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Facebook posts
stated on October 6, 2024 in a Facebook post:
“They create hurricanes via cloud seeding” and “direct them where they want the Hurricane to go!”


- National
- Weather
- Facebook Fact-checks
- Florida
- Facebook posts


Wind-driven rain soaks a street in downtown Tampa, Fla., Oct. 9, 2024, as Hurricane Milton passes through. (AP)
By Jeff CerconeOctober 10, 2024
If Your Time is short
Cloud seeding, used to increase rain or snow in drought-stricken areas by injecting silver iodide into clouds, is the most common weather modification program in use in the U.S.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration once used cloud seeding in a decadeslong project to try to lessen the intensity of hurricanes, but the project was ended in 1983 after mixed results.
There are no weather modification projects that can create or modify hurricanes, weather officials and experts said.
See the sources for this fact-check
Amid the deluge of misinformation about Hurricanes Helene and Milton is this persistent claim: Someone (perhaps the government!) is controlling the weather and intentionally steering storms to hit somewhere.
An Oct. 6 Facebook post said Hurricane Milton, which made landfall on Florida’s southwest coast the night of Oct. 9, was "created" and aimed at the state.
"They Create Hurricanes via cloud seeding, electro magnetic pulses then radiate and ionize them so they can intensify them and direct them where they want the Hurricane to go!" the post’s caption said.
This post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)
Claims that unknown figures, often governments, can somehow create and control the weather are not new. We debunked such claims after a deadly Turkey earthquake in 2023, after Hurricane Ian hit Florida in 2022 and after a Texas winter storm in 2021.
There are real weather modification programs, the most common of which is cloud seeding — a technique to increase rainfall or snow in drought-stricken regions by shooting silver iodide into clouds. But none can create or control a hurricane; such technology doesn’t exist, officials and experts say.

(Screenshot from Facebook)
Helene left a trail of destruction in the southwest U.S. after landing in Florida Sept. 26 and Milton formed Oct. 5 in the Gulf of Mexico, quickly intensifying into a powerful hurricane.
Featured Fact-check


Instagram posts
stated on October 7, 2024 in an Instagram post
Hurricane Milton article is evidence they "control and plan these storms."


Again, claims of shady forces geoengineering and controlling the storms surfaced, even among members of Congress, with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., posting on X, "yes they can control the weather." President Joe Biden on Oct. 9 called Greene’s comments "beyond ridiculous."
PolitiFact debunked several of those claims, including that "Hurricane Helene was the product of intentional weather modification" (it wasn’t), and that Amazon’s Alexa voice assistant proved Helene was created using cloud seeding (again, it wasn’t).
U.S. Rep. Chuck Edwards, R-N.C., took an opposite approach to Greene, releasing an Oct. 8 press release to debunk Hurricane Helene myths. In it, he said Charles Konrad, NOAA’s director of its Southeast Regional Climate Center, said "no one has the technology or ability to geoengineer a hurricane," nor to manipulate them.
Monica Allen, a public affairs director for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Research division told PolitiFact on Oct. 8 for a previous article that hurricanes, including Helene and Milton, form on their own.
The "NOAA confirms that there are no weather modification activities that could have resulted in Hurricane Helene or Hurricane Milton," Allen said.
From 1962 through 1983, the NOAA unsuccessfully tried using cloud seeding in hurricanes — to reduce their intensity, not to create them — in Project Stormfury. The NOAA has not pursued weather modification since that program ended after mixed results, Allen said.
"There is no known way to geoengineer a hurricane," Mark Bourassa, meteorology professor at the Florida State University Center for Ocean-Atmospheric Prediction Studies, told PolitiFact. "Hurricanes are huge and would require enormous rates of energy input (e.g., atomic bombs won't bother them much) to form. If we could geoengineer a hurricane then there would be a lot of other weather that would be dealt with — which isn't happening."
A Facebook post’s claim that Hurricane Milton was created using cloud seeding and steered toward Florida describes something that’s technologically impossible, weather experts said. The claim is Pants on Fire!
Read About Our Process
The Principles of the Truth-O-Meter
Our Sources
Facebook post, Oct. 6, 2024
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Hurricane modification?, accessed Oct. 9, 2024
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Project Stormfury, accessed Oct. 9, 2024
DRI, Cloud seeding program, accessed Oct. 9, 2024
NBC News, Biden shoots down Marjorie Taylor Greene's 'beyond ridiculous' conspiracy theory about controlling the weather, Oct. 9, 2024
Rep. Chuck Edwards, R-N.C., Debunking Helene Response Myths, Oct. 8, 2024
PolitiFact, Hurricane Helene was not artificially created, despite what Alexa says, Oct. 8, 2024
PolitiFact, Hurricane Helene was not a product of weather modification. That’s Pants on Fire!, Sept. 27, 2024
PolitiFact, Video doesn’t prove Hurricane Milton was geoengineered. It’s from 2021 , Oct. 8, 2024
PolitiFact, Hurricane Ian was a natural disaster, not a political conspiracy to devastate Floridians, Sept. 30, 2022
PolitiFact, Biden did not plan winter storm as ‘an attack on Texas’, Feb. 16, 2021
PolitiFact, Turkey-Syria earthquakes were natural disasters, not geoengineered, Feb. 15, 2023
Browse the Truth-O-Meter
More by Jeff Cercone


Facebook posts
stated on October 6, 2024 in a Facebook post:
“They create hurricanes via cloud seeding” and “direct them where they want the Hurricane to go!”




Instagram posts
stated on October 7, 2024 in an Instagram post:
Hurricane Milton article is evidence they "control and plan these storms."


Instagram posts
stated on October 6, 2024 in an Instagram post:
FEMA “blocked a runway” at a South Carolina airport and “halted” hurricane relief flights.




Elon Musk
stated on October 2, 2024 in a post on X:
With U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s CBP One app, it “takes less than 5 minutes and zero documentation to get approved as an illegal immigrant and be flown to the United States with air tickets paid for by the American taxpayer.”




Social Media
stated on September 30, 2024 in in social media posts:
“Biden Announces: ‘2.4 billion more to Ukraine’ but ‘no more aid for Hurricane Helene.’”




X posts
stated on September 28, 2024 in an X post:
Video shows “the bunker-busting bombs that ended the lives of (Hassan) Nasrallah and Hezbollah’s leadership.”




Threads posts
stated on September 22, 2024 in a Threads post:
Florida "put Tom Walz instead of Tim Walz" on its ballots.




Social Media
stated on September 22, 2024 in in social media posts:
“The Montana Secretary of State left Kamala Harris off the ballot.”




TikTok posts
stated on September 18, 2024 in a TikTok video:
“Attorney General Merrick Garland just vetoed charging Ryan Routh with attempted assassination” of Donald Trump.




Instagram posts
stated on September 17, 2024 in an Instagram post:
CDC warns a third of adults may die from dangerous bacteria in ramen noodles.




Facebook posts
stated on September 10, 2024 in a Facebook post:
Patron, Don Julio and Pink Whitney tequila recalled because they contained fecal matter.




Instagram posts
stated on September 11, 2024 in an Instagram post:
"Debate moderators made the false claim to Donald Trump that there is nowhere in the United States where abortion is legal up until birth."




X posts
stated on September 9, 2024 in an X post:




Donald Trump
stated on September 10, 2024 in at a Sept. 10 presidential debate:
"In Springfield (Ohio), they're eating the dogs, the people that came in, they're eating the cats. They're eating, they're eating the pets of the people that live there.”




Social Media
stated on September 6, 2024 in in social media posts:
Haitian immigrants are eating pets and wildlife in Springfield, Ohio.


No, cloud seeding wasn’t used to create Hurricane Milton


Robert Reich
stated on October 8, 2024 in an Instagram post:
“Two weeks ago 100 GOP lawmakers voted against additional FEMA funding.”




Eric Hovde
stated on September 5, 2024 in Campaign ad:
Says Democratic opponent Tammy Baldwin "gave stimulus checks to illegals."




Marjorie Taylor Greene
stated on October 7, 2024 in a post on X:
Patents dating back to the 1800s show that people can control the weather.




Senate Leadership Fund
stated on September 24, 2024 in a campaign ad:
U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown voted to “allow transgender biological men to compete in girls’ sports.”




X posts
stated on October 6, 2024 in una publicación en X:
"Los 750 dólares que nuestra generosa administración ha ofrecido a las víctimas del huracán Helene son un PRÉSTAMO! Tienen un año para devolverlo".




Kamala Harris
stated on October 7, 2024 in an interview on "60 Minutes":
"Teachers and nurses and firefighters are paying a higher tax rate than billionaires and the biggest corporations."




Facebook posts
stated on October 1, 2024 in a Facebook post:
“Taylor Swift blames Instagram for losing millions of followers after Harris endorsement: ‘It must be a glitch!”




Threads posts
stated on October 4, 2024 in a Threads post:
“FEMA is supposed to help out white people last for the purpose of ‘equity.’ … It’s literally on the FEMA website.”




Facebook posts
stated on October 6, 2024 in a Facebook post:
“They create hurricanes via cloud seeding” and “direct them where they want the Hurricane to go!”




Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee
stated on September 20, 2024 in Campaign ad:
Says Wisconsin GOP U.S. Senate candidate Eric Hovde "brags about being in the 1%."


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