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China creates first artificial snow in Tibet
18 Apr 2007 04:47:53 GMT
Source: Reuters
BEIJING, April 18 (Reuters) - China has created artificial snow for the first time in Tibet, Xinhua news agency reported on Wednesday, months after experts warned of melting glaciers and drought in the Himalayan region.

The Tibet meteorological station had performed a "successful artificial snowfall operation" last week in northern Tibet, about 4,500 metres above sea level, the agency said.

"The first artificial snowfall proves it is possible to change the weather through human efforts on the world's highest plateau," it quoted Yu Zhongshui, an engineer with the meteorological station, as saying.

"To launch artificial precipitation can help alleviate drought on the grassland in northern Tibet," Yu was quoted as saying.

Chinese scientists have warned that rising temperatures on the Qinghai-Tibet plateau will melt glaciers, dry up major Chinese rivers and trigger drought, sandstorms and desertification.
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Smoke spew from a factory in West Jakarta May 3, 2007. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) will issue a report in Bangkok on May 4 showing the fight against climate change won't be a big brake on economic growth and that the world has the tools at hand. A draft of the report, which draws on research by 2,500 scientists from more than 130 countries, looks at how governments and businesses can cut emissions and says tackling climate change should be viewed as a global economic problem, not just an environmental headache.



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