LOS ANGELES, June 16 (Xinhua) -- Facing severe water
supply shortage, Los Angeles plans to launch a controversial cloud-seeding
project that they believe will boost rainfall and raise the levels of local
reservoirs, a newspaper report said Monday.
The project, which will rely on injecting clouds with
silver iodide particles, has won approval from Los Angeles county supervisors
and is slated to begin this winter.
Officials decided to resume the program after a
seven-year lapse caused by concerns over mudslides in some mountain areas
ravaged by brush fires, according to the Los Angeles Times.
With California gripped by dry weather and Governor
Arnold Schwarzenegger declaring a statewide drought, cloud-seeding is attracting
both fresh attention and skeptics.
Critics have long dismissed seeding as a dubious
technological rain dance. They worry that it can trigger landslides, such as the
deadly one in the San Gabriel foothills 30 years ago when 11 people lost their
lives in a storm and subsequent landslides.
Some water experts believe that public funds would be
better spent promoting proven water-conservation measures, such as low-flow
toilets.
"It's a bit of a sign of desperation," said Peter
Gleick of Oakland, California-based think tank Pacific Institute.
"They've been doing cloud seeding for decades, but
we've never clearly been able to show if it's what we've done or what nature has
provided," Gleick was quoted by the newspaper as saying.
The U.S. National Academy of Sciences in 2003
released a report calling cloud seeding unproven and urged more thorough study.