Poster's note: NB sub continental scale

https://amp.theguardian.com/world/2020/dec/03/china-vows-to-boost-weather-modification-capabilities

China plans rapid expansion of ‘weather modification’ efforts
Ambition to cover area more than one and a half times size of India likely
to concern country’s neighbours

Jonathan Watts Global environment editor
 @jonathanwatts
Thu 3 Dec 2020 18.47 GMT
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China is planning a rapid expansion of its weather modification programme
to cover an area more than one and a half times the size of India, in a
move likely to raise concerns among the country’s neighbours.

The decision, announced by the cabinet on Wednesday night, would increase
fivefold the world’s biggest cloud-seeding operation, which already employs
an estimated 35,000 people.


For six decades, the communist nation has deployed military aircraft and
anti-aircraft guns to lace clouds with silver iodide or liquid nitrogen to
thicken water droplets to the point where they fall as snow or rain. The
technology has mostly been used at a local level to alleviate droughts or
clear skies ahead of major events, such as the 2008 Olympics or last
October’s 70th anniversary of the People’s Republic of China.

But the proposed enlargement is on a scale that could affect regional
weather patterns. The cabinet said it wanted to extend the artificial rain
and snow programme to cover at least 2.1m sq miles (5.5m sq km) of land by
2025. The long-term plan envisages that by 2035, the country’s weather
modification capabilities would reach an “advanced” level and focus on
revitalising rural regions, restoring ecosystems and minimising losses from
natural disasters.

It follows a rapid buildup of capacity in recent years. A 2017 plan
earmarked $168m (1.15bn yuan) for four new planes, eight upgraded craft,
897 rocket launchers and 1,856 digital control devices to cover 370,000
miles (960,000 sq km), about 10% of China’s territory.


Part of that is a new weather modification system in the Qinghai-Tibet
plateau, Asia’s biggest freshwater reserve. Chinese scientists are working
on the ambitious Tianhe (“sky river”) plan to divert water vapour
northwards from the Yangtze River basin to the Yellow River basin, where it
would become rainfall.

They say they have found potential channels near the boundary of the
troposphere that could carry 5bn cubic metres of water annually. The China
Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation has reportedly constructed
hundreds of chambers in the mountain region – known as Asia’s water tower –
to feed silver iodide into the atmosphere in large volumes.

This attempt to hydro-engineer the sky could ease shortages in the dry
north of China but may exacerbate problems in south-east Asia and India if
it affected the flow of the Mekong, Salween or Brahmaputra rivers – all of
which have their sources on the Qinghai-Tibet plateau.


Even before the latest announcement, Indian websites have speculated that
China is weaponising the weather and may already be disrupting rainfall
patterns. There is little credible evidence, but China would not be alone
in trying to alter the weather for strategic purposes.

The US journalist Seymour Hersh revealed in 1972 that the US attempted to
manipulate seasonal rains during the Vietnam war. Operation Popeye, as it
was known, aimed to flood the communist supply route along the Ho Chi Minh
trail. The US company General Electric conducted the first cloud-seeding
experiments in 1946. The technology was later adopted and upgraded by the
Soviet Union and then applied with fervour by China during the Great Leap
Forward, when Mao Zedong said “manmade rain is very important. I hope the
meteorological experts do their utmost to make it work.”


But its use has been peaceful and domestic. In the north, it is coordinated
by the Beijing weather modification office, which claims it has increased
precipitation in the capital by more than 10%. In 2009 it was credited for
a snowfall that helped to relieve a protracted drought. Ahead of the
Olympics in 2008, more than 1,000 silver iodide shells were fired into the
sky over eight hours to keep rain from disrupting the opening ceremony. The
technology was also reportedly deployed to clear smog in time for the 2014
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) meeting. Locals still jokingly
refer to the colour of clear skies as “Apec blue”.

But there are concerns about the lengths to which the Communist government
is willing to go to in tampering with the elements. In the 1970s, Chinese
generals proposed using nuclear weapons to blast a channel through the
Himalayas so that warm humid air from the Indian subcontinent could be
diverted to green the deserts of central and northern China. The country is
also in the midst of the world’s biggest water diversion scheme, which aims
to achieve a similar goal. However, many scientists, even within China, are
doubtful about the effectiveness of cloud seeding, particularly on a large
scale.

In China, weather modification is institutionalised and widely deployed,
and current narratives around the legitimacy to intervene in the local
climate may provide a rationale for interventions such as solar radiation
management.


Recent science papers say the artificial rain programme takes these ideas
to a new technological and political level. Shiuh-Shen Chien and colleagues
from National Taiwan University said China’s cloud water governance
presents a new human-weather ideology of “taming the weather”. Bettina
Bluemling from the University of Queensland and others argue that this
scale of intervention could set a precedent for Beijing to take the first
steps in climatic geoengineering.

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