Infrastructure

Drought Is Causing Level of Western U.S. to Rise

The drought throughout the Western United States, particularly California, may be the worst in a century. Aside from the ruin of crops and possible permanent damage to soil, the dry weather has had another effect. It is causing the level of the entire region to rise.

According to a research paper published in Science, reported by scientists at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego, experts have observed the change. What the research does not address much is whether the phenomenon matters. According to the data:

Investigating ground positioning data from GPS stations throughout the west, Scripps researchers Adrian Borsa, Duncan Agnew, and Dan Cayan found that the water shortage is causing an “uplift” effect up to 15 millimeters (more than half an inch) in California’s mountains and on average four millimeters (0.15 of an inch) across the west. From the GPS data, they estimate the water deficit at nearly 240 gigatons (63 trillion gallons of water), equivalent to a four-inch layer of water spread out over the entire western U.S.

And:

“These results quantify the amount of water mass lost in the past few years,” said Cayan. “It also represents a powerful new way to track water resources over a very large landscape. We can home in on the Sierra Nevada mountains and critical California snowpack. These results demonstrate that this technique can be used to study changes in fresh water stocks in other regions around the world, if they have a network of GPS sensors.”

READ ALSO: 10 Cities Running Out of Water

While these may be fascinating observations, they won’t bring back the water. Based on Drought Monitor data, nearly all of California suffers from the two worst types of drought — “exceptional” and “extreme.”

And there is little improvement expected:

rainfall during the last few weeks has been many times normal in part of the deserts of southeastern California, and severe drought was improved to moderate drought in some of this area where precipitation totals are now above normal for at least the last 6 months. Unfortunately, rainfall in this arid region will have no impact on the water shortages and seriously low reservoir stores reported throughout the state.

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