A newly released document titled “Contrails Research Roadmap 2025,” published by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), NASA, and NOAA, lays out plans for “routine, system-wide contrail management” by 2050.
Now, to be clear, the government isn’t calling these “chemtrails.”
They refer to them as “contrails,” but what they describe in this document is functionally the same thing people like me have been reporting on for years.
Jets spraying substances that linger in the sky, alter the weather, and affect temperature on the Earth—whether intentional or not, this is an admission of widespread atmospheric manipulation, dressed up as a side effect rather than a deliberate operation.
According to the government document itself, there are two types of persistent contrails that can last for hours to days and have significant impacts on the atmosphere:
Persistent Non-Spreading Contrails
These “can remain visible and retain their linear features for hours to days.”
The document explains they “form in ice supersaturated regions of the atmosphere and are likely to be more impactful than short-lived contrails.”
The agencies even admit they are “easily identified from the ground and satellites as being formed from aviation activity.”