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China, in Search of Water, is Building a Rain-Making Network Three Times the Size of Spain (scmp.com)

China is testing cutting-edge defence technology to develop a powerful yet relatively low-cost weather modification system to bring substantially more rain to the Tibetan plateau, Asia's biggest freshwater reserve. From a report: The system, which involves an enormous network of fuel-burning chambers installed high up on the Tibetan mountains, could increase rainfall in the region by up to 10 billion cubic metres a year -- about 7 per cent of China's total water consumption -- according to researchers involved in the project. Tens of thousands of chambers will be built at selected locations across the Tibetan plateau to produce rainfall over a total area of about 1.6 million square kilometres (620,000 square miles), or three times the size of Spain. It will be the world's biggest such project.

The chambers burn solid fuel to produce silver iodide, a cloud-seeding agent with a crystalline structure much like ice. The chambers stand on steep mountain ridges facing the moist monsoon from south Asia. As wind hits the mountain, it produces an upward draft and sweeps the particles into the clouds to induce rain and snow.

3 of 111 comments (clear)

  1. how this research breakthrough came to be by nimbius · · Score: 5, Funny

    professor higgins: "the rain in spain stays mainly in the plain"
    chinese scientists: ...hold my oolong...

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    Good people go to bed earlier.
  2. Re:Soil bacteria by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is China you're talking about. You shoot first, ask environmental questions later.

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    Ezekiel 23:20
  3. Re:You need moisture first by RandomFactor · · Score: 5, Informative

    This particular question is addressed at the very end of TFA. Sounds like there is a real concern with reducing the rainfall of other regions of China.

    Reducing the rainfall in regions other than China is not mentioned as a consideration.

    Beijing might not give the green light for the project either, he added, as intercepting the moisture in the skies over Tibet could have a knock-on effect and reduce rainfall in other Chinese regions.

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    --- Mercutio was right.