Thursday Top of the Scroll: Climate change identified as main driver of worsening drought in the Western United States
Humanity’s heating of the planet, driven by the burning of fossil fuels and unchecked emissions of greenhouse gases, has become the main driver of worsening droughts in California and the American West, according to new research.A team of UCLA and NOAA scientists found that while droughts in the last century were caused mainly by decreases in precipitation through natural cycles, an entirely different pattern has taken hold as a result of the rising temperatures this century. The researchers determined that since 2000, human-caused warming has become the dominant force leading to more drought severity in the Western United States. In the case of the intense Western drought from 2020 to 2022, the scientists attributed 61% of its severity to high temperatures, and only 31% to reduced precipitation.
Other drought articles:
- San Francisco Chronicle: Severe California droughts increasingly likely, scientists say. Here’s why
- Washington Post: Why future droughts will not be about rain
- UCLA news release: Climate change parching the American West even without rainfall deficits
- Science: Study: Anthropogenic warming has ushered in an era of temperature-dominated droughts in the western United States
- Courthouse News Service: Climate experts recommend Arizona drought declarations stay in effect