Is this the start of the 'dustbowl that never ends' that Guy McPherson talks about?
Climatologist:
Oklahoma is Burning. USDA Issues Dust Bowl Alert
6
May, 2014
Early
May heat dome. A four word combination that may as well be a curse.
And not something we would typically expect well before the height of
summer. But that’s exactly what’s happened to the US from the
southwest and on to its Heartland under a merciless regime of heat
and drought fed by human-caused climate change.
As
of Sunday, a high amplitude Jet Stream wave had formed over the
Central US. The brief up-slope was enhanced by a number of unstable
and powerful atmospheric dynamics. To the southwest, a warming
Eastern Pacific lent energy from a growing pool of heat. To the
north, from Arizona, to New Mexico, to Texas, to Oklahoma, lands
baked by more than a decade of chronic drought provided almost no
evaporative cooling as the atmospheric heat lens came into dangerous,
greenhouse gas enhanced focus far overhead.
(ECMWF pressure anomaly graphic from Weatherbell Analytics showing a strong heat dome in place on Monday May 5, 2014.)
By
Sunday and Monday, the heat dome was heavily entrenched and the
result was a record flash heatwave for large swaths of Texas,
Oklahoma, New Mexico, Kansas and Colorado.
In Oklahoma alone, temperatures rocketed to above 100 degrees
Fahrenheit at over 17 separate locations. One location experienced a
103 degree F reading, also the highest ever recorded for the date.
To
the North, Wichita Kansas shattered its all-time record high
temperature by a whopping 8 degrees spiking to an extreme of 102 F.
Not only was the heat far stronger than normal. It came far earlier.
For Wichita, the earliest 101 F or greater reading came on June 4 of
1933 with most years waiting until late June or early July for 100 F
+ readings.
For
the Heartland, this flash heatwave was very much like the heat of
July coming far too early. Across Oklahoma, multiple wildfires
erupted from lands ravaged by the most recent event in a long spate
of ever-increasing heat and dryness. The rapid rash of burning
occurred in regions near homes and businesses forcing more than a
thousand to flee.
This
sudden, extreme and profound heat prompted Gary McManus, Oklahoma’s
state climatologist to write: “Oklahoma is burning, both literally
and figuratively, as a combination of drought, record heat, high
winds and low relative humidity created the perfect wildfire
conditions yesterday,” in the
Oklahoma Climatological Survey’s online Ticker.
(NASA shot of Oklahoma fires on May 4 and 5. Image source: GCarbin. Note that though highly anomalous, these fires are nowhere near as extreme as the powerful early season blazes affecting large swaths of Siberia this spring.)
Oklahoma
governor Mary Fallin issued burn bans for almost half the state as
firefighters predicted continued extreme fire potentials for the
state throughout the week.
USDA
issues Dust Bowl Warning
Meanwhile,
US Department of Agriculture officials issued a warning Tuesday that
conditions in the US Heartland were rapidly deteriorating along lines
last seen during the infamous 1930s Dust Bowl as expectations for the
US domestic winter wheat crop again fell after the USDA’s most
recent agricultural tour.
Even
prior to the extreme early May heatwave emerging over the Central US
Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, the percent of the US wheat crop in
either good or excellent condition had fallen another 2% to 31% late
last week. Meanwhile, crops listed as ‘very poor’ rocketed from
an already abysmal 34% to 39% over the same period. The net result is
that the US wheat crop is in its worst condition since at least 1996,
according to findings by Commerzbank analysts.
For
Oklahoma, at the epicenter of current agricultural harm and flash
heatwaves, only 6% of the state’s entire wheat crop was listed as
in either good or excellent condition.
Department
of Agriculture crop scouts described the Oklahoma situation in,
perhaps, the starkest possible terms during their most recent report
stating:
“Producers
in the Panhandle continued to experience high winds … and low
moisture conditions similar to the Dust Bowl in the 1930s.”
Overall,
analysts now expect a US wheat crop of just 762 million bushels, the
third lowest in 15 years despite record areas planted.
Conditions
in Context
(Greatly diminished Sierra Nevada snow pack as seen from satellite on May 4, 2014. Image source: LANCE-MODIS.)
In
addition, a developing El Nino in the Eastern Pacific is likely to
enhance already dry conditions over the US Heartland through the
summer months. Together with the firmly re-entrenched west coast
blocking pattern, conditions associated with El Nino set in place an
extreme risk for a highly damaging return to drought for large
sections of the United States this summer.
Globally,
droughts continue to impact a number of the world’s previously most
productive agricultural regions. In particular, both Brazil and India
are currently suffering from extreme heat and/or drought. Argentina,
one of the world’s top wheat producers is also hard-hit. Another
one of the world’s largest grain exporters — the Ukraine — has
recently been destabilized by a series of ills including east-west
geopolitical tensions, internal division, and by Russian invasion. In
this context, it is also worth noting that drought, fire, and flood
have reduced Russian wheat production from 61 million tons in 2009
along a declining scale to 38 million tons in 2012.
Damages
and risks to US crops are, therefore, not simply a national
phenomena, but part of a much larger global context of ongoing and
increasing crop damage due to extreme weather set off by human-caused
climate change.
Links:
Hat
tip to:
Colorado
Bob
Todaysguestis
Jay
M.
Are lawns and the sacred golf courses and athletic fields still being irrigated? Cars being washed?
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ReplyDeleteLooks like Scribbler remains delusional regarding Ukraine...
ReplyDeleteAfter reading several of his blog posts, it appears to me that he has swallowed the US propaganda. Question for Scribbler: do you agree with Obomba that the coup government in Kiev was "duly elected". Do you agree with Z-Big that the coup government expresses the will of the people and should be recognized as the legitimate government?
http://johnpilger.com/articles/the-strangelove-effect-or-how-we-are-hoodwinked-into-accepting-a-new-world-war
Granted and I have pointed this out, but in view of what he is doing it is insignificant. It would be preferable if he would stay away from geopolitics.
DeleteWell, I would not characterize it as "insignificant". I would classify it as "a person doing good work in one important area and being delusional and out of touch in another important area". Another very important area. Scribbler CENSORS out much of rational/non-ad-hominem criticism from his blog, and this is a big problem. Ad hominem trolls aside, I cannot tolerate censorship --- it is intellectually dishonest and a tool of fascists. A friend of mine has written a little about the phenomenon of people doing inspired work in one area and being delusional idiots in another area. For example, Alexander Cockburn and anthropogenic global warming. Hansen and nuclear power. Paul Craig Roberts and his apologetics for Pinochet. Scribbler (pseudonym, I realize) is entitled to his own opinions, but not his own facts. What is intolerable and detracts from his credibility is his censorship.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.greanvillepost.com/2014/01/07/counterpunch-clinkers-the-republic-of-science-denial/