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Seeding hope: Cloud seeding’s role in combating drought and water scarcity

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Cloud seeding is used for rainfall augmentation, snowpack increase, hail suppression and fog dissipation.
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What is cloud seeding?

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  • Cloud seeding is a weather modification technique aimed at enhancing precipitation (rainfall/snowfall) by dispersing certain substances into clouds that serve as cloud condensation or ice nuclei.
  • Common agents: Silver Iodide, Potassium Iodide, Dry Ice (Solid CO₂) and Liquid Propane.
  • Sometimes salt particles are used, especially in coastal regions.

How it works? (Mechanism)

  1. Cloud selection: Only works on moisture-bearing clouds.
  2. Seeding agents dispersed: Through aircraft, rockets or ground-based generators.
  3. Process:
  • Hygroscopic seeding (salt-based) → enhances droplet formation.
  • Glaciogenic seeding (silver iodide) → promotes ice crystal formation.
  1. Outcome: Accelerates condensation → increases rainfall/snowfall.

Types of cloud seeding

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  1. Static seeding – Enhances rainfall by adding particles to encourage droplet growth.
  2. Dynamic seeding – Aims to boost vertical air currents for larger cloud development.
  3. Hygroscopic seeding – Uses salts to absorb moisture and enlarge droplets.

Applications

  • Rainfall augmentation – to combat drought, water scarcity and groundwater depletion.
  • Snowpack increase – in mountains to sustain river flows (used in USA).
  • Hail suppression – preventing crop damage.
  • Fog dissipation – especially around airports.

Global scenario

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  • USA & Canada – for increasing snowpack in Rockies.
  • China – large-scale cloud seeding (notably during 2008 Beijing Olympics).
  • UAE – invests heavily in cloud seeding to secure water resources.
  • Australia, Thailand, Israel – regular use in drought-prone areas.

India’s context

  • States practicing/experimenting: Karnataka, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Rajasthan.
  • Notable example:
  • Maharashtra (2015) conducted cloud seeding during severe drought.
  • Karnataka (2017) “Varshadhare Project” for rain augmentation.
  • Institutions involved: Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM), Pune; ISRO supports with satellites.

Advantages

  • Helps in drought management and agriculture.
  • Ensures water security in arid regions.
  • Reduces hailstorms → protects crops.
  • Can help reduce air pollution (by inducing rain to wash pollutants).

Limitations/concerns

  • Scientific uncertainty: Effectiveness ranges only 10-20% (ideal conditions).
  • High cost: Aircraft, chemicals and operations are expensive.
  • Environmental issues:
  • Silver iodide toxicity (bioaccumulation risk).
  • Altering natural weather cycles.
  • Ethical & geopolitical concerns:
  • “Weather modification as weapon” fears.
  • Transboundary rainfall disputes (e.g., if rainfall shifts from one region to another).
  • Legal vacuum: No comprehensive international law on artificial weather modification.

Cloud seeding is an artificial weather modification technique to induce rainfall/snowfall, offering potential in drought mitigation but limited by high costs, uncertain results, and environmental-ethical concerns, making it a debated yet significant climate-adaptation tool.

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