The Daily Telegraph

It’s not our fault says UK university, as cloud seeding is blamed for the deluge in Dubai

Experts say technology is not advanced enough to be the cause of extreme weather in desert region

- By Sarah Knapton Science editor

THE University of Reading has denied that its cloud-seeding technique was to blame for extreme flooding in Dubai after the worst rainfall since records began in 1949.

Meteorolog­y experts at the university have been working with the United Arab Emirates (UAE) over the past few years on a project to electrical­ly charge clouds, and produce raindrops.

On Sunday, two days before the region saw a year-and-a-half ’s worth of rainfall in one day (5.6 inches), the UAE carried out cloud-seeding efforts, according to flight-tracking data.

Several cloud-seeding planes were flown in the days leading up to the weather, Ahmed Habib, a meteorolog­ist at the UAE’S National Center for Meteorolog­y told Bloomberg.

“For any cloud that’s suitable over the UAE you make the operation,” Mr Habib said. The National, a state-linked newspaper in Abu Dhabi, quoted an anonymous official from UAE’S National Center for Meteorolog­y (NCM) yesterday as saying that no cloud seeding took place on Tuesday, the day of the rainfall.

They did confirm that the operation was performed on Sunday and Monday.

More than 5.6 inches of rain soaked Dubai over 24 hours on Tuesday. The average annual amount at the airport is 3.7 inches.

Thousands of British travellers were left stranded at Dubai Internatio­nal Airport as runways and access roads were blocked by surging water.

Many passengers were forced to spend the night sleeping in airport lounges after roads to nearby hotels were blocked.

Drivers were seen swimming from their cars and an elderly Emirati man in his 70s died on Tuesday morning when his vehicle was caught in flash floods.

In neighbouri­ng Oman, 19 people died after three consecutiv­e days of heavy rain.

Mr Habib told Bloomberg that several cloud-seeding planes were flown in the days before the extreme weather.

But the University of Reading said that even if cloud seeding had been carried out in the days before the storm it could not have caused such a deluge.

The team also said that the UAE had been using chemical seeding rather than the electrical charge technique developed in Britain.

Professor Maarten Ambaum, a meteorolog­ist at Reading who works closely with NCM, said: “The UAE does have an operationa­l cloud seeding programme to enhance the rainfall in this arid part of the world; however, there is no technology in existence that can create or even severely modify this kind of rainfall event.

“Any seeding operation has a fairly short-lived – a few hours at the very most, and small-scale effect.

“So even if they had had some operationa­l seeding activities in the days before, then they would not have been able to influence this particular weather system.

He added: “This was a largescale weather system, well predicted, and cloud seeding would not have been able to influence this in any substantia­l way.

“There has never been any scientific evidence that seeding can change climate or cause long term consequenc­es.”

The UAE carries out more than 1,000 hours of cloud seeding each year, to improve its annual rainfall, lower heat-related deaths and boost drinking water supplies.

Cloud seeding works by firing salt flares into the cloud to try and speed up condensati­on, which in turn creates rainfall.

Experts at Reading are also working with the UAE on the electric charge method that makes the droplets stick to each other, helping the growth rate.

The Reading team said the downpours were the result of medium-sized thundersto­rms sparked by massive thunderclo­uds, which had formed when heat drew up moisture into the atmosphere.

Experts said there would have been no benefit in seeding early clouds as they were already forecast to produce substantia­l amounts of rain.

The NMC also said it was too dangerous to send the small seeding planes into thunder clouds.

However, other meteorolog­ists warned that the consequenc­es of cloud seeding were still unknown and that it could have a longer-term impact

Johan Jaques, senior meteorolog­ist at German forecaster Kisters, said: “The Dubai floods act as a stark warning of the unintended consequenc­es we can unleash when we use such technology to alter the weather.

“Additional­ly, we have little control over the aftermath of cloud seeding –where exactly is it going to be raining effectivel­y?

‘The Dubai floods act as a warning of the effects we can unleash when we use such technology to alter the weather’

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 ?? ?? (Clockwise from top) a stranded car on a flooded street in Dubai; water is removed from a highway; an inflatable bed is used to float above the water; cars are left stranded after the flash floods
(Clockwise from top) a stranded car on a flooded street in Dubai; water is removed from a highway; an inflatable bed is used to float above the water; cars are left stranded after the flash floods
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