Bruce Kessler (16
Jun 2024)
"Megadought"
'Megadrought' emerging in the western US might be worse than any
in 1,200 years
Doyle Rice, USA TODAY
USA TODAYApril 16, 2020, 2:47 PM CDT
'Megadrought' emerging in the western US might be worse than any
in 1,200 years
Fueled in part by human-caused climate change, a “megadrought”
appears to be emerging in the western U.S., a study published
Thursday suggests.
In fact, the nearly-20-year drought is almost as bad or worse
than any in the past 1,200 years, scientists say.
Megadroughts – defined as intense droughts that last for decades
or longer – once plagued the Desert Southwest. Thanks to global
warming, an especially fierce one appears to be coming back:
"We now have enough observations of current drought and
tree-ring records of past drought to say that we're on the same
trajectory as the worst prehistoric droughts," said study lead
author A. Park Williams, a bioclimatologist at Columbia
University, in a statement. This is “a drought bigger than what
modern society has seen."
Scientists say that about half of this historic drought can be
blamed on man-made global warming. Some of the impacts today
include shrinking reservoirs and worsening wildfire seasons.
Since temperatures are projected to keep rising, it is likely
the drought will continue for the near future – or fade briefly
only to return, researchers say.
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The study covers an area stretching across nine U.S. states from
Oregon and Montana down through California, New Mexico and part
of northern Mexico.
Daniel Swain, a UCLA climate scientist who wasn’t part of the
study, called the research important because it provides
evidence “that human-caused climate change transformed what
might have otherwise been a moderate long-term drought into a
severe event comparable to the ‘megadroughts’ of centuries
past.”
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December-February on record
Williams said that "because the background is getting warmer,
the dice are increasingly loaded toward longer and more severe
droughts. We may get lucky, and natural variability will bring
more precipitation for a while.
"But going forward, we'll need more and more good luck to break
out of drought, and less and less bad luck to go back into
drought," he said.
Williams said the region could stay dry for centuries. "That's
not my prediction right now, but it's possible."
Naturally occurring western megadroughts have taken place many
times before. In fact, most of the USA's droughts of the past
century, even the 1930s Dust Bowl that forced migrations of
Oklahomans and others from the Plains, "were exceeded in
severity and duration multiple times by droughts during the
preceding 2,000 years," the National Climate Assessment said.
Megadroughts: Will plague the Southwest as climate warms, study
says
The difference now, of course, is the western USA is home to
more than 70 million people who weren't here for the previous
medieval megadroughts. The implications are far more daunting.
University of Michigan environment dean Jonathan Overpeck, who
studies southwestern climate and was not part of the study,
calls this drought “the first observed multidecadal megadrought
in recorded U.S. history.”
Global warming: 2020 expected to be Earth's warmest year on
record, scientists say
To identify past droughts, scientists studied thousands of tree
rings to find out how much – or little – rain fell hundreds of
years ago. Scientists used historical data in combination with
several computer model simulations to reach their conclusions.
One additional worrisome fact from the study was that the 20th
century was the wettest century in the entire 1,200-year record.
It was during that time that the population boomed in the
western U.S., and that has continued.
"The 20th century gave us an overly optimistic view of how much
water is potentially available," said study co-author Benjamin
Cook, a NASA climate scientist, in a statement.
"It goes to show that studies like this are not just about
ancient history," he said. "They're about problems that are
already here."
The study was published Thursday in the peer-reviewed journal S