https://www.capitalpress.com/opinion/editorials/editorial-oregon-should-try-cloud-seeding/article_de4e0bb0-ae38-11ed-9996-6beedbf82294.html
Editorial:
Oregon should try cloud seeding
FOLLOWED BY:
Oregon senator wants state
to investigate cloud seeding to alleviate drought
Senate Bill 58 could open
the door to cloud seeding in Oregon
Capital Press View February 24, 2023
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Idaho Power Co. and the state of Idaho spend
about $4 million a year to operate 57 remote ground generators
and three aircraft that produce 1.24 million acre-feet of
additional river flows in four basins.
Idaho Power Co.
A member of the Oregon Legislature is
curious. He wants to know whether seeding clouds could
produce more snowpack — and river runoff — that will benefit
Oregonians.
Sen. Lynn Findley, a Republican from
eastern Oregon, wants to know whether cloud seeding
operations would work in his home state. They are used in
several other western states, including Idaho, which has an
extensive, state-of-the-art program. In addition, more than
50 countries around the world use the technology to build up
their snowpack and river flows.
It stands to reason that Oregon should
take a close look at cloud seeding. Much of Oregon has been
locked in drought for four years. The prospect of providing
even a little relief is well worth the effort.
We already know that cloud seeding
works in the Cascade Range. In the 1970s, Portland General
Electric seeded clouds in hopes of producing more runoff to
generate electricity. The utility found the snowpack was 10%
larger but decided it wasn’t worth the effort.
Fast forward to 2023. The climate is
rapidly changing, parts of Oregon are in a multi-year
drought and the technology used for seeding clouds has
improved in the past half-century.
Now would seem to be the perfect time
to try cloud seeding again.
It should be noted that cloud seeding
works only under the right circumstances. The temperature
needs to be below 23 degrees, the clouds need to have plenty
of supercooled water and the wind needs to be blowing toward
the mountains.
The cloud seeding equipment — either
on the ground or mounted on an airplane — releases silver
oxide that helps the water to crystalize and fall as snow.
Idaho, which has had a successful
cloud seeding program for 20 years, has boosted the snowpack
in four river basins by 10% to 12%. That in turn boosted the
state’s river flows by 1.24 million acre-feet. In Oregon,
that would be the equivalent of three additional Detroit
Lakes.
It costs Idaho $3.22 for each
acre-foot of water the cloud seeding generates — a bargain
by any measure.
This is not smoke and mirrors. Idaho’s
experience with cloud seeding has been verified by the
National Center for Atmospheric Research. In addition to
generating more mountain snowpack, other new technology is
in the works that could boost rainfall by 25% to 30%.
We’re not atmospheric scientists, but
it has been shown that, under the right circumstances, cloud
seeding works.
It would be appropriate for
researchers to give this technology a close look and, if
possible, put it work for the people of Oregon.
They would be foolish not to.
=================================
Oregon senator wants state
to investigate cloud seeding to alleviate drought
Senate Bill 58 could open
the door to cloud seeding in Oregon
The thick, dark clouds that have
poured over the Cascades from Western Oregon in winter have
provided only mediocre amounts of snowfall in recent years.
Now, some hope cloud seeding could
turn things around and boost snowpack in times of drought.
Oregon Sen. Lynn Findley, R-Vale, last
month submitted a bill that could open up opportunities for
cloud seeding in Oregon.
Senate Bill 58 states
that a cloud seeding program may benefit basins throughout
the state and it would give the Water Resources Department
the tools it needs to implement seeding programs.
Making clouds produce more rain and
snow may sound like science fiction, but the technology has
been around for decades. Cloud seeding is already used in
several states. Beyond the U.S., more than 50 countries have
cloud seeding operations, including Australia, India, China
and Israel.
In Central Oregon, cloud seeding can
potentially be used to boost snowpack, increasing water
reserves for agriculture, wildlife, and recreation.
Siera Watson, chief of staff for
Findley, said the bill has been referred to the Natural
Resources Committee, but a meeting has yet to be been
scheduled.
The science behind cloud seeding
involves introducing tiny ice nuclei into certain types of
subfreezing clouds. The nuclei provide a base for snowflakes
to form around them. It’s basically giving Mother Nature a
helping hand.
There are two main methods of seeding
clouds: one uses dry ice (carbon dioxide) and the other uses
silver iodide. Dry ice is not toxic, and silver iodide is a
salt that has not been found to be harmful to humans or the
environment in the small amounts used in cloud seeding
operations.
Industrial emissions of silver iodide
into the atmosphere are usually far larger than the amount
released during cloud seeding, said Larry O’Neill, an
associate professor at Oregon State University’s College of
Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Science.
“Ecological and human health impact
studies have not found any adverse impacts in regions
subjected to cloud seeding,” said O’Neill. “As far as is
known, cloud seeding appears to be safe.”
Oregon has some history of cloud
seeding. Portland General Electric attempted to artificially
produce precipitation in the mid-1970s as a way to increase
runoff to help generate hydroelectric power but abandoned
the program after one winter.
“It ended that program in part because
their estimates showed only a possible 10% increase in
snowpack, which was not statistically significant, and
because of concerns that seeding operations changed the
intensity of snowfall that made roads more dangerous,” said
O’Neill.
Southern Oregon had a cloud seeding
operation in the 1950s that was aimed at reducing summer
hail storms, which damaged orchards. That operation also
ended after protests from local crop producers who claimed
that cloud seeding somehow prevented rainfall, O’Neill said.
Modern-day cloud seeding is becoming
more widely accepted and is widely used in neighboring
Idaho. The Idaho Collaborative Seeding Program says it
creates 1.2 million acre-feet of water annually from its
operations. The $4 million project operates 57 remote ground
generators and three aircraft. The estimated cost of the
water is $3.22 per acre-foot.
But O’Neill remains skeptical about
how much cloud seeding would impact water availability in
Oregon.
“Many studies dispute whether cloud
seeding has any measurable impact on precipitation,” said
O’Neill. “It is safe to say that even if cloud seeding does
enhance precipitation, it is by an amount that would have
little influence on the water supply here.”
O’Neill adds that the programs can
still divide communities. Some say seeding clouds can create
dangerous amounts of rainfall. There are also concerns that
it can inhibit rain that might fall elsewhere. “There will
always be controversy surrounding any weather modification
attempt, which may not be worth the possible small
benefits,” said O’Neill.
Deschutes County Commissioner Phil
Chang said he is open to exploring the option of cloud
seeding, but he said Central Oregon should first focus its
attention on improving the efficiency of agricultural water
use, including canal piping.
“There are tens of thousands of
acre-feet of water available in the basin through irrigation
modernization if we are willing to do the work and invest
the resources,” Chang said in an email. “I’d like to see us
focusing on supply reliability strategies with certain
outcomes.”
Authorities caution that a cloud
seeding-program can take time to develop. Mike Britton,
executive manager of North Unit Irrigation District, says it
will take three to five years to start “assuming
investigations warrant the effort.”
“It could be a potential opportunity
to create more water for the state, but it’s way down the
road, if at all,” said Britton.
Still, Britton thinks a study is
warranted. He has heard skeptics dismiss the science but
four years into a drought that is ravaging
farming communities he says
any option should be on the table.
“When I started talking about cloud
seeding people thought I was crazy — smoke and mirrors
stuff,” said Britton. “But we’d be remiss given our current
state of water supply statewide if we didn’t at least
investigate it.”
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