Sunday, November 16, 2025

Iran Launches Cloud Seeding Efforts Amid Worsening Drought

Iranian authorities have begun cloud seeding operations in a bid to bring rainfall amid the country severe drought
Iranian authorities have begun cloud seeding operations in a bid to bring rainfall amid the country’s most severe drought in decades, according to state media.

“Today, a cloud seeding flight was conducted over the Urmia Lake basin for the first time in the current water year,” which began in September, the official IRNA news agency reported late Saturday.

Urmia, in northwest Iran, is the country’s largest lake but has largely dried up, leaving behind a vast salt bed due to prolonged drought.

IRNA noted that additional cloud seeding efforts are planned for the provinces of East and West Azerbaijan.

Cloud seeding involves dispersing particles like silver iodide or salt into clouds from aircraft to stimulate rainfall.

Iran claimed last year that it had developed its own technology for the process.

Meanwhile, rainfall has been recorded in Ilam, Kermanshah, Kurdistan, Lorestan, and West Azerbaijan provinces.

The country’s meteorological organization reported that rainfall this year has dropped by roughly 89 percent compared to long-term averages.

“We are currently experiencing the driest autumn in 50 years,” the agency said.

State media also shared footage of snow covering Tochal mountain and its ski resort near Tehran in the Alborz range, marking the first snowfall of the season.

Iran, a largely arid country, has for years suffered chronic dry spells and heat waves expected to worsen with climate change.

Rainfall in the capital Tehran has been at its lowest level in a century, according to local officials, and half of Iran's provinces have not seen a drop of rain in months.

Water levels at reservoirs supplying many provinces have fallen to record lows.

Earlier this month, President Masoud Pezeshkian warned that without rain before winter, Tehran could face evacuation, though he did not elaborate.

Other countries in the region, including the United Arab Emirates, have also used cloud seeding to artificially produce rain.

No comments:

Post a Comment