Cloud-Seeding Shows Limited Results: Experts Highlight Scientific, Environmental, and Cost Challenges

Context:
• Delhi’s recent cloud-seeding experiment produced minimal rainfall, raising questions about the effectiveness, sustainability, and environmental risks of using such technology for reducing pollution.

Key Highlights:

  • Limited Rainfall Achieved
  • IIT-Kanpur conducted cloud-seeding flights dispersing silver iodide and salt particles.
  • Rainfall recorded: 0.1 mm in Noida, 0.2 mm in Greater Noida, and no rainfall in Delhi.
  • Uncertain Effectiveness in Local Conditions
  • Experts warn that convective, low-level clouds common in the plains may not respond well to cloud seeding.
  • Any potential improvement in air quality would be short-lived.
  • High Costs & Low Returns
  • Cloud-seeding projects can cost ₹3.2 crore or more, raising concerns over cost-benefit justification.

Significance

  • Cloud-seeding success is highly dependent on cloud characteristics—height, moisture content, type, and the precise timing of particle release. These conditions are often suboptimal in northern plains.
    • Air quality experts reiterate that cloud seeding does not address the root causes of Delhi’s pollution, which stem from transport emissions, construction dust, biomass burning, and power sector pollutants.
    • For cloud seeding to work, the timing must be early in a cloud’s life cycle—seeding too late causes particles to be washed out by natural rain.
    • Delhi’s complex aerosol mix—including sulphates, silica dust, and other particulates—interferes with cloud microphysics, making rain formation harder.
    • Cloud formation after seeding may take several hours, with no guarantee of precipitation.
    • Environmental concerns persist: silver iodide, although used in small quantities, may pose toxicity risks to aquatic life, and long-term ecological studies remain limited.

 

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