how China controls weather! ecology???

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Allen Ivey

unread,
Nov 4, 2009, 3:47:19 PM11/4/09
to Csj, nimc national, Hsin-Ya Liao, Gisela Lin, David Sue, Stanley Sue, Derald Wing Sue
fascinating!  I wondered how the skies cleared up in Beijing in one day when we were there. We arrived in very foggy/smoggy weather, but the next two days were clear for the 60th anniversary of the Communist Party. I wonder what the chemicals are doing to people.

Beijingers give frosty reception to man-made snowstorm

Agence France-Presse in Beijing 
4:34pm, Nov 04, 2009
 Email to friend Print a copy Bookmark and Share

Government scientists in Beijing have been pilloried for inducing a recent heavy snow fall that jammed traffic, delayed air travel and left city residents shivering, state media said on Wednesday.

Sunday’s snowfall dropped more than 16 million tonnes of snow on the Chinese capital, blanketing a city where winter heating services have yet to be switched on and leading to howls of public protest, the China Daily reported.

The Weather Modification Office shot massive amounts of chemicals into clouds over the city the night before to provoke the snowfall, which it said was needed due to a lingering drought in the region, the paper said.

Heating in most Beijing buildings was due to be turned on November 15, but city officials were forced to move the timetable forward and were working Wednesday to bring buildings onstream ahead of schedule.

“This arbitrary government decision had disregarded the interests of the people... we should [have] considered the potential hazards of cloud seeding,” said one commentary carried in the paper.

Sunday’s snowfall, the earliest to hit the capital in 22 years, delayed 200 flights stranding thousands of passengers, led to traffic accidents and disrupted electrical services dozens of times, it added.

“[This] shows there is a lot of room to improve the national weather manipulation warning system for the public,” the paper quoted Chen Zhenlin, spokesman of the China Meteorological Administration, as saying.

Mainland meteorologists have for years sought to make rain to reduce an ongoing drought.

But ahead of the massive celebrations marking the 60th anniversary of communist rule in China on October 1, cloud dispersal chemicals were used in the Beijing area to ward off unwanted rain clouds.



RATE THIS STORY 
AVERAGE (3 VOTES)

top

Allen
Allen E. Ivey

We make a living by what we get. We make a life by what we give.
                                                            Winston Churchill

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages