The Chinese government is contemplating the practice of ‘cloud seeding’ to disperse the county’s notorious smog, as schools have been forced to close or suspend outdoor activities in two eastern Chinese cities over hostile breathing conditions.
A ‘red alert’ for poor-quality air was raised by the government
Thursday in Nanjing, the capital of the eastern Jiangsu province.
Nanjing secondary and secondary classes were cancelled, while
Qingdao, a coastal city in Shandong province – located just north
of Nanjing – banned outdoor activities, according to Xinhua.
Qingdao recorded PM2.5 Air Quality Index levels of over 300,
while Nanjing saw a reading of 354 on Wednesday, according to
local news portal news.longhoo.net.
PM2.5 stands for Particulate Matter, 2.5 micrometers or less,
which are small enough to penetrate the smallest airways. Levels
above 300 are deemed to be hazardous by the world Health
Organization.
Qingdao has cracked down on the burning of both leaves and
rubbish as well as vehicle usage limits, and Nanjing has said
that it will assert control over industrial sources of
pollutants.
While both cities predicted that the high levels of pollution
would continue, a proposal has been put forward to create rain to
clear the country's notorious smog.
According to a document released by the China Meteorological
Administration, from 2015, local weather authorities will be
permitted to use cloud seeding – the dispersal of substances into
the air to change its composition – to disperse the country’s
smog.
The process of ‘cloud seeding’ involves firing rockets containing
silver iodide into clouds, instigating the formation of ice
crystals from super-cooled liquids. Particles then fall as rain
or snow, with the artificially induced precipitation clearing the
pollution and smog below, if all goes according to plan.
While there have been programs in place since the 1950s to
generate artificial rain, the idea is gaining new acceptance.
“There is indeed something to be said in favor of cloud
seeding, provided it is very targeted,” Roger Stone, a
climate scientist from the University of Southern Queensland in
Toowoomba, Australia, told The New Scientist on Thursday.
China has previously employed the practice to disperse bad
weather on important public holidays, for example, to ensure that
there would be clear skies for the opening of the Beijing
Olympics in 2008.
Some commentators have expressed doubt about the proposals, with
Hong Yanchao, the deputy director of the National Consultation
and Evaluation Committee for Weather Modification, telling
Chinadialogue that certain weather conditions must be met before
‘artificial rainfall’ can be induced. “Usually smog weather
does not meet these conditions,” he said.
Cloud seeding comes as a part of the government's scheme to spend
1.7 trillion yuan ($277 billion) solving the air pollution
problem. The plans were announced in July this year, with the
deputy mayor of Beijing also announcing a target to reduce
particulate concentrations by 25 percent over the course of the
next five years.