For more than 20 years the National Drought Mitigation Center (NDMC) has been monitoring dozens of indices of drought around the country, including satellite measurements of evaporation and color in vegetation, soil-moisture sensors, rainfall estimates, and river and streamflow levels. Although the agency's weekly assessments have identified periods of exceptional drought before, lately dryness has been ramping up. “The changing climate is definitely contributing to more natural disasters, drought being one of them,” says Brian Fuchs, a climatologist who oversees the weekly report at the NDMC. “We're seeing more frequent and high-intensity episodes. This year some of these areas in the West have been in drought more than they have been without drought.”
Climate Change Drives Escalating Drought
The past two decades have seen some of the most extreme dry periods in U.S. history
This article was originally published with the title "Escalating Drought" in Scientific American 325, 5, 74 (November 2021)
doi:10.1038/scientificamerican1121-74