drivers, the proximity of the operation to the disaster has reignited public skepticism.
Currently, there is no direct evidence that the cloud seeding caused the flooding, but that hasn’t stopped calls for a formal investigation. “We’re not saying it caused the floods,” said one emergency planner in Kerrville. “But when you’re playing with the atmosphere, the margin of error is thin—and the stakes are high.”
Legislation at Cross Purposes
Ironically, this is all unfolding against the backdrop of Texas’s most ambitious water legislation in decades. Senate Bill 7, passed in spring 2025, establishes the Texas Water Fund, a $20 billion commitment over 20 years to develop new water infrastructure. The fund could support desalination, wastewater recycling, and potentially cloud seeding, depending on implementation priorities (source: texas2036.org).
Yet, in the same session, Senate Bill 1154 was signed into law, explicitly banning governmental agencies from engaging in weather modification or geoengineering. The bill still permits cloud seeding by private companies and universities under license, but it reveals a growing ambivalence about the role of public authority in atmospheric intervention (source: billtrack50.com).
So, the state wants water, but not public responsibility for how it gets it.
A Matter of Trust, Not Just Science
All of this—interstate conflicts, flooding disasters, private weather control—adds up to a deeper crisis: a crisis of governance and trust.
If Rainmaker and others are to be entrusted with weather control, the public needs more than opaque permits and vague data. There needs to be independent oversight, community consent, and a clearer ethical framework. As the Texas Comptroller has stated: “Cloud seeding can hardly be considered a major source of new water in Texas” without more substantial evidence of long-term impact (source: comptroller.texas.gov).
Yet it’s being treated as one, especially in rural areas where desperation often outweighs caution.
Looking Up, Carefully
Texas didn’t get here overnight. Years of failed water negotiations, federal court losses, and paralyzing droughts have pushed the state to the edge of technological innovation. But innovation without transparency—and historical awareness—can backfire. The people of Central Texas now know this firsthand.
The rain we ask for must not come at the expense of those we forget to ask.
Citations & Sources:

Texas Senate Bill 7 (2025) – Establishes the Texas Water Fund, allocating $20 billion over 20 years for infrastructure, conservation, and new water sources.
Source: Texas Water Fund Overview – Texas 2036

House Joint Resolution 7 (2025) – Constitutional amendment to fund the Texas Water Fund with state sales tax revenue.
Source: Texas Legislature Online – HJR 7 Summary

Senate Bill 1154 (2025) – Prohibits governmental entities in Texas from engaging in geoengineering, weather modification, and cloud-seeding operations.
Source: BillTrack50 – SB 1154

RELATED POSTS

DOA at the Royal Inn – Police Return Hours Later for Overdose Call

Jeffrey Pennington, 60 of South Shore

Richard William Campbell, 69 of Lucasville

Tarrant Regional Water District v. Herrmann, 569 U.S. 614 (2013) – U.S. Supreme Court case ruling that Texas cannot take water from Oklahoma under the Red River Compact.
Source: SCOTUSblog case summary

Choctaw & Chickasaw Nations v. Oklahoma (2011–2016) – Federal lawsuit over Sardis Lake water rights; concluded in a 2016 agreement recognizing tribal control.
Source: NPR StateImpact Oklahoma Coverage

City of Hugo, OK v. Oklahoma Water Resources Board (2007–2013) – Legal dispute over attempts to sell Hugo Lake water to Texas entities.
Source: Wikipedia – Hugo Lake

Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) – Agency that licenses weather modification programs in Texas.
Source: TDLR Weather Modification Summary

Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts – Evaluation of cloud seeding as part of state water management strategy.
Source: Texas Water Development Report – Cloud Seeding

Red River Compact (1978) – Multi-state agreement governing allocation of the Red River’s water among Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louisiana.
Source: Oklahoma Water Resources Board

Rainmaker Technology Corporation – Weather modification company conducting seeding operations in Texas under TDLR permit.
Source: Rainmaker.com – Company Profile

Texas Cloud Seeding Project List (NOAA 2025) – Documentation of current weather modification projects across Texas.
Source: Wikipedia – 2025 U.S. Weather Modification Projects

Texas July 2025 Flood Coverage – Major storms and fatalities following July 3 cloud seeding activity.
Source: Weather.com – July 2025 Flood Emergency

Sunny’s Journal Coverage of Public Cloud Seeding Transparency Debate
Source: Sunny’s Journal – Texas Floods After Blue Rain

Texas 2036 – Nonprofit policy institute advocating for long-term infrastructure planning.
Source: Texas 2036 Water Fund Brief

Native Times – Indigenous news outlet covering water rights disputes in Oklahoma.
Source: Native Times – Choctaw Water Rights Coverage

ICT News – Coverage of tribal lawsuits blocking Texas access to Sardis Lake.
Source: ICT Archive – Sardis Lake Lawsuit

MJ Brickey is a nationally recognized journalist, producer, and author based in Nashville, Tennessee. Raised between southern Ohio and western Oklahoma, her work blends investigative reporting, digital media, and storytelling with a deep commitment to public service.

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