- Researchers are exploring a concept called " weather jiu-jitsu" to potentially mitigate the impact of extreme weather events by subtly altering their trajectories away from populated areas.
- Proof-of-concept simulations using AI and atmospheric models suggest that carefully timed, small-scale atmospheric interventions, such as cloud seeding , could significantly change weather patterns.
- One simulation indicated that the 2012 Hurricane Sandy's path could have been shifted by approximately 300 miles to bypass New York City with such interventions.
- Another simulation demonstrated that a similar weather operation might have raised the lowest temperature during the 2021 Texas freeze from -19C to about -7C, reducing its severity.
- While promising, the implementation of "weather jiu-jitsu" faces challenges, including the need for advanced weather monitoring, a deeper theoretical understanding, and addressing complex social and political implications like transboundary liability and equitable risk distribution.
IN FULL
Scientists propose ‘weather jiu-jitsu’ to nudge hurricanes off course