A groundbreaking new study has found an increase in air pollution can  reduce rainfall in drought-affected regions and worsen the severity of  storms in wet regions or seasons.
Researchers have discovered that increases in air pollution and other  particulate matter in the atmosphere can strongly affect cloud  development in ways that reduce precipitation in dry regions or seasons.
| This while increasing rain, snowfall and the intensity of severe  storms in wet regions or seasons, according to results of a new study. The research provides the first clear evidence of how aerosols - soot, dust and other particulates in the atmosphere - may affect weather and climate. The findings have important implications for the availability, management and use of water resources in regions across the United States and around the world.  |  
"Using a 10-year dataset of atmospheric measurements, we have uncovered  the long-term, net impact of aerosols on cloud height and thickness and  the resulting changes in precipitation frequency and intensity," says  Zhanqing Li, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Maryland and  lead author of a paper reporting the results.

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