California looks to cloud seeding to bolster - TopicsExpress



          

California looks to cloud seeding to bolster snowpack SACRAMENTO (AP) — With California experi­encing a second straight dry year, water agencies are turning to cloud seeding to help pad the state’s snow­pack. The practice has been around for decades, but cloud seeding has gone mainstream as a result of new tech­nology and research showing its reliable, the Sacramen­to Bee reported Monday. In a report this year, the California Department of Water Resources estimated cloud seeding projects gen­erate 400,000 acre-feet of additional water supply annu­ally in the state. That’s about half the volume of Folsom Reservoir. An acre-foot is enough water to supply a typ­ical household for a year. “The message is starting to sink in that this is a cost­effective tool,” said Jeff Tilley, director of weather mod­ification at the Desert Research Institute in Reno. “The technology is better; we understand how to do cloud seeding much better. And because we know how to do it more effectively, it’s definitely taken more seriously.” Cloud seeding involves spraying fine particles of sil­ver iodide into a cloud system. Under the right condi­tions, the silver iodide causes water droplets in the clouds to form ice crystals that grow larger and turn into snowflakes. The goal is to increase the amount of pre­cipitation that would otherwise fall. Proponents say cloud seeding is cheaper than desali­nation, new dams and even conservation projects. Addi­tionally, they say concerns about its environmental effects are unfounded. More than a dozen California watersheds have cloud-seeding projects, many of which began running last week, the Bee reported.
Posted on: Tue, 12 Nov 2013 19:05:56 +0000

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