Chinese Government Ramps Up Weather Control Efforts
formaggio writes "China's government is intervening with nature by rolling out four regional programs to artificially increase precipitation across the country by 10 percent before 2015. The program is anticipated to bring in an additional 230 billion cubic meters of precipitation per year by 2015. This is on top of the 50 billion cubic meters of precipitation China already artificially creates annually in the northeastern province of Jilin."
Sorry commies, but only the Allies can have the weather control device. Go play with your nuke and iron curtain.
To offset political mods, replace Flamebait with Insightful.
Are they also creating an evaporation effect in the region that supplies air moisture to the region they're trying to create precipitation in?
No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
but what could go wrong!?
This reminds me of an Edding's book I read once, "Guardians of the West" where the lead character started playing around with the weather (to prove a point to some very inept thinking people). Several months later his grandfather comes to his castle, and virtually berates him for tampering with the "most powerful force in nature".
:)
Somehow I think this very fitting considering (1) this is China we're talking about and (2) anyone (including the US) who plays around weather is virtually certain to cause an adverse effect somewhere else. So please DO NOT TAMPER WITH THE WEATHER!!.
Thanks.
Regards,
MBC1977,
What about downwind areas where the water would fall naturally? Might that effect snow packs and cause drought during summer months?
I see international problems brewing with this...
I hear that in some localities, the rain water (that falls on your property) doesn't belong to you, and you're not legally allowed to have rain barrels.
Weather alteration will amplify issues like that, such that countries have to make treaties regarding who can claim which clouds.
Of course, you have to wonder about a range of possibilities: You can make your neighbor have a drought, or potentially have a flood.