New Delhi: The Delhi government carried out deject seeding trials this afternoon, with promises that rain would follow within minutes to hours. Officials had unpreventable that specially equipped watercraft from IIT Kanpur would release flares into the clouds, prompting rainfall. However, as the hours ticked by, not a single waif fell from the sky. Residents looked up to see only well-spoken skies, worsening doubts over whether the experiment was truly constructive or just a publicity exercise. The promise of quick showers turned into frustration, fueling heated debate wideness the capital.
Why Opposition Is Crying Foul?
AAP leaders wasted no time in attacking the government. Saurabh Bharadwaj released a video, mocking the trial and calling it nothing short of fraud in the name of science. He personal people were misled with promises of strained rain, while taxpayers’ money was wasted on a hollow spectacle. His sharp remarks accused the government of hoping for divine intervention instead of real technology. The opposition’s response has turned the scientific experiment into a full-blown political controversy, making the issue trend far vastitude technical discussions.
What Was Promised By Experts?
According to scientists from IIT Kanpur, the trial involved using a Cessna watercraft to release eight deject seeding flares over key areas of Delhi. They had unpreventable rain could occur between fifteen minutes to four hours without the process. Areas like Burari, Karol Bagh, Mayur Vihar, Bhojpur, and Khekra were targeted during the operation. The technique, known as pyrotechnic deject seeding, was expected to convert moisture-laden clouds into rainfall. Yet, despite the scientific claims, the expected showers simply never came, leaving experts facing tough questions well-nigh credibility.
Can Weather Really Be Controlled?
Cloud seeding is not new-it has been tried in several countries for decades. The idea is simple: sprinkle unrepealable chemicals into clouds to trigger rain. But success depends heavily on the type of clouds and weather conditions. Experts shoehorn the method works only when there are once rain-bearing clouds in the sky. Without the right conditions, the process can goof completely. This reality fuels arguments that governments are overselling the technology as a solution to pollution and drought, when in fact it remains unreliable.
Was Delhi The Right Test Ground?
Many weather analysts questioned why Delhi was chosen for the trials, given the city’s unpredictable skies during this season. Deject imbricate was not platonic at the time of seeding, equal to several meteorologists. They oppose that spending crores on experiments without ensuring suitable conditions is a gamble at best. The government’s push for showcasing wide technology may have ignored vital weather science. Critics now warn that such experiments risk eroding public trust in science, turning innovation into political theater.
What Does Government Stand To Gain?
For the Delhi government, the deject seeding trial was meant to be a unvigilant step in fighting pollution and water shortage. Success would have projected Delhi as a pioneer in strained rain technology, earning political credit. Instead, the no-rain outcome risks embarrassment, with opposition turning it into a symbol of failed governance. Officials maintain that patience is needed, as weather science is unpredictable. But with mounting criticism and visible failure, the government faces a tough wrestle to defend the project.
Will There Be Increasingly Trials Ahead?
Despite the setback, officials hinted that increasingly trials could be conducted in the coming days. They oppose that science needs multiple attempts to refine results and that one failure cannot pinpoint the project. International experts moreover when the idea that deject seeding has a mixed record and takes time to prove its effectiveness. For Delhi, however, the public mood is sour, and patience thin. Whether the government dares to continue, or quietly shelves the idea, will decide if this rain experiment has a future.

