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Dubai flooding: Experts don’t think cloud seeding played a role in the rains
World

Dubai flooding: Experts don’t think cloud seeding played a role in the rains

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com April 17, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

With cloud seeding, it may rain, but it doesn’t really pour or flood — at least nothing like what drenched the United Arab Emirates and paralyzed Dubai, meteorologists said.

Cloud seeding, although decades old, is still controversial in the weather community, mostly because it has been hard to prove that it does very much. No one reports the type of flooding that on Tuesday doused the UAE, which often deploys the technology in an attempt to squeeze every drop of moisture from a sky that usually gives less than 4 or 5 inches (10 to 13 centimeters) of rain a year.

“It’s most certainly not cloud seeding,” said private meteorologist Ryan Maue, former chief scientist at the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. “If that occurred with cloud seeding, they’d have water all the time. You can’t create rain out of thin air per se and get 6 inches of water. That’s akin to perpetual motion technology.”

Meteorologists and climate scientists said the extreme rainfall is akin to what the world expects with human-caused climate change, and one way to know for certain that it was not caused by tinkering with clouds is that it was forecast days in advance. Atmospheric science researcher Tomer Burg pointed to computer models that six days earlier forecast several inches of rain — the typical amount for an entire year in the UAE.

Three low-pressure systems formed a train of storms slowly moving along the jet stream — the river of air that moves weather systems — toward the Persian Gulf, said University of Pennsylvania climate scientist Michael Mann. Blaming cloud seeding ignores the forecasts and the cause, he said.

Many of the people pointing to cloud seeding are also climate change deniers who are trying to divert attention from what’s really happening, Mann and other scientists said.

“When we talk about heavy rainfall, we need to talk about climate change. Focusing on cloud seeding is misleading,” said Imperial College of London climate scientist Friederike Otto, who heads a team that does rapid attribution of weather extremes to see if they were caused by global warming or not. “Rainfall is becoming much heavier around the world as the climate warms because a warmer atmosphere can hold more moisture.”

WHAT IS CLOUD SEEDING?

The desert nation of the United Arab Emirates attempted to dry out Wednesday from the heaviest rain ever recorded there after a deluge flooded out Dubai International Airport, disrupting flights through the world’s busiest airfield for international travel.

HOW EFFECTIVE IS IT?

A recent study of aerial seeding found a clear precipitation pattern on a radar that mirrored the seeding and offers evidence the method works. But exactly how effective it is remains unclear, scientists say.

The physics makes sense, but the results have been so small that scientists just can’t agree on whether it is fair to say it really works, said Maue and Mann.

Atmospheric forces are so huge and so chaotic that technically cloud seeding “is way too small a scale to create what happened,” Maue said. Extra rainfall from cloud seeding would have been minimal, both said.

WHO USES IT?

Despite not knowing its efficacy, governments in drought-stricken regions like the U.S. West and the UAE are often willing to invest in technology like seeding in the hopes of getting even a small amount of water.

Utah estimates cloud seeding helped increase its water supply by 12% in 2018, according to an analysis by the state’s Division of Water Resources. The analysis used estimates provided to them by the contractors paid to do the seeding.

Dozens of countries in Asia and the Middle East also use cloud seeding.

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation spent $2.4 million last year on cloud seeding along the overtapped Colorado River. Utah recently increased its seeding budget by tenfold.

SO WHAT CAUSED THE DELUGE?

That part of the Middle East doesn’t get many storms, but when it does, they are whoppers that dwarf what people in the United States are used to, Maue said.

Huge tropical storms like this “are not rare events for the Middle East,” said University of Reading meteorology professor Suzanne Gray. She cited a recent study analyzing nearly 100 such events over the southern Arabian Peninsula from 2000 to 2020, with most in March and April, including a March 2016 storm that dropped 9.4 inches (almost 24 centimeters) on Dubai in just a few hours.

The 2021 study said “a statistically significant increase in the (whopper storms) duration over southeast Arabian Peninsula has been found, suggesting that such extreme events may be even more impactful in a warming world.”

While cloud seeding can work around the margins, it doesn’t do big things, scientists say.

“It’s maybe a little bit of a human conceit that, yeah, we can control the weather in like a Star Trek sense,” Maue, who was appointed to NOAA by then-President Donald Trump, said. “Maybe on long time scales, climate time scales, we’re affecting the atmosphere on long time scales. But when it comes to controlling individual rain storms, we are not anywhere close to that. And if we were capable of doing that, I think we would be capable of solving many more difficult problems than creating a rain shower over Dubai.”

___

Borenstein reported from Washington, Peterson from Boulder, Colorado.

___

The Associated Press receives support from the Walton Family Foundation for coverage of water and environmental policy. The AP is solely responsible for all content. For all of AP’s environmental coverage, visit

April 17, 2024 0 comments
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Unprecedented Rainfall Causes Flooding at Dubai Airport, 18 Dead in Oman
World

Unprecedented Rainfall Causes Flooding at Dubai Airport, 18 Dead in Oman

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com April 17, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

A Flydubai plane wades through floodwaters entering the runway at Dubai Airport, UAE. Photo/X/@aviationbrk

DUBAI – The highest level of rain hit the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and surrounding countries, causing the Dubai airport to sink and 18 people died in Oman.

Air travel in Dubai has been suspended due to flooding and is expected to continue until Wednesday (17/4/2024), according to authorities.

Dubai usually records about five inches of rain a year. The floods that fell on Tuesday night alone were equal to that amount.

For the United Arab Emirates, this is the most rainfall in 75 years, the National Meteorological Center and the country’s government announced on social media.

“Flights to Dubai International Airport were canceled on Tuesday,” the airport said.

Airport management suspended operations for at least 25 minutes earlier in the day due to severe storms.

The airport said there was “significant flooding” on the roads leading to the airport and urged people to check the status of their flight and “allow significant extra travel time to the airport and use Dubai Metro for smoother movement.”

More rain is expected overnight in Dubai and across the United Arab Emirates, starting in the west and spreading east, according to the meteorological centre.

2024-04-17 07:08:20
#Flash #Floods #Paralyze #Dubai #Airport #People #Killed #Oman

April 17, 2024 0 comments
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Rare Heavy Rainfall Causes Flooding in United Arab Emirates, Dubai Airport Closed
World

Rare Heavy Rainfall Causes Flooding in United Arab Emirates, Dubai Airport Closed

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com April 17, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

Jakarta –

Heavy rain hit parts of the Middle East on Tuesday (16/4) local time, including United Arab Emirates (UAE). The heavy rain encouraged him flood a rare event that led to the closure of schools in the United Arab Emirates and flooded the tarmac at the International Airport Dubai.

The storm flooded roads and created dangerous conditions throughout the region, a normally dry region unaccustomed to heavy rains and floods.

Flights to Dubai airport have been temporarily canceled due to the “extraordinary weather event currently taking place in the UAE,” Dubai International Airport officials said on Tuesday local time. the statement, as reported by NBC, Wednesday (17/4/2024). ).

The airport said there was “significant flooding” on the roads leading to the airport and urged people to check the status of their flights.

Video obtained by Al Arabiya news agency showed the runway in Dubai flooded, with planes flying through the floods and support vehicles almost submerged.

More than 4.7 inches of rain fell in one day in the UAE, flooding streets in Dubai and causing water to spill over homes and businesses, the Associated Press news agency reported.

For United Arab Emiratesthis is the most rainfall in 75 years, the National Meteorological Center and the country’s government announced on social media.

Also watch the video: Half of Kazakhstan is paralyzed by floods, this is what it looks like

(it/it)

2024-04-17 03:01:38
#Rare #floods #hit #United #Arab #Emirates #Dubai #Airport #flooded

April 17, 2024 0 comments
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Eritrean Human Smuggling Leader Extradition Case Update: Another Suspect Extradited in October
World

Eritrean Human Smuggling Leader Extradition Case Update: Another Suspect Extradited in October

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com April 10, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

Public Prosecution Service Another suspect in the case was extradited in October.

NOS Nieuws•vandaag, 13:04

The Public Prosecution Service is requesting the extradition of a man imprisoned in the United Arab Emirates. The Public Prosecution Service accuses the 40-year-old man from Eritrea of ​​human smuggling, extortion and violence, including sexual violence, against migrants traveling from Libya to Europe.

The Eritrean is also said to be a member of a criminal organization. According to the Public Prosecution Service, that organization earned a lot of money by extorting Eritrean migrants. A case is already underway at the Overijssel court against another suspected leader of the same organization. He was extradited to the Netherlands by Ethiopia.

The organization is said to have allowed Eritreans to come to the Netherlands between 2014 and 2020 under life-threatening conditions. Along the way, victims in Libya were abused, tortured and raped, while they were locked up in camps with hundreds of others. According to the Public Prosecution Service, several victims died there.

Family in the Netherlands was extorted and had to pay a lot of money before the imprisoned family member was allowed to travel.

Escaped, but caught again

The Eritrean who the Public Prosecution Service now wants extradited has been internationally sought since 2021. The man was arrested in Ethiopia, but managed to escape during a court hearing. He was sentenced in absentia to life in prison in Ethiopia for human smuggling.

The man was arrested in Sudan last year during an international police operation. The action was led by the United Arab Emirates. They tracked him down in a money laundering investigation.

The Public Prosecution Service hopes that the man will be extradited. If that does not happen, the Public Prosecution Service will try him in absentia.

2024-04-10 11:04:25
#Public #Prosecution #Service #requests #extradition #Eritrean #tortured #fellow #countrymen #camps

April 10, 2024 0 comments
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UAE to Invest 35 Billion Euros in Egypt’s Largest Foreign Investment Ever, Creating Millions of Jobs
Business

UAE to Invest 35 Billion Euros in Egypt’s Largest Foreign Investment Ever, Creating Millions of Jobs

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com February 24, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

Feb 24, 2024 at 12:58 Update: an hour ago

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) is investing 35 billion euros in the development of a new tourist attraction in Egypt. According to Egyptian Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly, this is the largest foreign investment ever in the country.

The new tourist complex will be located on the Ras al-Hikma peninsula, which is located 350 kilometers northwest of the Egyptian capital Cairo. According to the plans, hotels, homes, a marina, sports centers and shops will be built.

The development of the new area should create millions of jobs and help Egypt get out of the economic crisis. The deal further strengthens the bond between Egypt and the UAE. The UAE has previously supported Egypt with investments.

Investor ADQ from Abu Dhabi is also purchasing the rights to develop the Ras al-Hikma area. The investor will lead a consortium of companies in the development and expects to attract more than $150 billion in investments for the major project.

Beeld: Getty Images

Read more about:

EgyptUnited Arab EmiratesEconomy
2024-02-24 11:58:54
#UAE #invests #billions #tourism #construction #project #Egypt #Economy

February 24, 2024 0 comments
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Oil and Gas Companies Make Concessions on Methane and Emissions at COP28 Conference
World

Oil and Gas Companies Make Concessions on Methane and Emissions at COP28 Conference

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com January 21, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

“Many more oil and gas companies made concessions on methane and emissions for the first time. Our final agreement talks about fossil fuels.” This was announced last year at the closing plenary session of COP28 by the president of the conference, Sultan Ahmed al-Jaber, who is also the head of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company. This year, the organization of the conference has been handed over to Azerbaijan, a country whose main exports are oil and natural gas.

Last year, from November 30 to December 12, the annual meeting of the member states of the United Nations General Convention on Climate Change, or the so-called COP28, took place. The purpose of these meetings is to fight against climate change, including last year all the countries of the world were supposed to jointly agree on a new direction of development in order to reduce the negative consequences caused by the climate.

All the agreements reached during the conference were overshadowed by the fact that it was held in one of the world’s largest oil-producing countries – the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Also, the fact that Sultan Ahmed Al-Jaber of the UAE was chosen as the president of COP28, who, in parallel with the position of the Minister of Industry and High Technologies, also holds the position of the head of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC).

COP28 President al-Jaber also managed to clash with scientists during the conference, saying there was “no science” to justify phasing out fossil fuels to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees. Al-Jaber had also said that giving up fossil resources would lead the world back to “caves”.

2024-01-21 22:02:00
#Petrocracy #hold #climate #conference #year #row #correct

January 21, 2024 0 comments
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