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General News    H3'ed 8/18/13

Historic Drought Ravages Southwest U.S.

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Sherwood Ross
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A severe drought in the Southwestern U.S. is devastating crops and farm communities---sending a warning about climate change, Sasha Abramsky reports in a prescient article published in the August 5-12 issue of The Nation .


"In a typical year, the winds ease up in mid-spring, and the dust tamps down. In the past three years, however, as the rains have failed and the land has dried up, the winds have continued into the searingly hot summers...the soil disintegrates...(and its) quality is now so poor that on the few occasions when it does rain, the next day's wind simply blows the newly moistened topsoil away," the author writes. Sandstorms are now commonplace.


"Across the area you can see rows of cotton, black and dead in the orange earth---entire fields burned by the static electricity generated by...sandstorms," he adds.


These storms---dubbed "haboobs" by returning Iraq veterans after their Arabic name---"are no longer considered an episodic menace but rather a fixture of the landscape, the calling card of an emerging climatological crisis," Abramsky contends. Some facts:


# U.S. Drought Monitor maps show virtually all central and western states suffering moderate to extreme drought. Despite the hard rains that fell this Spring in the east and north, the drought worsened in the west and southwest.

# 71% of America's landmass has been branded a disaster area by the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture(USDA).

# Arizona and Colorado are afflicted by forest fires of the ferocity that killed 19 fire-fighters in Arizona this past June.

# In 2011 and 2012 about half of the Texas cotton crop was killed by drought.


# U.S. corn, wheat, and soy production are all down owing to the drought. Corn production has dropped to its 2000 level, USDA says, and much of what is produced goes into gas tanks in the form of ethanol. As a result, corn prices are rising, leading to a general food price upsurge that is impacting poorer communities around the world that import from America.


# Aquifers don't produce water as formerly; some areas haven't seen rain for 18 months. "The water supply conditions we have right now are by far the worst we've had in the last 100 years," New Mexico State University civil engineering professor Phil King is quoted as saying. This year only 163,000 acre-feet of Rio Grande water is likely to be released to farmers, an all-time low.

# And what water farmers can squeeze out of the land is becoming saltier, thus less suitable for growing crops.

# The U.S. cattle population has been dropping---down 10% in the last decade.


"As hay and alfalfa prices skyrocket in response to the drought, farmers are selling off animals they can no longer afford to feed...The tight supply sets up the prospect that consumers will pay far more for beef in the years to come," Abramsky writes. In eastern New Mexico and the Texas panhandle, he reports, 20% of the dairies have closed and consumers are noticing the impact of higher milk production costs. And, because so few cattle were left in the area, Cargill closed its Plainview, Tex., beef-processing plant, making 2,000 jobless.

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Sherwood Ross worked as a reporter for the Chicago Daily News and contributed a regular "Workplace" column for Reuters. He has contributed to national magazines and hosted a talk show on WOL, Washington, D.C. In the Sixties he was active as public (more...)
 
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