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Can China solve its water problem with rain-making furnaces?

Researchers plan ambitious network of chemical rainmakers in Tibet

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A rain-making furnace on the Tibetan plateau. (Picture: maduo.gov.cn)
This article originally appeared on ABACUS

At 8 p.m. on August 8th, 2008 China’s big moment arrived: The Beijing Olympics began, with a lavish opening ceremony complete with elaborate performances and dazzling fireworks.

Eight is a lucky number in China, and it looked like fortune did favor the country on that day. No rain arrived to spoil the event, even though it was during the wet season.

But it might not have been down to luck. Beijing’s Weather Modification Office used aircraft and artillery to shoot silver iodide into the skies outside of the city -- so any rain would fall before it reached the stadium.
Now China wants to do it again... but on a much bigger scale.
A rain-making furnace on the Tibetan plateau. (Picture: maduo.gov.cn)
A rain-making furnace on the Tibetan plateau. (Picture: maduo.gov.cn)

Tens of thousands of chemical rainmakers -- furnaces that burn solid fuel to produce silver iodide -- will be scattered across the Tibetan plateau. As wet air from the Indian Ocean sweeps in, the chemicals blend in with clouds to accelerate rain and snowfall -- bringing much-needed water to one of the driest places on Earth.

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