It's a double edged sword. There was also talk of seeding hurricanes to either slow or inhibit their growth before making landfall. You'd need a C4 Galaxy fully laden with the crystals flying around for hours to do anything and then there's the debate about if it either promotes or inhibits rainfall - you certainly don't want to promote it in that situation!
I'm not sure whether the photo of the thunderstorm is a result of the seeding - I'd take a guess and say it's after the storm had formed to see how much more rain it produced - they tend to wait until the towers are tall enough and then bomb it.
Again more questions - wouldn't they have to use dopplar radar to see if the seeding actually enhanced rainfdroplets within the storm to determine if it worked and then compare how much is a result of seeding and how much of it is natural? How many clouds do you seed to try and cover this much area? It's pretty hit and miss i would have thought.
Whether it works is another thing - Texas has a very lengthy history using seeding techniques to lessen the impact of often severe droughts. In the 1950's and into the 1960's, it was used extensively and both the state and federal governments even funded research and conducted impact studies when they did this.
This practice is still widespread today when droughts threaten and to the extent that a coverage area of about 37 million acres ( that's about 20% of the land area of the state!) is used as seeding projects alone!! In today's times they seed only to enhance rainfall or when drought threatens the wellbeing of the state. A few years ago a seeding project included an amazing 51 million acres for seeding projects. With such a large area they work in they'e attempting to cover a hell of an area with the available cloud and storms! But like you said Michael, does it really work?
Personally, I'm against seeding to some extent. Leave nature to its own devices - they've done it in this country and perhaps not seen substantial results from seeding and is seeding really just a short term, stop-gap type fix for something we really don't have control over? Then the other side of the coin is - well if it can assist in filling dams or rainfall where it's needed then why not?
It's a long debate...I'll hunt down some stats if possible on results before and after seeding.
NB: Found a link: It's too lengthy to post details here and it has many references from studies done and a host of literary references.
http://www.agu.org/revgeophys/czys01/node2.html Mike