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Demand rising in China for weather modification
Published on 03-04-2010Email To Friend    Print Version
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Source: China Daily

BEIJING: China will step up weather modification in key regions to help relieve
drought, the director of the China Meteorological Administration has said.

As drought and hailstorms pose severe threats to rural income and food supply,
there is a rising demand for technology to cushion the impact, Zheng Guoguang
told China Daily.

Related readings:
 Beijing plans weather modification for National Day

Weather modification technology has also been used to ensure clear skies
for important events, and will possibly be used for the upcoming Shanghai
World Expo.
Modifying weather involves seeding clouds with grains of dry ice (frozen
carbon dioxide) or tiny particles of silver iodide to stimulate rainfall
or dissipate the clouds. It is also used to help prevent or control forest
fires and ease acute water shortages in some areas, he said.

Statistics for losses caused by natural disasters in recent years were not
immediately available, but a chronic drought in 2007, the worst in a decade,
caused losses of 37.4 million tons of grain, according to official statistics.
The annual grain output is around 500 million tons.

Zheng said he expects weather modification projects will contribute to the
country's efforts to increase grain production capacity by 50 million tons
annually.

Last year, officials used artillery, rockets or planes to induce precipitation
for wheat-producing areas and some other regions, thanks partly to a central
government fund of 60 million yuan ($8.8 million), Zheng said. In the past,
most funds for weather modification projects came from local governments.

In all, a record 840 flights were made to increase rain last year for areas
spanning 3.6 million square kilometers - or roughly one-third of China's
territory. Also, at least 116,000 rockets and 890,000 artillery shells were
fired to alter atmospheric phenomena.

Nationwide, weather modification projects cost 910 million yuan in 2009,
but helped generate output 30 times that amount, according to statistics
from the Weather Modification Center.

The meteorological agency has completed research and development of weather
modification core technology and equipment, a State-funded project during
the 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-2010). Research will continue to be beefed
up in the years to come, he said, without elaborating.

The technology was used to ensure clear skies for the grand parade of the
National Day celebration last year, when the country marked the 60th anniversary
of the founding of New China. It also was used to ensure rainless days for
the opening and closing ceremonies of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, Zheng
said.

The China Meteorological Administration is gearing up for weather services
for the Shanghai World Expo, which opens in May, and for November's Asian
Games in Guangzhou, he said.

The Shanghai event will be a challenge, as it lasts 184 days and may be affected
by monsoons and high temperatures.

Weather manipulation is still a developing discipline that holds great potential,
Zheng said. The country began modifying the weather on a local or regional
scale in 1958.

"It is still at a 'research-and-use' stage, and there are still a lot of
problems to be resolved," Zheng said.

Weather modification causes no pollution, as very few doses of dry ice or
silver iodide are used, said officials from the administration's Weather
Modification Center.

For example, the Beijing weather modification office has for years monitored
water quality in areas where modification projects took place. They found
traces of silver ions in the water to be far below the national drinking
water standard allowance.