Cloud seeders attempt to rescue 'hailstorm alley' from storms by reducing size of hail - Action News
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Cloud seeders attempt to rescue 'hailstorm alley' from storms by reducing size of hail

The swathe of Alberta dubbed "hailstorm alley" seems determined to liveup to itsominous nickname in 2020 and throughout those recentsummer storms, planestookto the skies in an effort to minimize hail before it fell.

Planes take to the skies in attempt to reduce hail from size of a golf ball to a pea

Cloud seeding efforts in Alberta, supported by the insurance industry, involves pilots flying into storm cells and spraying silver iodide. (CBC)

The swathe of Alberta dubbed "hailstorm alley" seems determined to liveup to itsominous nickname in 2020 and throughout those recentsummer storms, planestookto the skies in an effort to minimize hail before it fell.

The Alberta Severe Weather Management Societyis a privatenon-profit that was established by provincial insurance companies tocreate a program called the Alberta Hail Suppression Project.

Established in 1996, the project has its own weather radar and five cloud seeding airplanes three at the SpringbankAirport and two in Red Deer that usually fly in pairsto meet clouds that register as potentially severe.

The teams try to minimize the size of hailby spraying the clouds with silver iodide smoke particles, a seeding agent that helps to speed up the formation of the ice,director Terry Krausstold the Calgary Eyeopener on Monday.

The objective is tocreatemoreice crystals at a warmer temperature thatcompete for the cloud's liquid waterand therefore, make smaller hail.

"It's called hail reduction and hail suppression,"Krauss said.

"We want to have lots of pea-sized hail and small hail, instead of the large, damaging golf ball [sized hail],"

The particles that grew to giant size

Hailstorm alley which runs from High River, south of Calgary, and north to central Alberta typically has more than 40 hailstorms eachthe summer.

This year, those storms have summonedtoonie-sized hail thatpummellednortheast Calgary and incurred more than $1.2 billion in property damage.

Because weather conditions can quickly change, Krauss said, the work of seeding the clouds can be unpredictable just like the storm that ravaged Calgary on June 13.

It damaged at least 70,000 homes and vehicles, and destroyed entire crops, as hailstones the size of tennis balls fell at 80 to 100 km/h.

Tornado warnings and and ping-pong-ball sized hail have been in the forecast this summer. (Julie Prejet/CBC)

The Alberta Hail Suppression Project was able to forecast the storm, and even predict its severity. But Krauss said the information they had led them to a different area than where it ultimately formed.

"We have daily briefingsand we have very good forecasting for the potential of severe stormsand even on June 13, we were forecasting the possibility of golf-ball sized hail," Krauss said.

"We thought the storms would move in or form part of a cold front south, near Okotoks, and we had aircraft up. And unfortunately, on June 13the storm formed over southeast Calgary then sucked in some rain shower clouds that were just east between Calgary and Strathmore and those were the particles that grew to giant size."

Severe weather more frequent

The hailstorms this summer have been especially frequent and harsh, Krauss said, for a number of factors.

Alberta hasbeen under a trough of low pressure; it hasn't been very warm; southeast winds have the moisture up against the mountains and the foothills, while aloft, we have a jet stream in the low pressure zone.

But this may not be a one-off summer. Over the next few years, the hail suppression team might be getting busier.

Celyeste Power, western vice-president of theInsurance Bureau of Canada, told CBC News earlier last month that this summer's hailstorms seem to be part of a pattern.

"It's hard to ignore the fact Canada has been hit hard with natural disasters over the last decade, we're seeing much more frequent severe weather," she said.

Sarah Hoffman, a meteorologist with Environment and Climate Change Canada, said the summer severe weather season in Calgary usually runs from May long weekend to the second weekend in August.

With files from the Calgary Eyeopener, Sarah Rieger and The Canadian Press