At the end of October, researchers from IIT Kanpur made three attempts to use “cloud seeding” to produce artificial rain over New Delhi in an effort to wash down the city’s dangerously high rates of airborne pollution. The expensive initiative – for which the Delhi government had allocated Rs 3.21 crore – failed to produce any rain.
That isn’t surprising. Cloud seeding experiments around the world have barely produced any rain-on-demand. But it gives politicians get mileage.
Genesis of cloud seeding
Cloud seeding was pioneered in US in early 1940s to produce snow and rain for recreation and farming. A researcher at General Electric Ltd named Vincent Shaefer had realised that water vapor super cooled at -400C, if seeded by suitable agents like dry ice, could produce ice crystals

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