Berliner Boersenzeitung - Climate-boosted drought in western US worst in 1,200 years

EUR -
AED 4.157871
AFN 79.147377
ALL 97.791425
AMD 433.963171
ANG 2.025956
AOA 1038.063962
ARS 1293.941242
AUD 1.757171
AWG 2.04047
AZN 1.943585
BAM 1.952139
BBD 2.285135
BDT 137.852697
BGN 1.952749
BHD 0.426807
BIF 3367.506297
BMD 1.132022
BND 1.458687
BOB 7.819921
BRL 6.426376
BSD 1.131718
BTN 96.743446
BWP 15.190707
BYN 3.703658
BYR 22187.632659
BZD 2.273216
CAD 1.572316
CDF 3220.603083
CHF 0.935593
CLF 0.027814
CLP 1067.36074
CNY 8.173089
CNH 8.153044
COP 4723.384746
CRC 573.693722
CUC 1.132022
CUP 29.998585
CVE 110.057632
CZK 24.865929
DJF 201.531379
DKK 7.45938
DOP 66.711358
DZD 149.879916
EGP 56.511445
ERN 16.980331
ETB 152.37936
FJD 2.560072
FKP 0.846534
GBP 0.844619
GEL 3.101729
GGP 0.846534
GHS 13.467031
GIP 0.846534
GMD 82.075021
GNF 9803.701336
GTQ 8.687248
GYD 237.462092
HKD 8.864848
HNL 29.458454
HRK 7.531115
HTG 148.144327
HUF 402.196098
IDR 18484.562049
ILS 4.019754
IMP 0.846534
INR 96.878504
IQD 1482.541154
IRR 47672.27578
ISK 144.615673
JEP 0.846534
JMD 179.902622
JOD 0.80261
JPY 162.782814
KES 146.438953
KGS 98.995356
KHR 4530.264102
KMF 495.254296
KPW 1018.833904
KRW 1557.005483
KWD 0.347395
KYD 0.943081
KZT 576.997352
LAK 24468.815758
LBP 101400.764659
LKR 339.075616
LRD 226.343532
LSL 20.220911
LTL 3.342567
LVL 0.684749
LYD 6.203312
MAD 10.437818
MDL 19.573256
MGA 5067.228651
MKD 61.413319
MMK 2376.621027
MNT 4053.379776
MOP 9.125802
MRU 44.85249
MUR 51.73397
MVR 17.500717
MWK 1962.415791
MXN 21.861954
MYR 4.833712
MZN 72.334331
NAD 20.220109
NGN 1802.49641
NIO 41.652256
NOK 11.492627
NPR 154.789513
NZD 1.907095
OMR 0.435789
PAB 1.131718
PEN 4.172512
PGK 4.639259
PHP 62.977219
PKR 319.017643
PLN 4.24297
PYG 9039.648322
QAR 4.126225
RON 5.070892
RSD 117.044299
RUB 90.695383
RWF 1621.173823
SAR 4.246113
SBD 9.437819
SCR 16.359911
SDG 679.77724
SEK 10.848966
SGD 1.460297
SHP 0.889592
SLE 25.69445
SLL 23737.937132
SOS 646.752839
SRD 41.488488
STD 23430.571397
SVC 9.903515
SYP 14719.09719
SZL 20.225997
THB 37.115041
TJS 11.628277
TMT 3.967737
TND 3.386549
TOP 2.651307
TRY 43.949402
TTD 7.688175
TWD 34.061975
TZS 3060.418785
UAH 46.894942
UGX 4133.2852
USD 1.132022
UYU 47.141178
UZS 14591.507075
VES 107.184293
VND 29402.009339
VUV 137.319521
WST 3.135804
XAF 654.694525
XAG 0.034179
XAU 0.000342
XCD 3.059346
XDR 0.817488
XOF 654.729161
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.099227
ZAR 20.285727
ZMK 10189.557502
ZMW 30.782641
ZWL 364.510646
  • CMSC

    -0.1600

    22.1

    -0.72%

  • BCC

    -1.3600

    88.56

    -1.54%

  • BCE

    -0.0850

    21.575

    -0.39%

  • AZN

    0.7050

    70.625

    +1%

  • GSK

    0.4450

    38.845

    +1.15%

  • BTI

    0.3300

    44.77

    +0.74%

  • RIO

    0.2300

    62.47

    +0.37%

  • SCS

    -0.1050

    10.145

    -1.03%

  • NGG

    0.3450

    73.765

    +0.47%

  • BP

    -0.1050

    29.095

    -0.36%

  • RBGPF

    4.2000

    67.2

    +6.25%

  • CMSD

    -0.2200

    21.95

    -1%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    12.82

    0%

  • RELX

    0.5000

    55.49

    +0.9%

  • RYCEF

    0.2300

    11.15

    +2.06%

  • VOD

    0.1150

    10.505

    +1.09%

Climate-boosted drought in western US worst in 1,200 years
Climate-boosted drought in western US worst in 1,200 years

Climate-boosted drought in western US worst in 1,200 years

The megadrought that has parched southwestern United States and parts of Mexico over the last two decades is the worst to hit the region in at least 1,200 years, researchers said Monday.

Text size:

Human-caused global heating accounts for more than 40 percent of the dry spell's intensity, they reported in the journal Nature Climate Change.

"The turn-of-the-21st-century drought would not be on a megadrought trajectory without anthropogenic climate change," lead author Park Williams, an associate professor at the University of California in Los Angeles, and colleagues wrote.

Over the last decade, California and other western states have experienced severe water shortages, triggering periodic restrictions on water usage and forcing some communities to import bottled water for drinking.

Occasional heavy snow or rainfall have not been enough to compensate.

2021 was especially dry. As of February 10, 95 percent of western US had drought conditions, according to the US government's Drought Monitor.

Last summer, two of North America's largest reservoirs -- Lake Mead and Lake Powell -- reached their lowest recorded level in more than a century.

The odds are high that the current dry spell will continue for at least a couple of years, probably longer, according to the findings.

Running simulations based on soil moisture records stretching back 1,200 years, the researchers calculated a 94 percent chance that the drought would extend through 2022.

There's a three-in-four chance it will run until the end of decade.

Tree-ring analysis shows that the area west of the Rocky Mountains from southern Montana to northern Mexico was hit repeatedly by so-called megadroughts -- lasting at least 19 years -- between the years 800 and 1600.

- Chronic water scarcity -

Earlier research had established that the period 2000-2018 was likely the second worst drought since the year 800, topped by one in the late 1500s.

Data from 2019-2021, backed by new climate models released last year, have revealed the current drought to be worse than any from the Middle Ages.

But without climate change it "wouldn't hold a candle to the megadroughts of the 1500s, 1200s or 1100s," Williams said in a statement.

Western North America is not the only region hit by increasingly severe dry periods.

Climate change worsened the El Nino-driven droughts of 2015-2016, leading to widespread crop failures, loss of livestock, Rift Valley fever outbreaks, and increased rates of malnutrition.

Globally, 800 million to three billion people are projected to experience chronic water scarcity due to drought caused by two degrees Celsius warming above preindustrial levels, according to a draft 4,000-page Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report on climate impacts seen by AFP.

In a 4C world, that figure is up to four billion people.

Earth's surface has already warmed 1.1C on average, and is almost certain to breach the 1.5C cap called for in the Paris Agreement within two decades.

Other natural extreme weather events enhanced by global warming include deadly heatwaves, flood-causing rainfall and superstorms.

(O.Joost--BBZ)