Even with his years of experience and the technology at his disposal, meteorologist Don “Big Weather” Schwenneker says it can be challenging to accurately forecast severe weather. But when a storm or ...
Let's start with the facts. Cloud seeding is an 80-year-old practice of spraying tiny particles into a rain cloud in the hope of pushing it to rain or snow just a little more. It's used in nine states ...
Utah is using a technology that can add more water to the state’s supply Humans have the technology to literally make snowfall from the clouds. In the drought-stricken Southwest, where the Colorado ...
Water officials in Pinal County experimented with cloud seeding technology to boost rainfall over the summer, just months after bills that would have banned the practice failed to gain traction at the ...
In a place as dry as the desert city of Dubai, whenever they can get rain, they’ll take it. United Arab Emirates authorities will often even try to make it rain—as they did earlier this week when the ...
Cloud seeding involves spraying salts into incoming storm clouds to increase rainfall. Photos show how the UAE, United States, and other countries have been seeding clouds for decades. Historic floods ...
Flooding drenched the United Arab Emirates on Tuesday, in a country that usually only has 4 or 5 inches of rain each year. Experts have said the cause of the rainfall was likely not cloud seeding, as ...
With cloud seeding, it may rain, but it doesn't really pour or flood — at least nothing like what drenched the United Arab Emirates and paralyzed Dubai, meteorologists said. Cloud seeding, although ...
A nine-year, $14 million study says that cloud seeding can increase snowfall, and some officials in thirsty Arizona say it’s time to ramp it up. The study is the most ambitious and expensive ever done ...
Is it smart water management or messing with Mother Nature? Oct. 6, 2012— -- Craig Funke's job is to fly a small plane to the edge of violent thunderstorms and back. The former commercial pilot ...
With cloud seeding, it may rain, but it doesn’t really pour or flood — at least nothing like what drenched the United Arab Emirates and paralyzed Dubai, meteorologists said. Cloud seeding, although ...
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