Community | November 25, 2012 | 10 comments

Worst US drought in Decades Deepens to Cover 60 Percent of Lower 48 States

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Vic_Romano
By The Associated Press

ST. LOUIS -- The worst U.S. drought in decades has deepened again after more than a month of encouraging reports of slowly improving conditions, a drought-tracking consortium said Wednesday, as scientists struggled for an explanation other than a simple lack of rain.

While more than half of the continental U.S. has been in a drought since summer, rain storms had appeared to be easing the situation week by week since late September. But that promising run ended with Wednesday's weekly U.S. Drought Monitor report, which showed increases in the portion of the country in drought and the severity of it.

The report showed that 60.1 percent of the lower 48 states were in some form of drought as of Tuesday, up from 58.8 percent the previous week. The amount of land in extreme or exceptional drought — the two worst classifications — increased from 18.3 percent to 19.04 percent.

The Drought Monitor's map tells the story, with dark red blotches covering the center of the nation and portions of Texas and the Southeast as an indication of where conditions are the most intense. Those areas are surrounded by others in lesser stages of drought, with only the Northwest, Florida and a narrow band from New England south to Mississippi escaping.

A federal meteorologist cautioned that Wednesday's numbers shouldn't be alarming, saying that while drought usually subsides heading into winter, the Drought Monitor report merely reflects a week without rain in a large chunk of the country.

"The places that are getting precipitation, like the Pacific Northwest, are not in drought, while areas that need the rainfall to end the drought aren't getting it," added Richard Heim, a meteorologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Climatic Data Center. "I would expect the drought area to expand again" by next week since little rain is forecast in the Midwest in coming days.

He said there was no clear, scientific explanation for why the drought was lingering or estimate for how long it would last.

"What's driving the weather? It's kind of a car with no one at the steering wheel," Heim said. "None of the atmospheric indicators are really strong. A lot of them are tickling around the edges and fighting about who wants to be king of the hill, but none of them are dominant."

The biggest area of exceptional drought, the most severe of the five categories listed by the Drought Monitor, centers over the Great Plains. Virtually all of Nebraska is in a deep drought, with more than three-fourths in the worst stage. But Nebraska, along with the Dakotas to the north, could still see things get worse "in the near future," the USDA's Eric Luebehusen wrote in Wednesday's update.

The drought also has been intensifying in Kansas, the top U.S. producer of winter wheat. It also is entirely covered by drought, and the area in the worst stage rose nearly 4 percentage points to 34.5 percent as of Tuesday. Much of that increase was in southern Kansas, where rainfall has been 25 percent of normal over the past half year.

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http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/22/15354660-worst-us-drought-in-decades-...
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10 comments // Worst US drought in Decades Deepens to Cover 60 Percent of Lower 48 States

  • treewolf39
    • +1
      treewolf39  
    • Better to go into the future in some sort of prepared state. What will you do when the electricity is out and their is no food in the stores? My short answer is five gallon food grade containers with rice in one beans in another honey in another sugar in another noodles in one more. Gallons of vinegar, baking soda and flour of some sort. It will not last forever but in gives you trading ability and with water can keep you and maybe five others alive for half a year. Better have seeds as well. I like buckets with sealed lids in case you have to leave your home or shelter.

    • 6 months ago
  • coolplanet
    • +2
      coolplanet  
    • The weakening of the Jet Stream from a warming Arctic is producing 'blocking highs' stalling weather patterns just as predicted by climate scientists 30 years ago.

    • 6 months ago
  • HarukoHaruhara
  • artemis6
  • Vic_Romano
    • +5
      Vic_Romano  
    • U.S. Drought May Curtail Mississippi River Grain-Barge Shipping

      Water levels on the Mississippi River may drop to historic lows next month in the Midwest, delaying barges carrying everything from grains and coal to steel and petroleum, after the worst U.S. drought in 56 years.

      The waterway, the busiest in the U.S., may be too shallow to navigate by Dec. 10 from St. Louis south about 180 miles (290 kilometers) to Cairo, Illinois, where the Mississippi meets the Ohio River, the American Waterways Operators and Waterways Council Inc. said in a Nov. 16 statement.

      The drought that dried out farmland from Ohio to Nebraska is expected to persist at least through February in most areas and spread to Texas, according to the U.S. Climate Prediction Center in College Park, Maryland. Barges on the Mississippi handle about 60 percent of grain exports that enter the Gulf of Mexico through New Orleans. The U.S. is the world’s largest shipper of corn, wheat and soybeans.

      “The Mississippi River is especially critical for the agricultural community,” George Foster, the president of JB Marine Service Inc. in St. Louis, said in a Nov. 16 statement. “Closure of the Mississippi next month would mean that about 300 million bushels of agricultural product worth $2.3 billion will be delayed reaching its destination.”

      The number of barges moving south on the Mississippi fell to 660 in the week ended Oct. 10, down from 691 a year earlier, data from the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers show. A total of 488 barges moved north, down 26 percent from a year earlier.

      http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-11-19/u-s-drought-may-curtail-mississippi-riv...

    • 6 months ago
  • HarukoHaruhara
  • Vic_Romano
    • +3
      Vic_Romano  
    • HarukoHaruhara:

      Shipping has declined along the Missouri over the last 100 years, but I can honestly say that I've NEVER seen the river as low as it has been in the last 4 months.

      The flooding of last year even makes this even more confounding to me.

    • 6 months ago
  • coolplanet
  • Mishima
  • Vic_Romano

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