
Where It Hides
Weather Systems
Falls from the sky regularly. Often without warning. Sometimes in catastrophic volumes.
How It Gets In
DHMO falls from the sky on a regular basis. Most days in most populated regions of the world experience some form of DHMO precipitation. In some locations, the cumulative annual deposition exceeds two meters in depth.
The substance arrives without consent. There are no opt-out programs for atmospheric DHMO release. Property owners cannot decline service. Pedestrians cannot meaningfully shield themselves from sustained exposure events. The only available defense is real-time avoidance using forecasting tools that themselves rely on DHMO-tracking instrumentation.
Climate change is accelerating both the frequency and the severity of high-volume atmospheric DHMO release events. Without intervention, we expect the next decade to bring more — not fewer — uncontrolled deposition incidents.
Concentration Levels
| Context | Measurement |
|---|---|
| Avg annual atmospheric DHMO deposition, US Northeast | 1.0–1.4 m |
| Major precipitation events per year, continental US | 300+ |
| Opt-out programs for atmospheric DHMO release | 0 |
| Decade-over-decade deposition variance trend | Increasing |