Poster's note : this newspaper discussion is interesting as the arguments
could form part of an emergency framing for geoengineering deployment. A
particularly interesting feature is the association with previous
civilisation collapse. The challenge of geoengineering out of a drought is
tricky with Stratospheric sulphur aerosols. Maybe Marine cloud brightening
would be better?

http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/climate-change/no-rain-for-decades-stand-by-for-the-megadroughts-scientists-warn-9732483.html

No rain for decades: Stand by for the ‘megadroughts’, scientists warn

Parts of the world could face decades without rainfall because of global
warming

Sunday 14 September 2014

Climate change is set to unleash a series of decades-long “megadroughts”
this century, according to research to be published this week.

Experts warn the droughts could be even more severe than the prolonged
water shortage currently afflicting California, where residents have
resorted to stealing from fire hydrants  amid mass crop failures and
regular wildfires.

Megadroughts – which are generally defined as lasting 35 years or more –
will become considerably more frequent as global warming increases
temperatures and reduces rainfall in regions already susceptible, warns
Cornell University’s Dr Toby Ault, the author of the new report.

Megadroughts are also likely to be hotter and last longer than in the past,
he claimed. His peer-reviewed research – to be published in the  American
Meterological  Society’s Journal of Climate – is the first to
scientifically establish that climate change exacerbates the threat.

In pictures: Changing climate around the world

“We can now explicitly add megadroughts to the list of risks that are being
intensified by climate change. Without climate change there would be a 5 to
15 per cent risk of a megadrought in the south-west of the US this century.
With it, the probability jumps to between 20 per cent and 50 per cent, with
the southernmost part of the country particularly at risk,” Dr Ault
told The Independent.

The threat megadroughts pose is so great they could decimate the world’s
economy and food supply, inflicting a humanitarian crisis, experts warned.

“Global warming will make droughts evermore severe and devastating in the
future. The south-west of the US, southern Europe, much of Africa, India,
Australia and much of Central and South America could all have a drought
that lasts decades,” said Jonathan T Overpeck, an environmental scientist
at the University  of Arizona.

Video: The truth about global water shortages

“It is feasible that continued global warming could lead to multiple
regions experiencing a hot megadrought at the same time in the future. This
could lead to global economic, food and humanitarian shocks,”  Dr Overpeck
added.

Megadroughts are defined more by their duration than their intensity. They
have historically been associated with prolonged La Niña conditions, which
create cooler than normal water temperatures in the tropical eastern
Pacific Ocean. This reduces evaporation and, in turn, the amount of
rainfall.

Megadroughts have occurred periodically around the world in the past few
thousand years. In some cases they have caused civilisations to collapse,
such as the ancient Puebloan native-American tribes in the south-west of
the US – who abandoned their homes during a megadrought in the late 13th
century – and the Khmer empire of Cambodia in the 14th century.

The fallout from future megadroughts will be even more severe because the
global population is larger and the strain on water supplies is greater,
warns Professor  Park Williams of Columbia University in New York.

“Many of the already drought-prone parts of the planet will see
megadroughts during this century that are far worse than anything those
regions have seen in the past several thousand years at least.”

Prof Williams believes governments should pay some industry and communities
to cut their water consumption.

While the UK is unlikely to suffer its own megadrought, Dr Overpeck warned
that Britain could be hit by a megadrought elsewhere, especially in regions
it relies on for food, or in zones prone to conflict.

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