Free Republic
Browse · Search
Bloggers & Personal
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Drought Indicators In Western States Flash Warnings Of The ‘Big One’
Zubu Brothers ^ | 6-24-2021 | Leslie Kaufman, Laura Bliss, Mark Chediak, Brian Eckhouse and Szu Yu Chen.

Posted on 06/24/2021 7:12:46 AM PDT by blam

Sarah Brunner opened the irrigation spigots on her farm in March, three months early. The rain should have still been falling in California. Now that summer is taking hold, she and her husband are considering shifting their meager water supplies into pastures so their animals will have enough to eat.

Brunner’s worries don’t stop at the barnyard. The family’s fields of shallots, garlic and goats are surrounded by thick Northern California forests, dried out and primed to burn. An early season wildfire near her home recently prompted Brunner to document her possessions and reevaluate her fire insurance. “I don’t feel safe anymore. It’s going to hit us hard,” she says. “There’s no doubt about it, we’re going to be inundated with fires. It’s just a matter of time.”

Drought in a habitat shared with bears, cougars and coyotes, all searching for a drink, has a way of compounding the danger. “The animals are going to get more desperate,” Brunner says.

Unstoppable drought is rolling over California and the Western U.S. once again, as it has with little interruption since the new century began. Nearly 98% of land across 11 Western states is abnormally dry, and more than 88% is covered by some category of drought—the worst levels in the U.S. Drought Monitor’s 21-year history. Reservoirs have drained to their bottoms, leaving bath-tub rings on their shorelines. Rivers reduced to trickles are setting off conflicts for dwindling water rights. Millions of acres of trees and shrubs have turned from shade to fuel for the out-of-control blazes everyone predicts will come.

“As far as drought goes, this is the big one, especially if we are talking about the broader drought across the whole Southwest,” says Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at the University of California Los Angeles. “By a lot of metrics, it is the most severe drought on record.”

Economic Cost

Last year drought cost the U.S. $4.5 billion, according to the National Centers for Environmental Information, and the dry conditions exacerbated a record wildfire season that cost an additional $16.5 billion. As climate change claws into weather patterns, the U.S. Southwest in particular has become permanently drier.

Arizona and New Mexico missed out on winter precipitation as well as last year’s annual summer monsoon. Lake Mead hit its lowest water level since 1937. Models used by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation have predicted the Colorado River, in its 22 year of drought, would continue to dwindle along with its reservoirs.

Based on paleohydrology data, this ranks as one of the driest periods of the last 1,200 years, according to Elizabeth Klein, senior counselor to the Department of Interior who testified at Congressional hearing last month.

California endured a six-year drought that ended in 2017, one of the state’s longest and most severe dry spells. Experts warn of worse conditions in the state this summer. “We have never seen drought at the scale and the intensity that we see right now, and it is possible that this may be the baseline for the future,” Klein warns.

Swain terms this process the aridification of the West—a complete shift in the region’s climate. “It is hard to call it drought anymore because it is a permanent state of being,” he says. “Things are moving in one direction rather than going back and forth.”

Agriculture Pressured

From June 2020 to May 2021, California posted its driest 12-month period on record, according to the National Centers for Environmental Information. So too did Arizona and Utah, while Idaho, Wyoming, New Mexico, Nevada and North Dakota all placed in the top 10. California just finished its fourth driest spring on record; Washington, Oregon and Idaho their second. Forecasts call for drought to remain locked in across the West, and by August drought conditions could spread into Nebraska and eastern Colorado.

The pressure is mounting on agriculture, which consumes 80% of California’s water. California’s Central Valley alone accounts for 17% of all irrigated land in the U.S. But the problem reaches far beyond the Golden State.

Irrigated farms in the Bureau of Reclamation’s Klamath Project in California and Oregon are facing their worst season since start of the 116-year effort, Dan Keppen, executive director of the Family Farm Alliance, testified to Congress last month. He pointed out that one canal in the project won’t deliver water for the first time since it was built in 1907. The drought is creating conflict between groups who want to save fish stocks and farmers trying to water crops.

Traditional approaches to water and how it is apportioned are based on 20th century norms. “A lot of assumptions are no longer valid,” Swain says. “Even the most pessimistic projections from a few years ago are not pessimistic enough.”

Forecasts say the wildfire threat across the West is running a month ahead of schedule because of dry trees and brush—and that means there’s daily potential for something to spark the flames.

That painful process of adjustment is playing out at the Foggy Bottoms Boys, a mixed crop and dairy farm in the bottoms of the Eel River Valley on California’s northern coast. The operation is “destocking” in anticipation of a drought-caused feed shortage, selling off about 20 out of their 120 cows milking cows and reducing the sheep flock by about half.

Conservation Ethic

The stress brought by years of drought has made cities much better at managing water than they were before the dry years in the prior decade. Californians cut back water use during the last drought, and that conservation ethic has largely persisted. Urban water use is 16% lower now than in 2013, but the level of preparedness is not the same across the state.

“The rest of California is not anywhere near as prepared as Southern California,” says Felicia Marcus, a visiting fellow at Stanford University’s Water in the West program and former chair of the California State Water Resources Control Board. Southern California’s Metropolitan Water District provides water for nearly half the state’s population and has spent more than $3 billion on water storage and conveyance since the late 1990s. Local agencies have also invested more in water recycling, lawn rebates and ongoing conservation. By contrast, the Bay Area lacks a regional body to make broad investments and coordinate conservation plans, though there are efforts to share some facilities.

Water Resources

Water has always been a problem in the American West because the region doesn’t get its water the same way as the East, where periodic rainstorms replenish the landscape. California gets nearly all of its water from rain and snow between November and March, and there are dire consequences if that falls short. California’s snow pack, which was pretty good during the winter of 2020 and 2021 compared to previous years, melted straight into parched ground. “The snow pack just kind of poofed into thin air,” Swain says.

Arizona, New Mexico and parts of Colorado, Nevada and Utah depend on an annual monsoon that starts in July and last a few weeks. The monsoon forecasts range from lackluster to bleak.

Drought is also dimming hydro-electric power across the region. Power capacity at the Hoover Dam dropped about 25%, and California is seeing the lowest levels of hydro-electric output in more than five years. Glen Canyon Dam in Arizona might approach minimum levels beyond which it produces no power, and California’s Lake Oroville could get so shallow it won’t produce power in August and September.

From the early 1900s to the late 1960s, America invested in water storage projects across the West, including the Hoover Dam. These enormous projects now appear built for another climate. For decades federal dam projects all but ground to a halt until the passage of new legislation in 2016 that breathed new life into a series of next-generation projects: California’s Sites Reservoir, the Sacramento Regional Water Bank and storage projects in Washington’s Yakima Basin. A coalition of 220 agriculture and water organizations is now lobbying Congress to spend $49 billion over the next 10 years on repairs for old and crumbing dams, as well as new infrastructure including water recycling and reuse projects.

It’s possible there will be new dams, but these would be built with a new aim: to capture extreme winter flood waters that current dams can’t hold. In 2017, the last big flood year in California, the state’s Department of Water Resources estimated that 48 million acre-feet of water flowed out under the Golden Gate Bridge. That’s more than seven times the amount of water exported by the State Water Project to meet the needs of agricultural in Central Valley and homes Southern California. The Sites Reservoir, once completed, would try to capture up to 1.5 million acre-feet of this winter flow for use in the dry season.

Upcoming Disaster

But these projects won’t do anything to shield the West against the upcoming disaster, which promises to get worse with every dry, hot day. Forecasts say the wildfire threat across the West is running a month ahead of schedule because of dry trees and brush—and that means there’s daily potential for something to spark the flames. Last week saw dry lightning warnings pop up across the western U.S., according to the Storm Prediction Center. The air is so dry that rain from thunderstorms evaporates before it hits the ground, leaving lightning to strike parched trees and shrubs.

“We haven’t seen the extreme devastating wildfire yet. But the key word is yet. They are coming,” Swain says. “A lot of what’s alarming right now is what the current conditions tell us where we’re going to be in two or three months.”

Without moisture in the soil, the sun’s energy heats the air. Last week’s heatwave that pushed temperatures to about 115 degrees Fahrenheit throughout the Central Valley, and even higher in Arizona and Nevada, is likely a preview of what lies ahead. “For a lot of parts of the West this is the beginning of the dry season,” Swain says. “This is going to get worse before it gets better.”


TOPICS: Weather
KEYWORDS: climate; drought; heat; weather
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-43 next last

1 posted on 06/24/2021 7:12:46 AM PDT by blam
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: blam

What good does it do to build more dam storage, if they are just going to flush it all out to the sea anyway.

I read they had enough water stored in 2019 for a 7 year supply. And drained it all off.


2 posted on 06/24/2021 7:17:12 AM PDT by DannyTN
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: blam

The WEST was not called THE GREAT AMERICAN DESERT for nothing. It was called that almost 200 years ago.


3 posted on 06/24/2021 7:22:29 AM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar ((Democrats have declared us to be THE OBSOLETE MAN in the Twilight Zone.))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: blam
If the drought is so bad, why has California Government emptied out all of the reservoirs? Man made famines comprise ALL famines over the last 80 years (Holodomir, Great Chinese Famine, African Famines, Etc.)…

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/3300728/
4 posted on 06/24/2021 7:25:34 AM PDT by Jan_Sobieski (Sanctification)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: blam
Western US is a tinderbox waiting to explode after record heat and the worst drought in potentially 1,200 YEARS could spell disaster with threats of wildfires, water shortages and blackouts
5 posted on 06/24/2021 7:29:43 AM PDT by blam
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: blam

We’ve just finished a stretch of over 100 degree days in western Colorado, earlier than usual. It does look like a rough summer.


6 posted on 06/24/2021 7:30:11 AM PDT by SaxxonWoods ( comment might be sarcasm, or not. It depends. Often I'm not sure either.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: blam

CA farmers on facebook are already asking to purchase hay from farmers out East.


7 posted on 06/24/2021 7:33:44 AM PDT by setter
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: blam

And, don’t charge up your electric cars either. Anyone think “they” will use this as another reason to try to impose a transportation lockdown to lower your/our auto emissions? Bueller? After all, weren’t there a slew of reports about how clean the air was within a few weeks during the initial scamdemic lock down? Be VERY vigilant my FRiends.


8 posted on 06/24/2021 7:37:00 AM PDT by rktman (Destroy America from within? Check! WTH? Enlisted USN 1967 to end up with this?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SaxxonWoods

We’re heading for a 5-6 day stretch of 104-106 temps here in the Idaho Panhandle. Which no one is really prepared for.


9 posted on 06/24/2021 7:50:20 AM PDT by Noumenon (The Second Amendment exists primarily to deal with those who just won't take no for an answer. KTF)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: blam

North Alabama is being shown as abnormally dry. That is complete BS. We had one of the wettest, coolest springs in many years. I understand that the west is dry, but not here in North Alabama


10 posted on 06/24/2021 7:55:34 AM PDT by RatRipper ( Democrats and socialists are vile liars, thdieves and murderers - enemies of good and America.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: DannyTN

The story of water in the west is hundreds of years old now

To get a perspective I noticed in the states look up the damn building projects that occurred for instance

Lake Shasta
The grand Coulee Dam
Lake Berryessa
The Hoover dam

These were a man of engineering projects at the time and quite amazing when you study what they did back in the 30s to do what they did


11 posted on 06/24/2021 8:02:43 AM PDT by Truthoverpower (Arizona !!!! Now the TRUMP TRAIN is getting back on TRACK ! TRUTH! FREEDOM ! LIBERTY! )
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Noumenon

Good luck, FRiend. Fire trucks driving to a fire not too far from here were starting fires with their catalytic converters just driving through the brush to get to the original fires.


12 posted on 06/24/2021 8:08:50 AM PDT by SaxxonWoods ( comment might be sarcasm, or not. It depends. Often I'm not sure either.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

They should blow up the hetch hetchy dam


13 posted on 06/24/2021 8:09:16 AM PDT by dsrtsage ( Complexity is just simple lacking imagination)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: Truthoverpower

Amazing they had the forethought to build those dams in the 30s considering there had never been droughts in the southwest since global warming hadn’t been invented yet


14 posted on 06/24/2021 8:11:58 AM PDT by dsrtsage ( Complexity is just simple lacking imagination)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: blam

Had a good rain in Phoenix last night.


15 posted on 06/24/2021 8:16:23 AM PDT by LS ("Castles made of sand, fall in the sea . . . eventually" (Hendrix) )
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: blam

Environmental Nazis in Oregon have caused the removal of dams and are in the process of removing more.


16 posted on 06/24/2021 8:20:34 AM PDT by Cold Heart
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: blam

Deport their illegals and they’ll have more water to go around.


17 posted on 06/24/2021 8:25:20 AM PDT by bgill
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: blam

Scary thinking about the upcoming fires. There could be a lot of loss of homes. Very scary.


18 posted on 06/24/2021 8:28:44 AM PDT by Freedom_Is_Not_Free (America -- July 4, 1776 to November 3, 2020 -- R.I.P.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: LS

Good rain in Phoenix last night has minimal effect these days.
Before the channeling and cementing of the streets, ditches and canals, the rain could move west slowly and seep into the ground renewing the wells, watering trees which met over the streets in lots of places.

Sad scene there now.


19 posted on 06/24/2021 8:39:06 AM PDT by amihow (Postmodernism kills the real.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: Freedom_Is_Not_Free

...have clients in TX completely burned out in Paradise, CA with what they could carry. Still rails about tree huggers saving brush and dumping water every year in the ocean!... ymmv


20 posted on 06/24/2021 8:39:59 AM PDT by PalominoGuy (a Republic, if you can keep it!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 18 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-43 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
Bloggers & Personal
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson