Master of weather? China in drive to advance rain-making tech

  • China’s expanded weather modification efforts would support emergency response plans to deal with events such as drought and hailstorms
  • Its artificial rainfall and snowfall operations will cover an area of more than 5.5 million sq km – greater than the total size of Southeast Asia

A Chinese soldier loads cloud-seeding shells during a weather modification mission in northern Shanxi province in February 2011. Photo: Xinhua
Two years before the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, Chinese authorities revealed plans to use cloud-seeding to control the weather. The feat involved launching 1,104 rockets packed with silver iodide into the sky, which helped eliminate any threat of downpours in the nation’s capital during the event’s opening ceremony on August 8 that year.

Fast-forward around 12 years since that Olympiad, and China now plans to aggressively expand its weather control programme. The country expects its artificial rainfall and snowfall operations to cover an area of more than 5.5 million square kilometres – greater than the total 4.5 million sq km size of Southeast Asia.

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