May 8, 2006

What is old is new again

Cutting edge science from China -- from Associated Press:
China Makes Artificial Rain for Beijing
Chinese weather specialists used chemicals to engineer Beijing's heaviest rainfall of the year, helping to relieve drought and rinse dust from China's capital, the official Xinhua News Agency reported Friday.

Technicians with the Beijing Weather Modification Office fired seven rocket shells containing 163 cigarette-size sticks of silver iodide over the city's skies on Thursday, Xinhua said.

The reaction that occurred brought as much as four-tenths of an inch of rain, the heaviest rainfall this year, helping to "alleviate drought, add soil moisture and remove dust from the air for better air quality," Xinhua said.

Though unusual in many parts of the world, China has been tinkering with artificial rainmaking for decades, using it frequently in the drought-plagued north. Last month, another artificial rainfall was generated to clear Beijing after the city suffered some of the fiercest dust storms this decade.

Whether cloud-seeding actually works has been the subject of debate in the scientific community. In 2003, the U.S. National Academy of Sciences questioned the science behind it as "too weak."
Four tenths of an inch is considered a success? Sheesh -- I know that we live in an area with heavier than normal precipitation but an inch is considered normal and 0.4 would be a light sprinkle. We have had as much as six inches in one day. Cloud seeding has been looked at from from the 1940's. Wikipedia has a good article: Cloud Seeding HighBeam links to another article from Science News If the Chinese hadn't cut down their forests and overgrazed their steppes, they wouldn't be having these problems with dust and low rainfall. And the rain that is falling on Beijing to "rinse the dust" is probably rainfall that is being diverted from agricultural needs. Unintended consequences again. Posted by DaveH at May 8, 2006 12:20 PM
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