Manila Standard

‘Flash drought’ frequency increasing due to climate change—study

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WASHINGTON, USA—Dryspells known as flash droughts, with a surprising­ly rapid onset and often devastatin­g impact, are becoming more frequent as human activity warms the planet, according to a study published Thursday.

Though droughts are generally thought of as long-term phenomena, some can occur quite suddenly, in a matter of weeks, when the conditions are right.

Global warming is a recipe for increasing those special conditions around the world, creating in certain areas a decrease in precipitat­ion and increased evaporatio­n, which dries out the soil more quickly.

For the study, published in the journal Science, researcher­s analyzed a combinatio­n of satellite data and ground moisture readings from a period of over 60 years (1951-2014).

“Both flash and slow droughts are increasing” as global temperatur­es rise, lead author Xing Yuan told AFP. But flash droughts are increasing more quickly “especially over Europe, North and East Asia, Sahel and west coast of South America,” he said.

The researcher, based out of China’s Nanjing University of Informatio­n Science and Technology (NUIST), warned that the rapid onset of flash droughts gives humans little time to adapt, such as by diverting water resources or preparing for wildfires.

“The vegetation do not have enough time to adapt either,” he added. Yuan’s team used climate modeling to forecast how flash droughts will change under several possible greenhouse gas emission scenarios. Even if emissions are moderate, flash droughts will continue to become more frequent across practicall­y all regions. Under higher emissions scenarios, the trend would be more drastic.

Yuan also said the data showed a general increase in drought onset speeds, with his team finding a “robust transition at global scale” of slow to flash droughts.

“We believe the reduction in emission can slow down this transition,” he told AFP.

The concept of flash drought emerged in the early 21st century, but has received more attention since the summer 2012 drought in the United States, which set in particular­ly quickly and caused more than $30 billion in economic losses.

A commentary piece by two professors in the Netherland­s, also published in Science, said the study’s warning “should be taken seriously” as the threat “may be even greater than they suggest.”

David Walker of Wageningen University and Anne Van Loon of Vrije Universite­it (VU) Amsterdam, both of whom were not involved in Yuan’s work, underlined that most of the “hot spot regions” determined by the study were particular­ly lowincome areas.

“These regions generally have more vulnerable population­s and lower financial resources for coping mechanisms,” they said.

The pair also added that current methods for detecting droughts, often month-by-month data analyses, must be updated to “operate on shorter time scales,” due to the increase in flash droughts which “may build and trigger outcomes in just weeks.

 ?? AFP ?? A picture taken on April 4, 2023 shows the dry Chiba dam near the city of Korba in northeaste­rn Tunisia. The North African country’s dams are at critical lows following years of drought, exacerbate­d by pipeline leaks in a decrepit distributi­on networK.
AFP A picture taken on April 4, 2023 shows the dry Chiba dam near the city of Korba in northeaste­rn Tunisia. The North African country’s dams are at critical lows following years of drought, exacerbate­d by pipeline leaks in a decrepit distributi­on networK.

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