Justice Gavai observed in 2024 that states must evolve a policy for identifying the creamy layer even among the Scheduled Castes (SC) and Schedule Tribes (ST)
World

Justice Gavai observed in 2024 that states must evolve a policy for identifying the creamy layer even among the Scheduled Castes (SC) and Schedule Tribes (ST) and deny them the benefit of reservation. Asserting that the Indian Constitution is not "static"

2
3
4
5

How Much Did Delhi Cloud Seeding Attempt Cost? Dry Run Brings No Rain

Posted By: Hari Ram Posted On: Oct 29, 2025Share Article
How Much Did Delhi Cloud Seeding Attempt Cost
An aircraft releases flares as IIT Kanpur conducts a cloud seeding mission to induce artificial rainfall aimed at reducing pollution levels, in New Delhi.

How Much Did Delhi Cloud Seeding Attempt Cost? Multi-Crore Dry Run Brings No Rain, Only Political Storm

Delhi's Rs 1.2 crore artificial rain trial failed to induce rain despite two sorties, prompting an AAP leader's 'Lord Indra' jibe at the government. IIT-Kanpur and Minister Sirsa cited low moisture (15%) for the result.

A multi-crore, high-stakes effort to alleviate the capital's 'very poor' air quality via induced rain fell flat on Tuesday, notwithstanding two consecutive cloud-seeding trials. The trial, which the exercise is estimated to have cost the government Rs 1.2 crore for the day's sorties, immediately sparked a new political battle, with the opposition taking a tongue-in-cheek jab at the BJP government.

Two cloud seeding experiments were conducted over northwest Delhi and NCR areas such as Burari, Mayur Vihar, and Noida in a small, single-propeller Cessna aircraft flown by IIT Kanpur. The aircraft released flares with silver iodide and sodium chloride compounds into clouds.

Add Zee News as a Preferred Source

But though Environment Minister Manjinder Singh Sirsa termed the process "successful," the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) measured no rain in Delhi until late evening.

Important Technical Facts:

Cost Per Trial: The Delhi Cabinet had already sanctioned ₹3.21 crore for conducting five trials, and on average, they would do each trial at around ₹64 lakh. The two trials conducted on Tuesday together cost about ₹1.28 crore.

Procedure: The Cessna aircraft released a total of 16 flares (eight in each experiment) to trigger precipitation.

Scientific Challenge: A report from the government identified that the IMD-forecast moisture content was critically low, at 10-15 per cent only, which is non-ideal for efficient cloud seeding. The Environment Minister also accepted that rain will not be heavy because humidity would be as low as 15−20 per cent.

In spite of the inability to generate rain, the officially released government report stated that the cloud seeding experiments did result in a decrease in particulate matter in the particular areas where the exercise was conducted.

Minister Sirsa was optimistic in his tone, saying that the government is making an "unprecedented, science-first step" to battle pollution. He further stated that 9 to 10 more such experiments are scheduled within the coming days, focusing on northern regions according to IMD wind direction predictions.

The costly, rain-free experiment gave the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) new ammunition, making the scientific endeavor a political hot potato.

The AAP leader Saurabh Bharadwaj criticised the scheduling of trials on a day when the IMD had already predicted natural rain. "Will Lord Indra descend to make it clear whether it is artificial rain or natural rain?" Bharadwaj joked at a press conference, indirectly pointing a finger at the BJP for possible fraud.

This development continues a political slugfest, as the current ruling party has previously criticised the AAP for only "talking about such plans" without action during its tenure, which saw the cloud seeding proposal shelved citing unfavourable conditions.

ALSO READ | Delhi AQI 'Very Poor': GRAP II In Force, Non-BS-VI Vehicle Ban Starts Nov 1, Cloud Seeding Continues

Comment on Post

Leave a comment

If you have a News Orbit 360 user account, your address will be used to display your profile picture.


Justice Gavai observed in 2024 that states must evolve a policy for identifying the creamy layer even among the Scheduled Castes (SC) and Schedule Tribes (ST)
World
CJI Gavai backs exclusion of creamy layer in reservation to scheduled castes

Justice Gavai observed in 2024 that states must evolve a policy for identifying the creamy layer even among the Scheduled Castes (SC) and Schedule Tribes (ST) and deny them the benefit of reservation. Asserting that the Indian Constitution is not "static"

3 months ago


Sing Up