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Chinese Government To Control Olympic Weather
#1
From China government weather control and China plans to control weather for Olympics

Who knew that China spends $100 million per year on weather-modification programs? Chinese weather planners intend to use their expertise to reduce the possibility of rainfall for the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.

If storms approach the city, Chinese authorities will seed the clouds with silver iodide to force rainfall; Beijing weather patterns make it clear that your chances of getting wet while watching track and field are about fifty percent.

If the statistics are to be believed (and are not just part of some sort of "Five Year Plan" for rain), Chinese weather-controllers (1,500 strong!) know what they are doing. Since 1999, 250 billion tons of rain have been created and 470,000 square kilometers of land have been made hail-free. By 2010, the volume of artificial rain will reach 50 billion tons per year.

In China, weather control is nominally the function of the China Meteorological Administration, but since the effort involves planes, anti-aircraft guns and other military paraphernalia, the Chinese navy is also involved. China plans to set up a national command center for weather modification by 2010 to coordinate the practices of rain making and hail-suppression around the country.

This is exactly what the government does right here in the United States - the fictional U.S. of Robert Heinlein's 1941 novel Methuselah's Children, that is. The government has weather integrators that direct the movement of storms across the country.

At this point in the story, Lazarus Long is trying to land a rather large space freighter (with "worn, obsolescent injection meters," no less) in the middle of a storm that was built to order.

Oklahoma and half of Texas were covered with deep, thick clouds. Lazarus was amazed and somehow pleased; it reminded him of other days, when weather was something experienced rather than controlled. Life had lost some flavor, in his opinion, when the weather engineers had learned how to harness the elements...

Then he was down in it and too busy to meditate. In spite of her size the freighter bucked and complained. Whew! Ford must have ordered this little charivari the minute the time was set-and, at that, the integrators must have had a big low-pressure area close at hand to build on.
(Read more about weather integrators)

Here in real-life America, we have very little control over the weather; experts agree that we are behind the Chinese in weather-control technology. However, we are way ahead in weather as art.

From China government weather control and China plans to control weather for Olympics. Scroll down for more stories in the same category. (Story submitted 5/23/2007)

http://www.technovelgy.com/ct/Science-Fi...wsNum=1053

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#2
  Little known fact but our tax dollars do the same still.   Local news even says so.
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#3
Richard.....You state America has very little control over the weather and China is a lot more advanced. We have had some major weather distrubaces causing loss of lives and destruction. Some of these patterns are out of character and many are just more severe than prior incidents. Do you think the more advanced countries and world leaders are using what they know against America for control?
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#4
Sorry for typo on end of line 1. Should be disturbances.
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#5
The Chinese motto is a dragon. They believe the dragon has control of the weather. Their version of the dragon differs from Medieval Europe in that it roams the water and changes the weather.
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#6
Alexandrite, I suspect the US can control the weather as well if not better than China. The US just isn’t admitting it like China is.
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#7
  I use to read long ago how Russia use to send storms over here to mess with us!  Im sure other countries would do that for a test if they could! ;)
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#8
Here’s another report of China making it rain. 

China induces artificial rainfall to clean lake 

Friday, June 01, 2007  20:22 IST
BEIJING: Officials have artificially induced rainfall to dilute a polluted lake which provides drinking water to over five million people of Wuxi city in eastern China's Jiangsu Province.

Thirty-nine rockets, containing silver iodide, were fired at eight different sites surrounding Taihu Lake on Thursday afternoon and Friday morning, a spokesman with the Jiangsu Provincial Meteorological Station said.

The operation induced moderate rain at various areas around the lake and even heavy rain in some parts, the spokesman said.

Results from 43 monitoring stations showed that the rainfall exceeded 20 mm, Xinhua News Agency reported. "Continuous high temperatures and lack of rainfall since this spring are mainly to blame for the outbreak of the blue-green algae bloom," the spokesman said.

The average temperature in the Taihu Lake region was 17.1 degrees Celsius in the first five months, 0.7 degrees higher than previous years, or the highest since 1955.

In addition, some areas around the lake reported less rainfall this year and Wuxi city, which receives its drinking water from the lake, received 30 per cent less than average.

The spokesman said local meteorological authorities were closely monitoring weather changes and once conditions allowed, they would attempt to induce more rain.

Nearly two million people in Wuxi, an economically dynamic city 128 km northwest of Shanghai, have been affected by the water pollution. The price of an 18-litre bottle of water sold by street peddlers had risen from USD one to over USD six by Wednesday night.

http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1100521
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