There’s a . Perhaps you’ve heard a few things about it.
Like the fact that it’s cost the state , helped burn up roughly 118,000 acres of this year to date and inspired Los Angeles to release a 96 million-strong armada of shade balls into reservoirs (though it was ). Oh, and the state is also missing a .
The sobering numbers come from researchers at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, NASA and University of Idaho who analyzed temperature, precipitation, wind speed and other data to tease out the role climate change has played in the drought in a new study published on Thursday in .
It’s the latest in a string of studies that have examined this big question. The general consensus is that heat has in exacerbating the drought and that at least some of that heat is part of the larger pattern of global warming. Last year was a punctuation mark with the Golden State to crispy golden brown.
The “” — an atmospheric feature that’s deflected storms every which way but over California since 2012 — also might have , though those are still somewhat murky. But the specific role climate change has played in the drought hasn’t been truly teased out until this new study.
Maps of June-August Palmer Drought Severity Index and ranking for 2014 and 2012–14. Rankings are based on all years between 1901 and 2014.“This study is the first to parse out the relative contribution of anthropogenic warming versus natural climate variability,” , a tree ring researcher at Lamont, said. “From a method standpoint, it’s a big advancement. It’s the first time I know of that data has been parsed apart this way for any drought on the planet.”Williams led the latest round of research that uses temperature, precipitation, wind and other drought data to break the state up into grid of 23,955 boxes. The data paint the sharpest picture yet of a state in severe drought. Averaged across the state, the findings show that this hasn’t been California’s worst drought on record, but it is the worst drought on record in the places that matter the most to people.
The epicenter of the drought is the Central Valley, the heart of California’s $46.4 billion agricultural industry. The Sierra Nevada mountains, where most of the state’s water comes from, and a large swath of the coast from , where more than half the state’s population lives, have also experienced record-setting drought conditions since 2012.
The lack of rain is what obviously started the drought but heat has ensured its lasting impacts. By comparing different datasets and historical temperature trends, Williams and his colleagues were able to show that up to 27 percent of this drought can be ascribed to climate change-driven warming.
“We needed to answer this question. Just knowing how much climate change has affected this drought is really important as a tool to help Californians understand that while natural climate variability is still important, but over the long term, we already have a trend underway,” Williams said.
That trend also means the odds of severe drought in California have doubled since the early 20th century.
Changing drought patterns across the U.S. at the start of each decade through 2095.“They do a nice job showing that exceptionally warm temperatures from 2012-2014 amplified drought conditions for California,” , a climate scientist at the Southwest Fisheries Science Center who has previously written about temperature variations in the region, said.
Williams likened the impacts of rising temperatures to a bully after your lunch money.
Climate Central. The article was
see also:
No comments:
Post a Comment