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Pigs still can't fly, but this winter, the mayor of Moscow promises to keep
it from snowing. For just a few million dollars, the mayor's office will
hire the Russian Air Force to spray a fine chemical mist over the clouds
before they reach the capital, forcing them to dump their snow outside the
city. Authorities say this will be a boon for Moscow, which is typically
covered with a blanket of snow from November to March. Road crews won't need
to constantly clear the streets, and traffic — and quality of life — will
undoubtedly improve.
The idea came from Mayor Yury Luzhkov, who is no stranger to playing God. In
2002, he spearheaded a project to reverse the flow of the vast River Ob
through Siberia to help irrigate the country's parched Central Asian
neighbors. Although that idea hasn't exactly turned out as
planned — scientists have said it's not feasible — this time, Luzhkov says,
there's no way he can fail.
Controlling the weather in Moscow is nothing new, he says. Ahead of the two
main holidays celebrated in the city each year — Victory Day in May and City
Day in September — the often cash-strapped air force is paid to make sure that
it doesn't, well, rain on the parades. With a city budget of $40 billion a
year (larger than New York City's budget), Moscow can easily afford the $2-3
million price tag to keep the skies blue as spectators watch the tanks and
rocket launchers roll along Red Square. Now there's a new challenge for the
air force: Moscow's notorious blizzards.
"You know how every year on City Day and Victory Day we create the weather?"
Luzhkov asked a group of farmers outside Moscow in September, according to
Russian media reports. "Well, we should do the same with the snow! Then
outside Moscow there will be more moisture, a bigger harvest, while for us
it won't snow as much. It will make financial sense."
The plan was unsurprisingly rubber-stamped this week by the Moscow City
Council, which is dominated by Luzhkov's supporters. Then the city's
Department of Housing and Public Works described how it would work. The air
force will use cement powder, dry ice or silver iodide to spray the clouds
from Nov. 15 to March 15 — and only to prevent "very big and serious snow"
from falling on the city, said Andrei Tsybin, the head of the department.
This could mean that a few flakes will manage to slip through the cracks.
Tsybin estimated that the total cost of keeping the storms at bay would be
$6 million this winter, roughly half the amount Moscow normally spends to
clear the streets of snow.
So far the main objection to the plan has come from Moscow's suburbs, which
will likely be inundated with snow if the plan goes forward. Alla Kachan,
the Moscow region's ecology minister, said the proposal still needs to be
assessed by environmental experts and discussed with the people living in
the area before Luzhkov can enact it. "The citizens of the region have some
concerns. We have received lots of messages," she told the RIA news agency.
With only a few weeks left before winter comes, environmentalists will have
to work fast to keep Luzhkov from implementing his zaniest plan to date — and
to stop the first snowflakes from wafting down to the city streets.
From TIME.COM (http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,1930822,00.html) |