MailOnline reports
that Vladimir Putin is preparing to play God and spike clouds with a chemical
cocktail to prevent it raining on his vast Red Square military parade on
Saturday. Reports say the Kremlin is ready to splash out £5million to use
Soviet technology which should guarantee sunshine for the commemoration of the
70th anniversary of the end of the Second World War in Europe - and Putin's
15th year as Russia's head of state. Ahead of the parade, a fleet of Russian
air force planes are on standby from around 6am to fly from an airbase north of
Moscow to spray special reactant chemical agents over any thick clouds, causing
them to release their rainfall in downpours before reaching the capital.
Cloud
spiking or seeding involves spraying clouds with a cocktail of silver iodide,
liquid nitrogen and dry ice. The icy particles freeze water droplets so that
they continue growing in size and eventually fall out of the cloud as snow
which turns to rain before it reaches the ground. As a result central Moscow should be bathed
in sunshine, or at least dry, for the major commemoration of Victory Day - one
of the most hallowed in the Russian calendar. However,
hapless villages around 40 to 60 miles from the capital can expect to be
deluged.
Globally, it is now
considered a mainstream tool and it has become a tradition in China to ‘seed’
clouds before public holidays to induce rain, disperse pollution and ensure
clear blue skies. The 10 aging Soviet-era Antonovs and Illuyshin planes are
being prepared to use spray cannons to blast any lurking dark clouds with a
cocktail of weather-changing chemicals to prevent a Red Square washout. A
record 400million roubles has been allocated this year to seed the clouds using
a system pioneered under Stalin. Military spokesman Colonel Vladimir Drik has
told previously how the aircraft fly from Chkalovsky air base before beginning
work at an altitude of 8,000 metres to 'correct' the adverse weather. 'For dispersion of clouds, the Air Force uses
specially refurbished An-26 and An-12 transport planes supplied with reagents,'
he explained.
At the end of the
Soviet era, a former KGB official suggested the system could be marketed to
Britain to prevent washouts at Wimbledon fortnight - and Test Match cricket. The
proposal never got off the ground, but the Russians regularly use the
cloud-spiking technique on big occasions. It was once used to ease torrential
rain at an open air Michael Jackson concert in Moscow. The system does not
always work: in 2012, the planes failed to clear the leaden skies for the
Victory Day parade. The Russians deny criticism that the operation is harmful
to the environment.
Despite
being wartime allies with the USSR against Hitler, neither Britain not the US
will be represented at head of government level.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
8th May 2015.
