Experts Think Cloud Seeding Did Not Play Role in Dubai Floods

Members of the Dubai Civil Defence prepare to remove water from a flooded highway after a rainstorm in Dubai on April 17.

Photographer: Christopher Pike/Bloomberg
Lock
This article is for subscribers only.

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.