Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation for DWR personnel of significant news articles and comment
April 6, 2007
1. Top Item
Permanent drought predicted for Southwest; Study says global warming threatens to create a Dust Bowl-like period. Water politics could also get heated
By Alan Zarembo and Bettina Boxall, staff writers
The driest periods of the last century — the Dust Bowl of the 1930s and the droughts of the 1950s — may become the norm in the
The research suggests that the transformation may already be underway. Much of the region has been in a severe drought since 2000, which the study's analysis of computer climate models shows as the beginning of a long dry period.
The study, published online in the journal Science, predicted a permanent drought by 2050 throughout the Southwest — one of the fastest-growing regions in the nation.
The data tell "a story which is pretty darn scary and very strong," said Jonathan Overpeck, a climate researcher at the
Richard Seager, a research scientist at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory at
"There are going to be some tough decisions on how to allocate water," he said. "Is it going to be the cities, or is it going to be agriculture?"
Seager said the projections, based on 19 computer models, showed a surprising level of agreement. "There is only one model that does not have a drying trend," he said.
Philip Mote, an atmospheric scientist at the
The future effect of global warming is the subject of a United Nations report to be released today in
The first report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was released in February. It declared that global warming had become a "runaway train" and that human activities were "very likely" to blame.
The landmark report helped shift the long and rancorous political debate over climate change from whether man-made warming was real to what could be done about it.
The mechanics and patterns of drought in the Southwest have been the focus of increased scrutiny in recent years.
During the last period of significant, prolonged drought — the Medieval Climate Optimum from about the years 900 to 1300 — the region experienced dry periods that lasted as long as 20 years, scientists say.
Drought research has largely focused on the workings of air currents that arise from variations in sea-surface temperature in the
The most significant in terms of drought is La Niña. During La Niña years, precipitation belts shift north, parching the Southwest.
The latest study investigated the possibility of a broader, global climatic mechanism that could cause drought. Specifically, they looked at the Hadley cell, one of the planet's most powerful atmospheric circulation patterns, driving weather in the tropics and subtropics.
Within the cell, air rises at the equator, moves toward the poles and descends over the subtropics.
Increasing levels of greenhouse gases, the researchers said, warms the atmosphere, which expands the poleward reach of the Hadley cell. Dry air, which suppresses precipitation, then descends over a wider expanse of the Mediterranean region, the Middle East and
All of those areas would be similarly affected, though the study examined only the effect on North America in a swath reaching from
The researchers tested a "middle of the road" scenario of future carbon dioxide emissions to predict rainfall and evaporation. They assumed that emissions would rise until 2050 and then decline. The carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere would be 720 parts per million in 2100, compared with about 380 parts per million today.
The computer models, on average, found about a 15% decline in surface moisture — which is calculated by subtracting evaporation from precipitation — from 2021 to 2040, as compared with the average from 1950 to 2000.
A 15% drop led to the conditions that caused the Dust Bowl in the Great Plains and the northern
Even without the circulation changes, global warming intensifies existing patterns of vapor transport, causing dry areas to get drier and wet areas to get wetter. When it rains, it is likely to rain harder, but scientists said that was unlikely to make up for losses from a shifting climate.
Kelly Redmond, deputy director of the
But, he added, "In the future we may see fewer such very wet years."
Although the computer models show the drying has already started, they are not accurate enough to know whether the drought is the result of global warming or a natural variation.
"It's really hard to tell," said Connie Woodhouse, a paleoclimatologist at the
The
For the
Inevitably, water would be reallocated from agriculture, which uses most of the West's supply, to urban users, drying up farms.
"This is a situation that is going to cause water wars," said Kevin Trenberth, a scientist at the
"If there's not enough water to meet everybody's allocation, how do you divide it up?"
Officials from seven states recently forged an agreement on the current drought, which has left the Colorado River's big reservoirs —
In the next couple of years, water deliveries may have to be reduced to
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