Modifying the weather
- Influencing weather
Description
Most common weather modification projects seek to augment normal snow or rainfall, to refill reservoirs, generate snow for ski resorts or relieve droughty crops. Fog over busy airports may be modified by dropping dry ice. Future developments may be draining energy from budding hurricanes and hailstorms, or creating rain from a clear blue sky.
Implementation
At least 29 states in the USA had licensed weather modification programmes in 1999.
“Cloud seeding technology” works by sprinkling clouds with dry ice and silver iodide to increase rain or snow. The aerosols and other particulates are injected into the skies using ground-based diffusers or via airplanes and are visible as "chemtrails". Noteworthy are US power stations near the Sierra Nevada mountains which aim to increase snowpack and runoff water for electricity generation.
Military researchers are also attempting to influence the weather by adding small amounts of energy at just the right time and space. An experimental U.S. Navy and Air Force ionospheric heater known as the High-Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) has been projecting tightly-focused beams of intense radio-frequency energy into the atmosphere for the past several years. Artificial "mirrors", formed of polymers sprayed behind high-flying aircraft, could could be held aloft by the pressure exerted by such radiation beams. By absorbing microwave energy, these structures could heat the air and induce changes in the weather.
By 2022, China had invested some $168 million into efforts to control the weather. It was employing somewhere in the vicinity of 35,000 people within in its “Weather Modification Department,” which has offices all across China, and generating around 55 billion tonnes of artificial rain annually.