SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Manmade Global Warming, A hoax? A Scam? or a Doomsday Cult? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: joseffy who wrote (2548)5/28/2011 7:22:33 PM
From: Don Hurst  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 4326
 
My goodness, the "Global Weirding" just keeps going on and on...

And as Texas burns up, their Governor wants to cut the budget of the department responsible to fight the wild fires...

Yup, he should really get a lot of votes from the Repub right wing base in the Presidential primaries...

OHMIGOSH...

>>" West Texas sees worst drought since Dust Bowl
Climatologist: "Along with the U.S., France, and China all are experiencing some pretty nasty drought that is going to have a major global impact on commodities, wheat in particular."
May 26, 2011
Parts of West Texas, Oklahoma and adjoining states are suffering from a drought that rivals the Dust Bowl of the 1930s. Some scientists say this is a kind of “global weirding” heralding climate change.

Were it not for the Biblical flooding of the Mississippi River and, well, Biblical whirlwinds slamming the Midwest, the “hellish” side of Hell and High Water would be the big news. Last month a “record breaking 1.79 million acres burned across the country” and most of that was in Texas, NOAA reported.

The Houston Chronicle reported this week, “Texas’ farmers and ranchers are coping with their eighth drought in the last 13 years, and this one, while still young, has a chance of slamming producers with their biggest losses ever, officials said.

Nearly four fifths of Texas is under extreme or exceptional drought. Reuters reports, the “dire drought” has “expanded across the key farming state of Kansas … the top U.S. wheat-growing state” over the last two weeks, “adding to struggles of wheat farmers already dealing with weather-ravaged fields.”

“It is pretty bad,” said Kansas state climatologist Mary Knapp. “For a lot of these areas… the last significant rainfall was in July of last year.”

It’s not just the United States that is being slammed. As AFP reports, “Central China’s worst drought in more than 50 years is drying reservoirs, stalling rice planting, and threatens crippling power shortages as hydroelectric plants lie idle, state media said Wednesday.”

The UK’s Guardian explains the “drastic” measures the Chinese are taking :

Severe drought has forced China to release 5 billion cubic metres from Three Gorges reservoir for irrigation and drinking water

The dried up Yangtze river in southwest China’s Chongqing municipality.

Regional authorities have declared more than 1,300 lakes “dead”, which means they are out of use for irrigation and drinking supply.

Europe is also being slammed, as Bloomberg reported yesterday:

Crops in northwestern Europe are suffering from the driest weather in decades, while Texas A&M University said yesterday wheat and cotton on in the U.S. state are in an “extremely dire” situation on a lack of soil moisture.

Mark Svoboda, climatologist with the National Drought Mitigation Center said last week: “Along with the U.S., France, and China all are experiencing some pretty nasty drought that is going to have a major global impact on commodities, wheat in particular.”
The U.S. Department of Agriculture on May 11 forecast that Kansas would harvest 261.8 million bushels of wheat this summer, down from 27 percent from a year ago. The Texas and Oklahoma wheat crops are forecast to fall more than 50 percent because of the drought, causing the overall U.S. winter wheat crop to be estimated as the smallest in five years.
The good news is that the extreme-weather-driven exports bans of Russia and Ukraine that started last summer seem likely to end soon:
Ukraine and Russia may return to the world wheat market in coming months as local harvests rebound from last year’s drought, in a reversal of roles with the U.S. and Europe, where dry conditions are wasting crops this year.Ukraine plans to lift grain-export quotas that reduced its wheat shipments by more than half, while Russian grain traders are gearing up to make foreign deliveries as the government in Moscow considers letting a ban on grain shipments expire.
And China has stores of grain that allow it to weather a bad crop season, Reuters reports:

A prolonged drought in China could hit grains output in key growing regions, further squeezing global supplies and putting upward pressure on prices, but plentiful domestic wheat stocks will act as a cushion and keep import volumes low.

Back to this country, here’s a video of what’s happening in Texas:

How do we get deluges and droughts at the same time in neighboring states?

” ‘Global weirding’ is the best way to describe what we are seeing,” said Katharine Hayhoe, a climate scientist at Texas Tech University. “There is a lot going on these days that’s not what we are used to seeing. What’s happening is our rainfall patterns are shifting. In some places it means more heavy rainfall, in some places it means more drought, in some places it means both.”

Get used to it:
"<<

climateprogress.org



To: joseffy who wrote (2548)6/1/2011 2:52:22 AM
From: Hawkmoon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4326
 
This will likely add to the impetus in Idaho to increase the height of their reservoirs so they can capture this excess run-off. They always seem to get too little run-off, or too much.

Considering much of the agriculture in that state is irrigated farm land, water issues are critical.

Hawk