Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Study: Drought rises to 1,200-year record

Scientist sees worst case getting worse

- SETH BORENSTEIN

The American West’s megadrough­t deepened so much last year that it is now the driest in at least 1,200 years and is a worst-case climate-change scenario playing out live, a new study finds.

A dramatic drying in 2021 — about as dry as 2002 and one of the driest years ever recorded for the region — pushed the 22-year drought past the previous record-holder for megadrough­ts in the late 1500s and shows no signs of easing in the near future, according to a study Monday in the journal Nature Climate Change.

The study calculated that 42% of this megadrough­t can be attributed to human-caused climate change.

“Climate change is changing the baseline conditions toward a drier, gradually drier state in the West, and that means the worst-case scenario keeps getting worse,” said study lead author Park Williams, a climate hydrologis­t at the University of California, Los Angeles. “This is right in line with what people were thinking of in the 1900s as a worst-case scenario. But today I think we need to be even preparing for conditions in the future that are far worse than this.”

Williams studied soil moisture levels in the West — a box that includes California, Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, Arizona, most of Oregon and Idaho, much of New Mexico, western Colorado, northern Mexico, and the southwest corners of Montana and Texas — using modern measuremen­ts and tree rings for estimates that go back to the year 800. A few years ago, Williams studied the current drought and said it qualified as a lengthy and deep “megadrough­t” and that the only worse one was in the 1500s. He figured the current drought wouldn’t surpass that one because megadrough­ts tended to peter out after 20 years. And he said 2019 was a wet year, so it looked like the western drought might be coming to an end.

But the region dried up in late 2020 and 2021.

All of California was considered in official drought from mid-May until the end of 2021, and at least three-quarters of the state was at the highest two drought levels from June through Christmas, according to the U.S. drought monitor.

“For this drought to have just cranked up back to maximum drought intensity in late 2020 through 2021 is a quite emphatic statement by this 2000s drought saying that we’re nowhere close to the end,” Williams said. This drought is 5% drier than the record from the 1500s, he said.

The drought monitor says 55% of the West is in drought, with 13% experienci­ng the two highest drought levels.

This megadrough­t really kicked off in 2002 — one of the driest years ever based on humidity and tree rings, Williams said.

“I was wondering if we’d ever see a year like 2002 again in my life, and in fact we saw it 20 years later, within the same drought,” Williams said. The drought levels in 2002 and 2021 were a statistica­l tie, though still behind 1580 for the worst single year.

Climate change from the burning of fossil fuels is bringing hotter temperatur­es and increasing evaporatio­n in the air, scientists say.

Williams used 29 models to create a hypothetic­al world with no human-caused warming, then compared it with what happened in real life — the scientific­ally accepted way to check if an extreme weather event is due to climate change. He found that 42% of the drought conditions are directly from human-caused warming.

Without climate change, he said, the megadrough­t would have ended early on because 2005 and 2006 would have been wet enough to break it.

The study “is an important wake-up call,” said Jonathan Overpeck, dean of environmen­t at the University of Michigan, who wasn’t part of the study. “Climate change is literally baking the water supply and forests of the Southwest, and it could get a whole lot worse if we don’t halt climate change soon.”

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford) ?? State lawmakers mingle on their way out of the House chambers Monday after Gov. Asa Hutchinson’s address.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford) State lawmakers mingle on their way out of the House chambers Monday after Gov. Asa Hutchinson’s address.

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