Claim
Viral social media posts claim that Bill Gates is creating or controlling rainfall in North India using “artificial rain,” chemtrails, or geoengineering experiments.
Verdict: False
What’s the story?
Over the past few days, several parts of North India witnessed sudden rainfall, thunderstorms, and hail after an early March heatwave. Soon after, viral reels and posts began linking this weather change to alleged “experiments” by Bill Gates, claiming that the rain was artificially created and even harmful (“death rain”). Some posts also referenced a Harvard geoengineering project to suggest that large-scale weather manipulation is already underway in India.

Factcheck India Found?
There is no scientific evidence that any individual, including Bill Gates, can control rainfall—especially at a regional or national scale.
1. The real cause: Western Disturbance
According to the India Meteorological Department, the rainfall was caused by a Western Disturbance—a common weather system that originates near the Mediterranean and travels toward India.
- These systems regularly bring rain, thunderstorms, and hail to North India
- The recent one was more intense due to a strong, straight low-pressure system
- This is a natural atmospheric phenomenon, not artificial intervention
2. Misuse of geoengineering research
Viral posts mention SCoPEx to support their claims.
But facts say otherwise:
- It was a small-scale research proposal to study sunlight reflection
- Planned for the Arctic—not India
- It was never fully conducted and was cancelled in 2024
It had nothing to do with rainfall or India’s weather systems.
3. No link between Bill Gates and weather control
While Bill Gates funds projects in agriculture, health, and climate resilience, there is:
- No evidence linking him to weather manipulation
- No credible scientific or institutional backing for such claims
Misinterpreted clips about “labs in India” actually refer to innovation testing, not climate control.
4. What “artificial rain” actually means
The term usually refers to cloud seeding, a limited weather-modification technique.
- Used in parts of India like Maharashtra and Karnataka
- Works only when clouds already exist
- Cannot create rain from clear skies
- Cannot control large systems like the monsoon
- Its impact is small, local, and temporary.
5. Hailstones not melting ≠ “chemical rain”
Viral videos showing hailstones that don’t melt quickly are also misleading.
Natural reasons include:
- Low post-storm temperatures
- Cloud cover blocking sunlight
- Ice accumulation and shaded surfaces
These are well-understood weather behaviors, not proof of artificial interference.
Conclusion
There is no evidence that Bill Gates or anyone else is controlling rainfall in India. The recent weather in North India was caused by a natural Western Disturbance, and viral claims misrepresent both science and real-world events. The narrative is a mix of misinformation, misinterpreted research, and fear-based content and not facts. Always verify facts with Factcheck India.

