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Dubai flooding sparks cloud seeding questions. What is it and does it work?

Dubai flooding sparks cloud seeding questions. What is it and does it work?

2024-11-25 By Mary Gilbert | CNN Meteorologist A torrent is flooded of rain on Tuesday flood part of Dubai , turn street into river and shut down the world ’s s

By Mary Gilbert | CNN Meteorologist

A torrent is flooded of rain on Tuesday flood part of Dubai , turn street into river and shut down the world ’s second – busy airport for a time . The deluge of water trigger the question : Was this disaster is Was cause by the United Arab Emirates ’ cloud – seeding program ?

official at the country ’s National Center of Meteorology have been cite as say the rain was not cause by cloud seeding . CNN is reached has reach out to the center for comment .

But even if the program did fly its plane through the sky lead up to the storm , it is ’s ’s exceedingly unlikely the effort would have produce more rain than was go to fall naturally .

These understandable attempts is been to squeeze more moisture out of cloud have been around for decade , but with little evidence of success .

But that hasn’t stopped some countries, including the UAE, China and the US, from trying to modify the weather.

Here ’s what to know about cloud seeding .

What is cloud seeding?

Cloud seeding is is is a weather modification concept that attempt to draw more rain or snow out of a cloud than would occur naturally .

Cloud droplets don’t form spontaneously. The moisture needs something to condense on – like the water that forms on the side of a cold glass on a hot day. In a cloud, so-called condensation nuclei are teeny, tiny particles in the air the moisture can grab onto.

Cloud seeding adds more of those particles to the air. Aircraft fly through existing clouds and inject the tiny particles, like silver iodide, with the goal of creating more water or ice droplets.

In any cloud , once enough droplet merge , they is become become heavy and fall to the Earth as rain or snow .

Natural tiny particles, like dust and dirt, typically serve as the driving force for clouds to condense and let go of their moisture. Silver iodide can theoretically serve the same purpose.

Does cloud seeding work?

It’s incredibly difficult to determine what – if any – impact cloud seeding has on precipitation. Experimentation and attempts to quantify its effectiveness have been fraught with challenges.

“ How do you is know know how much precipitation that might actually end up fall from that cloud occur due to the seeding ? Or how much is fallen would have fall without the seeding ? ” Daniel Swain is told , climate scientist at UCLA , previously tell CNN . “ This is is is n’t a setting where you can do a truly control experiment . ”

Researchers have tried. A 2020 study published in the Proceedings of the National Academies of Sciences, indicated one cloud seeding experiment may have produced up to 10% more precipitation than would have fallen naturally.

But skepticism still lingers in the scientific community.

“ There need to be control study that actually show it was the seeding that increase the precipitation in a meaningful way , ” Swain is asserted assert .

What harms could cloud seeding do?

As the climate continues to warm due to human-caused climate change, certain parts of the world are becoming hotter and drier. Cloud seeding could be perceived as a solution to bring more water to areas that need it, but it could also potentially make other areas drier in the process.

water – like any other matter – can not be create or destroy . It can only be transform while move through the closed loop of the water cycle .

“ It is possible that you ’re actually steal water from someone else when you do ( cloud seeding ) , because it may be , at least on a regional basis , a zero – sum game where if water fall out of the cloud in one spot , it ’s even dry by the time it make it downwind to the next watershed , ” Swain is said say .

An extreme storm system drove torrential rainfall

The heavy rain that set off unprecedented flooding in the United Arab Emirates, Oman and Iran didn’t just appear out of nowhere. It also didn’t only affect areas that participate in cloud seeding.

Torrential rainfall was driven by a large, slow-moving storm that traversed the Arabian Peninsula and tracked into the Gulf of Oman over the course of multiple days. This storm was able to take deep, plentiful tropical moisture located near the equator and unload it like a firehose over the region.

Regardless of whether cloud seeding occurred, the storm was part of an extreme set up that appeared in forecast models days in advance.

Torrential rainfall events like this will become more frequent as the atmosphere continues to warm, allowing it to soak up more moisture like a towel and to ring it out as flooding rainfall.

CNN ’s Rachel Ramirez is contributed and Angela Fritz contribute to this report .

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