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by MarkChristopher from Palm Coast

Last Post 408 days Ago


Drought, a fixture in much of the West for nearly a decade, now covers more than one-third of the continental USA. And it's spreading.

As summer starts, half the nation is either abnormally dry or in outright drought from prolonged lack of rain that could lead to water shortages, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor, a weekly index of conditions. Welcome rainfall last weekend from Tropical Storm Barry brought short-term relief to parts of the fire-scorched Southeast. But up to 50 inches of rain is needed to end the drought there, and this is the driest spring in the Southeast since record-keeping began in 1895, according to the National Climatic Data Center.

Coast to coast, the drought's effects are as varied as the landscapes:

In central California, ranchers are selling cattle or trucking them out of state as grazing grass dries up. In Southern California's Antelope Valley, rainfall at just 15% of normal erased the spring bloom of California poppies.

In South Florida, lake Okeechobee, America's second-largest body of fresh water, fell last week to a record low — an average 8.89 feet above sea level. So much lake bed is dry that 12,000 acres of it caught fire last month. Saltwater intrusion threatens to contaminate municipal wells for Atlantic coastal towns as fresh groundwater levels drop.

In Alabama, shallow ponds on commercial catfish farms are dwindling, and more than half the corn and wheat crops are in poor condition.

Dry episodes have become so persistent in the West that some scientists and water managers say drought is the "new normal" there. Reinforcing that notion are global-warming projections warning of more and deeper dry spells in the Southwest, although a report in last week's Science magazine challenges the climate models and suggests there will be more rainfall worldwide later this century.

"It seems extremely likely that drought will become more the norm" for the West, says Kathy Jacobs of the Arizona Water Institute, a research partnership of the state's three universities. "Droughts will continue to come and go, but … higher temperatures are going to produce more water stress." That's because warmer temperatures in the Southwest boosts demands for water and cause more to evaporate from lakes and reservoirs.

"The only good news about drought is it forces us to pay attention to water management," says Peter Gleick of the Pacific Institute, a think tank in Oakland that stresses efficient water use.

This drought has been particularly harsh in three regions: the Southwest, the Southeast and northern Minnesota.

Severe dryness across California and Arizona has spread into 11 other Western states. On the Colorado River, the water supply for 30 million people in seven states and Mexico, the Lake Powell and Lake Mead reservoirs are only half full and unlikely to recover for years. In Los Angeles County, on track for a record dry year with 21% of normal rain downtown since last summer, fire officials are threatening to cancel Fourth of July fireworks if conditions worsen. On Wednesday, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa urged residents to voluntarily cut water use 10%, the city's first such call since the 1990s.

In Minnesota, which is in its worst drought since 1976, the situation is improving slowly, although a wildfire last month burned dozens of houses and 115 square miles in the northeastern part of the state.

The Southeast, unaccustomed to prolonged dry spells, may be suffering the most. In eight states from Mississippi to the Carolinas and down through Florida, lakes are shrinking, crops are withering, well levels are falling and there are new limits on water use. "We need 40-50 inches of rainfall to get out of the drought," says Carol Ann Wehle of the South Florida Water Management District.

Despite a recent storm, water hasn't flowed in Florida's Kissimmee River, which feeds Lake Okeechobee, in 212 days. The district has imposed its strictest water-use limits ever in 13 counties, cutting home watering to once a week and commercial use by 45%.

The drought also has provided an occasional benefit: Okeechobee's record low level allowed crews to clean out decades of muck and debris.

And some stricken areas are recovering. Texas and Oklahoma, charred by wildfires in the dry winter of 2005-06, are drought-free.

Even in California, where winter snowpack in the Sierra Nevada range was only 27% of normal this year, plentiful runoff from last year's snows filled many reservoirs, so shortages are unlikely this year. But another dry winter would tax supplies.

Gleick says water managers are not reacting forcefully enough to the drought: "The time to tell people that we're in the middle of a drought and to institute strong conservation programs is today, not a year from now." The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California is doing that. Last month, it began a "Let's Save" radio campaign.

After nearly a decade of drought in parts of the West, the nation's fastest-growing region wrestles with rising water demands and declining supply.

Donald Wilhite of the National Drought Mitigation Center says the Southwest and Southeast are "becoming gradually more vulnerable to drought" because the rising population will need more water. "We think of water as an unlimited resource," he says. "But what happens when you turn on the tap and it's not there?"


What do you think about all this, and do you think we will be able to act fast enough? Even though scientist have shown the world proof this is real, and only recently has the world become more concerned it still seems to me like a large percent of Americans are not doing anything. We all know global warming is causing this, and whether you think it's from human activities or not, the fact is it's happening and we as people need to change our life style and become more conservative and use natural resources.

At the G8 last week President Bush did not anounce a clear plan for the United States and global warming.  President Bush thinks we have higher priorities, such as the war in the Middle East. In my opinion it should be on the top of our list, as we are running out of time and the United States is the "super power" country and also the largest polluter and we need to set an example for the rest of the world. The changing climate is our biggest threat, far greater than "terrorist".

 

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Member Comments Total Comments: 3
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Truthguys read my blog view my photos
Jun 10, 2007 | 11:18 PM

CAll China and India... This isnt Global Warming... its an Earth thing. It happens and the studies show that. Yes there is junk in the air, but wait 10 years when China and India pass us in Power plants and car pollution. China is losing its green and the Desert is causing sand storms, and 90 per cent of their lakes and rivers are polluted... they dont care.

Stay off the Liberal-Socialist sites that Palm Coast loves.

MarkChristopher read my blog view my photos
Jun 11, 2007 | 10:53 AM

sure, let's not worry about it... we will be fine just like the other 99% of species on earth that no longer exist. We are different and can survive anything. Why should we care or do anything, let's just keeep using oil (which is running dry in the not so distant future) and not worry about other natural resources for energy, which in turn will save Americans money and stimulate our OWN ecomomy... no lets just keep throwing money in the middle eastern peoples pockets... where do you think the "terrorist" get that money from to buy the supplies for that bomb?

I think the war in the middle east is very important for our future, and I think we should fight till the end. However I think the issue with energy is JUST as important, if not more.

Running out of food and water is serious.. we cannot survive with out it, this is most important to us, more than anything else. If we cannot eat or drink than we die.

The fact is the climate is changing and we must adjust now, not throw this issue on the "back burner" which is what our current leadership is doing.

MarkChristopher read my blog view my photos
Jun 11, 2007 | 11:31 AM

and yes it is global warming.. which the meaning of it is as simple as it sounds.
Doesn't mean that it is caused by humans, it just means the planet is warming!
It may not be such a big deal right now as we are in early stages, however it will catch up to us soon.

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MarkChristopher

I have been a resident of Palm Coast since September of 2001. I am twenty four, and work in banking. I have lived in Florida my whole life, and originally came from Miami.

Member Since: 9/4/2006