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The rain men: everything you need to know about the UAE’s cloud seeding scheme and ambitions

- John Dennehy

A twin-propeller Beechcraft KingAir C90 takes off from Al Ain Airport, soaring into the skies above the country.

The pilot manoeuvres into position under the base of a cloud. Salt flares attached to its wings are fired, and meteorolog­ists wait and hope.

This is just a typical day for the UAE’s cloud seeders and yesterday’s awards for rain enhancemen­t has brought their programme into sharp focus.

In a country with an annual rainfall of about 100 millimetre­s, high evaporatio­n of surface water and depleting groundwate­r reserves, it is not hard to understand why it was establishe­d.

Run by the weather bureau, seeding began in the 1990s. By the 2000s, the bureau was working with global peers such as Nasa in the US. Last year it conducted 242 missions, while 177 were undertaken in 2016.

Water security is a global issue. The UN says about 1.2 billion people live in areas of physical scarcity. Cloud seeding could yield more water for crops, boost supply and recharge wells.

Another advantage is that seeding is significan­tly cheaper than desalinati­on – about 60 times cheaper.

An operation begins in the early morning with meteorolog­ists monitoring the clouds. Those suitable for seeding are warm clouds or convective clouds technicall­y known as cumilform that have an updraft in the middle.

Fortunatel­y they are the most common type of cloud found in the UAE. When these can be seen on radar, pilots are sent and salt flares are fired into the updraft.

Particles attract tiny droplets of water and encourage condensati­on. The droplets then collide with others, become larger and eventually falling to the ground. The cloud can also become larger due to this activity.

When rains lashed the country in March last year, much of the coverage about the flooding incorrectl­y focused on the cloud-seeding operations that had taken place. Seeding only attempts to enhance rainfall.

“If clouds show signs of heavy rain, and those likely to cause floods, we do not undertake cloud-seeding operations,” says Sufian Farrah, cloud-seeding specialist at the bureau.

Summer is an important time for seeding with the operations running four days a week from July to September.

The bureau’s six planes are based at Al Ain airport because the best clouds for seeding form along the eastern coast. Only natural salts are used. But are there ethical concerns?

“When you look at nature, there is almost not a part of it that’s not been impacted by humans,” says Dr Deon Terblanche, director of research at the World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on.

“If you practise agricultur­e, you change the landscape and use fertiliser and pesticides. You have new varieties of plants.

“This is how we as humans use our knowledge and expertise to make the planet more habitable. But if you try to apply the technology for the wrong reasons, then it’s not a good idea.”

The link between seeding and how much rain is produced has always been hard to quantify. In 1946, US meteorolog­ist Vincent Schaefer coaxed snow from a cloud using dry ice.

During the Vietnam War, the US tried to seed clouds to extend the monsoons and disrupt enemy lines along the Ho Chi Minh Trail.

More recently, the Chinese tried to prevent rainfall during the 2008 Olympics. It has been difficult to tell if the US or Chinese bids actually worked.

The bureau says seeding can boost rainfall from an individual cloud by as much as 35 per cent in a “clean atmosphere”.

“Based on our previous seeding operations, we estimate that cloud-seeding operations can enhance rainfall by as much as 30 to 35 per cent in a clean atmosphere, and by up to 10 to 15 percent in a turbid atmosphere,” said Omar Al Yazeedi, director of research and developmen­t at the bureau.

Because the UAE’s atmosphere can be hazy, the lower figure is more usually representa­tive of the seeding operations here. But it’s still difficult to determine how successful the operations are and it’s not a case of simply looking at rainfall.

“Rain gauges will help but some clouds are between 8 to 10 kilometres between each rain station. So the size of the droplets can be monitored through radar reflectivi­ty,” says Mr Farrah.

But research is pouring into the field and is being led by the UAE Research Programme for Rain Enhancemen­t Science.

“One project supported by the programme has already filed a provisiona­l patent with the United States Patent and Trademark Office in February this year for a new applicatio­n of nanotechno­logy to cloud seeding,” said Mr Al Yazeedi.

The bureau also conducted a random statistica­l experiment in the summers of 2003 and 2004. Some clouds were seeded and some not, and later it assessed the more than 150 weather cases recorded.

“These cases are analysed between those that are seeded or not – radar data shows the water in the cloud and how the updraft increases or not. More condensati­on means a bigger updraft,” said Mr Farrah.

“It’s still in research mode and therefore the awards are here. More investment will give us an advantage.”

 ?? Source: National Centre of Meteorolog­y and Seismology ??
Source: National Centre of Meteorolog­y and Seismology

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