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Climate and Environment

Study Finds Western Megadrought Is The Worst In 1,200 Years

Walkways extend out over lake water. The shore on the near side appears brown and red, and also has some pipes/tubes on it. They extend out to buildings on the water. There are red and brown hills in the background.
Water levels at Lake Powell, the nation's second-largest reservoir, have dropped by more than 150 feet in the ongoing megadrought.
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Claire Harbage
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NPR
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Shrunk reservoirs. Depleted aquifers. Low rivers. Raging wildfires. It's no secret that the Western U.S. is in a severe drought. New research published Monday shows just how extreme the situation has become.

The Western U.S. and Northern Mexico are experiencing their driest period in at least 1,200 years, according to the new study published in the journal Nature Climate Change. The last comparable — though not as severe — multi-decade mega-drought occurred in the 1500s, when the West was still largely inhabited by American Indian tribes.

Today, the region is home to tens of millions of people, massive agricultural centers and some of the fastest-growing cities in the U.S. — all in an area where there's less water available than there was in the past, partially due to human-caused climate change.

"We have a society that's relying on there being the amount of water there was in the 1900s," said the study's lead author, Park Williams, a bioclimatologist at the University of California, Los Angeles. "But now with the number of water molecules available to us declining, it really is time for us to get real about how much water there is for us to use."

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Williams looked at tree-ring data from thousands of sites to conduct the research. They sampled data collected from live trees, dead trees and wood beams preserved at Native American archeological sites. The tree rings gave Williams an insight into drought events dating back to the year 800 AD, around the same time Charlemagne was being crowned Emperor of Rome.

He identified four other mega-droughts in that time period, the most notable being a 23-year drought that ended in the late 1500s. There were hopes during a wet 2019 that the current mega-drought was following a similar pattern, Williams said.

"And then from summer 2020 through all of 2021, it was just exceptionally dry across the West ... indicating that this drought is nowhere near done."

It's time to 'pull out all the stops' and plan for less water

Western water managers were again hopeful for a change at the beginning of this winter. Record-breaking snowfall in California's Sierra Nevada and big snow storms blanketed the Northern Rockies in December. But a hot, dry start to the year has since dropped snowpack levels to below average in many places.

Water reflects red and brown shoreline dirt, along with green and yellow hillsides.
Water sparkles on a shrinking Lake Powell near the Cathedral in the Desert in Glen Canyon.
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Claire Harbage
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NPR
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Lake Mead and Lake Powell, the country's two largest reservoirs, are only filled at about one-third of their total capacity. Communities, ranchers and farmers have depleted groundwater stores to meet demands.

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Federal water managers declared the first-ever water shortage along the Colorado River last year, triggering cuts to some of the river's 40 million users. It was a recognition "that the hydrology that was planned for years ago — but we hoped we would never see — is here," said Bureau of Reclamation Commissioner Camille Touton.

"The Colorado River Basin no longer has the privilege of time," said Kim Mitchell, Senior Water Policy Advisor at Western Resource Advocates, an environmental nonprofit, after hearing about the new research. "It's imperative for water managers in the West to incorporate a smaller [Colorado] River into future operations, and pull out all the stops in scaling up basin-wide conservation. Incremental solutions just won't be enough."

Human-caused climate change contributes to drought

Existing management guidelines for the Colorado River are set to expire in 2026. The seven states that draw from the watershed are negotiating with the federal government, Native American tribes and Mexico over what future management should look like.

Last December, Nevada, Arizona and California agreed to take less water from the Colorado River in an effort to prop up Lake Mead, and more cuts could follow.

"This is a wake-up call for everyone," Adel Hagekhalil, general water manager for the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, told KUNC. "For all of us. We are facing a new normal when it comes to climate change."

Researcher Williams said roughly one-fifth of the current mega-drought can be attributed to human-caused climate change. Greenhouse gas emissions are warming the world, speeding evaporation, and disrupting weather patterns.

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He described water patterns in the West as a yo-yo — sometimes high, sometimes low. Climate change has put that yo-yo on an escalator, heading down, he said, "and we cannot let ourselves get tricked by a few wet years into giving up on the progress we've been making."

"We actually have to change our relationship with water."

  • Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit npr.org.

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