Videos Login Subscribe Renew E-edition
logo
ePaper
coogle_play
app_store
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
    • Columns
    • Letters
  • Obituaries
  • Classifieds
    • Place a Classified
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
  • Legal Notices
    • Read Statewide Legal Notices
  • Archives
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
      • Columns
      • Letters
    • Obituaries
    • Classifieds
      • Place a Classified
    • Advertise
    • Contact us
    • Legal Notices
      • Read Statewide Legal Notices
    • Archives
News
By By Ryan Spencer Vail Daily on April 22, 2026
Dry winter sparks more interest in cloud seeding
State weather modification program manager: Technology could be critical to boosting water supply

Colorado’s weather modification program is seeing an increased interest in cloud-seeding technology after the record-low snowpack this past winter.

In the past couple of weeks, Weather Modification Program Manager Andrew Rickert said he’s received inquiries from two major ski resorts hoping to learn more about cloud seeding, which can increase the amount of snowfall a storm drops.

“After a year like this, it makes sense that these ski resorts are looking for anything they can do to bolster snowpack,” Rickert said. “They’re very interested in seeing what else they can do to get more precipitation.”

Cloud seeding is a weather-modification technique that has been around since 1946. It involves dispersing silver iodide, or other harmless compounds, to serve as nuclei around which ice crystals can form during a storm, Rickert explained. He said cloud-seeding systems can increase a storm’s snowfall by roughly 8-12% when generators are turned on.

The Colorado Water Conservation Board administers the state’s weather- modification program, which issues permits to contractors who operate seven permitted winter cloud-seeding projects, all of which are located on the Western Slope.

Rickert said he believes that dry years like this “are one of the reasons why we need to look into cloud seeding as a measure to get more snow, to get more moisture out of a system.” But he noted that the technology can only do so much when natural snowfall is low.

“Cloud seeding can’t create storms,” he said. “We need storms to be present with the right characteristics — wind speed, wind direction and the presence of super-cooled liquid water — and when all those things are there, then we can seed the storm to get a little bit more out of it.”

Fewer storms to seed

The ability of cloud seeding to add to Colorado’s snowpack was limited this year compared to past years due in large part to the lack of suitable storms that rolled through the state, Rickert said. He noted, however, that the technology still likely added small amounts of extra precipitation to the storms it did seed.

In Colorado, he said all seven wintertime cloud-seeding programs use ground-based generator systems and operate from Nov. 1 to April 15, with contractors able to get an extension to the end of April if conditions allow.

“We can’t just create a storm out of thin air,” he said. “It’s all dependent on how many storms we have through the course of a winter.

We can’t do anything during a season like this when we have such a small number of storms.”

Two of the state’s cloud seeding projects — the Central Colorado Mountains River Basins project, which targets the region from about Winter Park to Aspen, and the San Juan Mountains project — are run by Western Weather Consultants, a Durango-based company.

Western Weather Consultants Lead Forecaster and Assistant Manager Mike Hjermstad said that the regions where both of those projects operate saw far fewer storms suitable for cloud seeding this year.

In the central mountains, where there are usually 30 to 40 storms that are suitable for cloud seeding, there were only 20 this season, Hjermstad said. In the San Juan Mountains, there were even fewer storms that were suitable to be seeded. Only about 12 storms rolled through all winter long that could be seeded, he said.

Now that the cloud-seeding season has ended, contractors that run cloud-seeding programs in Colorado are compiling reports on when generators were turned on and how long to estimate how much snow they were able to add to the snowpack.

He said while Western Weather Consultants wasn’t able to do as much cloud seeding this year as in the past, it wasn’t nothing.

“It was totally limited,” he said. “But there is an increase from it, from seeding.”

Potential looking forward

Despite the limited impact this winter, cloud-seeding technology has been rolled out across the West with the goal of adding to the snowpack.

At least nine states currently conduct cloud-seeding operations, including California, Nevada, Idaho, Utah, Wyoming, New Mexico, Texas and North Dakota, according to the Western Governors’ Association.

The Governors’ Association confirmed cloud seeding is a cheap way to boost water supplies. Cloud seeding is able to produce an acre-foot of drinking water for less than $10, compared to the same amount of drinking water costing about $3,000 to produce via desalination, according to the association.

Rickert said that weather modification is often misunderstood, but with the drought conditions that the West has been facing in recent years, the technology could be critical to increasing the region’s water supply.

In a normal winter, he said it could supply “an additional hundreds of thousands of acres of winter.”

“Weather modification is the only way to actually add physical water to a system,” he added. “When ski resorts are making snow, they’re pulling water from our lakes, streams and rivers to do that. This just uses our silver iodine solution to add snow. It’s the only way to actually add water to a basin, which I believe is a huge benefit.”

This story is republished with permission and was originally published by the Vail Daily.

City takes plunge on hot springs repairs
Main, News...
City takes plunge on hot springs repairs
Council approves $286,568 contract to resurface, replace tiles in overlook pools in September
By Mike Wiggins mike@ouraynews.com 
April 22, 2026
The city of Ouray will spend more than $280,000 to resurface the hottest soaking areas at the Ouray Hot Springs Pool this fall, a repair pool managers say is vital to maintaining one of the city’s mos...
this is a test
County backs down on road closure
Main
County backs down on road closure
Rather than block access to upper Yankee Boy Basin, commissioners focus on managing, restoring
By Lia Salvatierra lia@ouraynews.com 
April 22, 2026
Ouray County has decided against closing the upper section of Yankee Boy Basin road to motorized traffic, and will work with the U.S. Forest Service and volunteer groups to keep drivers on the main ro...
this is a test
News
County leaders campaign for merger
Commissioner claims benefits to combined fire, EMS; Log Hill Fire District concerned about structure, cost
By Lia Salvatierra lia@ouraynews.com 
April 22, 2026
Ouray County leaders last week campaigned for a combined countywide fire and emergency services authority at a Log Hill Mesa Fire Protection District meeting, while the district’s board of directors a...
this is a test
News
City keeps status quo on Via Ferrata operations — for now
Climbing course to open soon under new municipal management, as users seek changes to guide fees, weight restrictions
By Mike Wiggins mike@ouraynews.com 
April 22, 2026
The Ouray Via Ferrata is scheduled to open May 1 under a new municipal management structure, even as city leaders and commercial guides debate whether to tweak key details like guide fees and weight r...
this is a test
News
Federal officer charged with assault over confrontation at Durango ICE protest
By By Chase Woodruff Colorado Newsline 
April 22, 2026
A U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer is facing charges of assault and criminal mischief in Colorado state court after an investigation into an October 2025 incident in Durango in which he seiz...
this is a test
Blue Lakes trail won’t require permit this year
News
Blue Lakes trail won’t require permit this year
No permits needed at Blue Lakes this year
By By Lia Salvatierra 
April 22, 2026
Hikers and campers won’t need a permit to hike the famed Blue Lakes trail until at least 2027, though there are other new rules for using the area this summer. The anticipated permit system was part o...
this is a test
ePaper
coogle_play
app_store
ePaper
coogle_play
app_store
Editor Picks
News
Mine owners to address cleanup efforts at meeting
By LIA SALVATIERRA 
April 22, 2026
For the first time in eight years, the owner of the Idarado Mine is joining the Uncompahgre Watershed Partnership for a public update on its cleanup efforts in Ouray County. The “Local Water Quality &...
this is a test
News
4-H, fairgrounds to restart operations with new manager
April 22, 2026
Ouray County will restart events at the 4-H Event Center and Fairgrounds on May 1, now that it has hired a new manager for the facility. Operations at the facility have been largely on hold since mid-...
this is a test
News
Town seeks millions in federal money for sewer plant
By Plaindealer Staff 
April 22, 2026
Ridgway is asking for $2.25 million in congressionally directed spending to rebuild part of its sewer plant to comply with state standards. The funding request, approved during an April 8 meeting, is ...
this is a test
News
Man arrested at Ridgway restaurant
By Plaindealer Staff 
April 22, 2026
A Montrose man was arrested Tuesday afternoon in Ridgway after the Montrose Police Department asked the Ridgway Marshal’s Office for assistance in detaining him. Vicente Gonzales, 33, was arrested by ...
this is a test
Ridgway soccer continues hot streak
Feature
Ridgway soccer continues hot streak
April 22, 2026
Ridgway's Reya Lawler (8) clashes with Bayfield's Aubree Tideman (4) for possession during nonleague action on April 18 at Bayfield High School. The Class 2A Demons sewed up a five-match away stretch ...
this is a test
Facebook

Remote-triggered avalanche in San Juan Mountains

First responders receive first COVID-19 vaccines

Ouray County Plaindealer
Office address:

195 S Lena St. Unit D
Ridgway, Colorado 81432
970-325-4412

Mailing address:
PO Box 529
Ridgway CO 81432

This site complies with ADA requirements

© 2023 Ouray County Plaindealer

  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Accessibility Policy