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Drones that make rain: how technology is changing climate management on farms

🌦️ When the weather is no longer a whim of nature

A few years ago, a farmer could only helplessly look at the sky, praying for rain or sunshine. Today, thanks to technology, he becomes a strategist, not a victim. The new trend is Weather-as-a-Service, or microclimate management as a service.

And among the key tools are drones that make rain.

🚁 How does it work?

Modern agricultural drones can not only survey fields and apply fertilizers. The new generation is equipped with systems for atmospheric effects:

  • Spraying silver iodide or liquid nitrogen to condense moisture in clouds.
  • Cloud density monitoring and flight planning based on accurate weather models.
  • Working in conjunction with AI that analyzes data about the local microclimate.

This allows you to artificially stimulate rain or reduce hail risks exactly where the crop needs it.

🌍 World cases

🇨🇳 China: agricultural drones in Sichuan

In 2024, Sichuan provincial authorities tested a fleet of 30 drones to sow silver iodide during a drought. The result: rainfall increased by 17%, and farmers saved their rice crop.

🇦🇪 UAE: “Cloud Seeding Drones”

The UAE has been running a government drone program to irrigate desert farms for several years. In 2023, more than 200 flights were made, which allowed raising soil moisture levels to optimal levels for tomato and date plantations.

🇺🇸 USA: private Weather-as-a-Service

Weather Modification Inc. has introduced a service where farmers sign a contract and receive a guaranteed “window” of rain or hail protection. The technology is already in use in Texas and Kansas.

🇺🇦 Ukraine: potential for breakthrough

  • Southern Ukraine often suffers from droughts. In 2024, the Kherson Regional State Administration tested a pilot project with drones to combat dust storms and preserve moisture — the results have not yet been released, but early reports promise a 10–12% reduction in losses.
  • Ukrainian agro-startups are already interested in the Weather-as-a-Service market. For example, Kyiv-based startup AgroSky is developing a collaboration model where farmers pay only for the actual amount of precipitation received.

📌 Value for Ukraine: not just adaptation to the climate, but active management of it, which can save entire regions from economic losses.

🔑 The future is in the sky

Rain-making drones are not science fiction, but a new tool in agrotechnology. They turn weather into a manageable resource, and the farmer into a strategist who can plan not only the crop but also the climate beneath it.

💡 Technology rules the sky. It’s time for Ukraine to rule its future.

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