‘Worse
Than Anything Seen in 2,000 Years’ as Megadrought Threatens Western
States
3
September, 2014
A
new study warns that the chances of western states in the U.S.
experiencing a multi-decade ‘megadrought’—not seen in
historical climate records in over 2,000 years—has a much higher
chance of occurring in the decades ahead than previously realized. In
fact, scientists are warning, the drought now being experienced in
California and elsewhere could be just the beginning of an
unprecedented water crisis across the west and southwest regions of
the country.
“As
we add greenhouse gases into the atmosphere – and we haven’t put
the brakes on stopping this – we are weighting the dice for
megadrought… This will be worse than anything seen during the last
2,000 years.” —Toby Ault, Cornell University
The
research—a project between scientists at Cornell University, the
University of Arizona, and the U.S. Geological Survey—shows that
chances for a decade-long drought this century is now at fifty-fifty,
and that a drought lasting as long as 35 years—defined as a
“megadrought”—has a twenty- to fifty-percent chance of
occurring.
“For
the southwestern U.S., I’m not optimistic about avoiding real
megadroughts,” Toby Ault, Cornell assistant professor of earth and
atmospheric sciences and lead author of the paper, told the Cornell
Chronicle. “As we add greenhouse gases into the atmosphere – and
we haven’t put the brakes on stopping this – we are weighting the
dice for megadrought.”
And
if such a megadrought does occur, warned Ault, “This will be worse
than anything seen during the last 2,000 years.”
And
as USA Today notes,
“The difference now, of course, is the Western USA is home to more
than 70 million people who weren’t here for previous megadroughts.
The implications are far more daunting.”
The
study—entitled Assessing
the Risk of Persistent Drought Using Climate Model Simulations and
Paleoclimate Data—used
both “climate model projections as well as observational
(paleoclimate) information” as it looked back over the historic
records of drought in the region while also looking forward by using
advanced predictive techniques used to measure the possible impacts
of current and future global warming.
According
to the study’s
abstract,
its findings “are important to consider as adaptation and
mitigation strategies are developed to cope with regional impacts of
climate change, where population growth is high and multidecadal
megadrought—worse than anything seen during the last 2000
years—would pose unprecedented challenges to water resources in the
region.”
“The
picture is not pretty,” said Julia Cole, a professor of geosciences
and atmospheric sciences at the University of Arizona and co-author
of the study. “We hope this opens up new discussions about how to
best use and conserve the precious water that we have.”
Changing
the way western states manage their water resources and policies that
respond aggressively to the issue of climate change, Cole indicated,
could mitigate the worst impacts.
“I
think we’d really have to change the way we think about water and
the way that we use water because right now we’re on a path that
would be unsustainable if we had a drought of 35 years,” Cole said.
The
Modern Farmer spoke to
Richard Seager, a climate scientist at Columbia University and other
author of many
studies of
historic droughts, about the report and were told the prospect of a
looming megadrought is “not so crazy.”
“By
some measures the west has been in drought since 1998 so we might be
approaching a megadrought classification.” Seager said.
“We
know that megadroughts — droughts as severe as the ones in past
century, but lasting much longer, up to a few decades – occurred
over the past millennium in the southwest and the Great Plains,” he
continued Seager, who also noted that megadroughts are more notably
for their duration than their severity. Seager also told the The
Modern Farmer that the U.S. hasn’t had a megadrought in
several centuries and that even the great Dust Bowl drought of the
1930s—famously depicted in the The Grapes of Wrath—”though
incredibly severe, was not long enough to qualify.”
According
to the Cornell Chronicle:
As of Aug. 12, most of California sits in a D4 “exceptional drought,” which is in the most severe category. Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas loiter in a substantially less severe D1 moderate drought. Ault says climatologists don’t know whether the severe western and southwestern drought will continue, but “with ongoing climate change, this is a glimpse of things to come. It’s a preview of our future,” he said.
While the 1930s Dust Bowl in the Midwest lasted four to eight years, depending upon location, a megadrought can last more than three decades, which could lead to mass population migration on a scale never before seen in this country.
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