A new study finds that a number of areas around the
world are drying out at increasingly faster rates. One such region includes
southwestern North America down to Central America. In California, farms and
ranches such as this one in Walnut Creek have suffered years of drought and
warming temperatures.
USDA
Several regions around the world are
seeing marked declines in water availability, according to a paper published in the journal Science
Advances on July 25. The study, partially funded by NASA, found that dry areas
are increasing by about twice the size of California each year.
Researchers identified the trend using
data collected from 2002 to 2024 by two U.S.-German missions called the Gravity
Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) and GRACE Follow-On (GRACE-FO).
One of the regions includes an area
stretching from southwestern North America to Central America, where dry
conditions are becoming more common. The expansion of a recent European drought
has produced a mega-drying region that stretches from North Africa to Europe,
through the Middle East and Central Asia, and into northern China and Southeast
Asia.
The study authors also found that most of the wet areas on Earth are getting wetter, including parts of East Africa and western sub-Saharan Africa. But those regions aren’t getting wetter as fast as the dry regions are drying out.
Source: US-German Water Satellites Show Continental Dry Spots Are Getting Drier - NASA Science

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