UAE National Centre of Meteorology Announces Winners of Sixth Global Rain Enhancement Research Program

Global Collaboration Boosts UAE's Rainfall Innovation

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UAE's Commitment to Cutting-Edge Climate Research

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) continues to position itself as a global leader in addressing water scarcity through innovative science. On January 21, 2026, the National Centre of Meteorology (NCM), under the UAE Research Program for Rain Enhancement Science (UAEREP), announced the winners of its sixth cycle of research grants. This marks another milestone in the country's ambitious push to enhance rainfall in its arid environment, where annual precipitation averages less than 100 millimeters. The program, funded with up to $1.5 million per project over three years, selected three international teams from 140 global submissions, underscoring UAE's role in fostering worldwide collaboration on sustainable water solutions.

Understanding UAEREP and Its Strategic Vision

UAEREP, launched in 2015 by the UAE Ministry of Presidential Affairs and managed by NCM, aims to advance rain enhancement technologies like cloud seeding to bolster water security. The program aligns with the UAE's National Strategy for Climate Change and Water Security 2036, investing over $22.5 million across five previous cycles in 14 projects. These efforts have yielded more than 2,150 citations, 113 conference papers, and several patents, demonstrating tangible scientific progress. Priority areas include cloud formation enhancement, seeding material optimization, and atmospheric modeling, guided by a 10-year roadmap that emphasizes actionable, high-impact research.

UAE's Pioneering Cloud Seeding Operations

The UAE has conducted cloud seeding since 2002, with NCM performing hundreds of missions annually. In early 2025 alone, 172 flights were executed, targeting convective clouds with hygroscopic flares to promote droplet coalescence and precipitation. Independent studies, such as one published in Atmosphere, report an average 23% increase in annual rainfall over seeded areas, with enhancements up to 30-35% in optimal conditions. These operations involve specialized aircraft releasing silver iodide or salt-based agents, monitored by advanced radar and satellite systems. Such statistics highlight the program's operational maturity, providing a real-world testing ground for UAEREP-funded innovations.

UAE cloud seeding aircraft releasing flares into convective clouds

The Rigorous Selection Process

UAEREP's sixth cycle attracted proposals from leading experts worldwide. After initial screening, shortlisted teams underwent peer review by international panels, focusing on scientific merit, feasibility, and alignment with UAE priorities. The final three were chosen for their potential to deliver breakthroughs in radar analysis, seeding materials, and land-atmosphere interactions. Each grant caps at $550,000 annually, supporting multidisciplinary teams with access to NCM's infrastructure, including radar networks and flight operations.

Winner 1: Dr. Michael Dixon's AI-Powered Radar Revolution

Dr. Michael Dixon, Principal Radar Meteorologist at Echo Science Works in Boulder, Colorado, USA, leads "Advancing Cloud Seeding Science with Dual-Polarization Radar Signatures and Artificial Intelligence." Traditional radar tracks storms via reflectivity, but Dixon's project leverages dual-polarization data—measuring particle shape and size—and machine learning to detect seeding-induced microphysical changes in real-time. This could refine targeting, boosting efficiency by identifying responsive clouds. Dixon's expertise in operational meteorology ensures practical outcomes, potentially increasing seeding success rates by quantifying subtle precipitation enhancements.

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Winner 2: Prof. Linda Zou's Nanotechnology for Seeding Agents

Prof. Linda Zou, with prior UAEREP success from Khalifa University and now at Victoria University, Australia, heads "AI-Assisted Development and Optimization of Glaciogenic Cloud Seeding Materials." Her team develops nano-engineered ice-nucleating particles superior to silver iodide, using AI to simulate performance under UAE conditions. Past work at Khalifa University tested hygroscopic nanomaterials in operational flights, showing promise for warmer clouds. This project builds on that, aiming for eco-friendly agents that activate at higher temperatures, expanding seeding windows in the region's variable climate. Khalifa University's trials demonstrated viable alternatives, linking directly to UAE higher education strengths.

Winner 3: Dr. Oliver Branch's Innovative Landscape Modification

Dr. Oliver Branch from Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany, proposes "Rainfall Enhancement through Modification of Land Cover and Land Form (RAINLAND)." This novel approach tests how solar farms, vegetation belts, or terrain alterations create updrafts, fostering convective clouds without aerial seeding. Simulations and field tests in UAE deserts will assess rainfall triggers, offering a passive, scalable complement to traditional methods. Branch's atmospheric modeling expertise promises data-driven designs for arid landscapes.

Dual-polarization radar display showing cloud microphysics for seeding evaluation

UAE Universities Driving Local Expertise

UAE higher education institutions are integral to UAEREP. Khalifa University, a key partner, hosts labs developing seeding materials and AI models, with Prof. Zou's past projects leading operational tests. Partners include UAE University, American University of Sharjah, University of Sharjah, American University in Dubai, and NYU Abu Dhabi, contributing to 45 global collaborations. These ties provide students and faculty hands-on research opportunities in atmospheric science, aligning with UAE's vision for research excellence. For instance, Khalifa's presentations at International Rain Enhancement Forums showcase UAE-led innovations, training next-gen climatologists.

Proven Impacts and Case Studies from Prior Cycles

Previous UAEREP cycles delivered breakthroughs: Cycle 1's nanotechnology (Zou at Khalifa) optimized droplet growth; Cycle 4's hybrid ML nowcasting improved flight planning. A 2021 study on UAE operations confirmed seeding boosts storm volume by 159% and lifetime by 65%. These translate to real gains—NCM attributes up to 15% annual rainfall increase to seeding, critical for agriculture and reservoirs amid 98% groundwater dependency.

Challenges and Future Horizons

Despite successes, challenges persist: verifying seeding efficacy amid natural variability requires advanced analytics like Dixon's radar AI. Emerging UAE research at MBZUAI explores real-time cloud seedability via machine learning. The 10-year roadmap targets commercialization, with UAEREP's $4.5 million Cycle 6 investment accelerating prototypes. Collaborations with UAE universities ensure knowledge transfer, positioning Emirati graduates for leadership in global climate tech.

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Broader Implications for Water Security and Education

In a nation where desalination meets 42% of needs but costs soar, rain enhancement diversifies supplies sustainably. Successes inspire arid regions worldwide, elevating UAE's soft power. For higher education, UAEREP creates interdisciplinary hubs—meteorology meets AI, engineering, and policy—fostering PhD programs and startups. Khalifa University exemplifies this, blending research with UAE Vision 2031 priorities.

Call to Action: Opportunities in UAE Climate Research

Aspiring researchers should monitor UAEREP's Cycle 7 call, expected soon. UAE universities offer scholarships in environmental science, linking to NCM facilities. This funding not only combats scarcity but cultivates a vibrant academic ecosystem, ensuring UAE's innovative edge.

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Prof. Isabella CroweView full profile

Contributing Writer

Advancing interdisciplinary research and policy in global higher education.

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Frequently Asked Questions

☁️What is UAEREP?

The UAE Research Program for Rain Enhancement Science (UAEREP), managed by NCM, funds global research to advance cloud seeding and rainfall technologies for water security.

🏆Who won the sixth cycle grants?

Dr. Michael Dixon (USA, radar AI), Prof. Linda Zou (nano-seeding materials), Dr. Oliver Branch (Germany, landscape reshaping), each up to $1.5M.

📈How effective is UAE cloud seeding?

Studies show 23% average rainfall increase, up to 35% in ideal conditions, with NCM conducting 172 flights in early 2025. Atmosphere study details.

🎓Role of UAE universities?

Khalifa University leads with past projects and forums; partners include UAEU, AUS. Fosters student research in atmospheric science.

🔬What are the projects about?

Dixon: AI radar for seeding eval; Zou: Nano ice nucleants; Branch: Land mods for updrafts. All test in UAE conditions.

✈️UAE cloud seeding history?

Since 2002, hundreds of annual ops by NCM, targeting convective clouds with hygroscopic/silver iodide flares.

📚Impacts of previous cycles?

14 projects, 2,150+ citations, patents. E.g., nano-materials tested operationally.

💧Why rain enhancement in UAE?

<100mm annual rain, 98% groundwater reliant. Supplements desalination (42% supply).

🚀Future of UAEREP?

Cycle 7 soon; 10-year roadmap for commercialization, UAE uni collaborations key.

🔍Opportunities for UAE academics?

Grants, NCM facilities access, programs at Khalifa U/NYUAD. Monitor uaerep.ae for calls.

Challenges in verification?

Natural variability; addressed by advanced radar/AI in new projects.

🌍Global context?

UAE leads; >12 countries seed, but UAEREP pioneers funding/collabs.