^^ ... I'm not saying weather modification technology exists but damn if it isn't a coincidence that the covert biowar out of Wuhan was followed by cyber-attacks (masked as "ransomware" hacks) in the West began happening and now rainfall events in Commie China in excess of 200mm per hour!! wtf?
... oh yeah and HAARP was powered up again not so long ago, and it's almost incontrovertible now that the ionsphere and our weather in the troposphere are an inter-linked system
It’s so hot in Dubai the government is paying scientists to make it rain.Facing a hotter future, dwindling water sources and an exploding population, scientists in one Middle East country are making it rain.
Literally.
United Arab Emirates meteorological officials released a video this week of cars driving through a downpour in Ras al Khaimah in the northern part of the country. The storm was the result of one of the UAE’s newest efforts to increase rainfall in a desert nation that gets about four inches a year on average.
Washington, D.C., in contrast, has averaged nearly 45 inches of rain annually for the past decade.
Scientists created rainstorms by launching drones, which then zapped clouds with electricity, the Independent reports. Jolting droplets in the clouds can cause them to clump together, researchers found. The larger raindrops that result then fall to the ground, instead of evaporating midair — which is often the fate of smaller droplets in the UAE, where temperatures are hot and the clouds are high.
“What we are trying to do is to make the droplets inside the clouds big enough so that when they fall out of the cloud, they survive down to the surface,” meteorologist and researcher Keri Nicoll told CNN in May as her team prepared to start testing the drones near Dubai.
Nicoll is part of a team of scientists with the University of Reading in England whose research led to this week’s man-made rainstorms. In 2017, the university’s scientists received $1.5 million for use over three years from the UAE Research Program for Rain Enhancement Science, which has invested in at least nine different research projects over the past five years.
To test their research, Nicoll and her team built four drones with wingspans of about 6½ feet. The drones, which are launched from a catapult, can fly for about 40 minutes, CNN reported. During flight, the drone’s sensors measure temperature, humidity and electrical charge within a cloud, which lets the researchers know when and where they need to zap.