Experts sound alarm as unusual conditions could threaten water supply for millions of Americans: 'Abysmal'
Drought has defined water conditions in the western United States in recent years. This year, conditions seem particularly dry in the southwestern U.S., according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the National Integrated Drought Information System.
The organizations released a report earlier this month detailing snow-water conditions across the West. The report concluded dry conditions plagued the Southwest and produced "deepening snow deficits."
Of the western U.S., 62% experienced below-average snow-water conditions this winter, NOAA and NIDIS reported. The driest areas included northwestern Montana, eastern Wyoming, central and southern Utah, and southwestern Colorado, while Arizona and New Mexico had the least precipitation.
Arizona and New Mexico recorded less than 50% of normal snow-water conditions at all but two monitoring stations. Some of these stations –– like Verde Basin and Little Colorado Basin in Arizona –– experienced as little as 8% and 17% of normal conditions, respectively. The report described the Southwest's snowpack as "abysmal," which could be "critical" for the region's water supply.
Arizona and New Mexico's dry winters will decrease the Southwest's water supply into the spring and summer. The Bureau of Reclamation forecasts inflow into Lake Powell –– which supplies water to communities in Arizona, Nevada, and California –– at 67% of normal from April to July.
This winter does not mark the Southwest's first poor snowpack. Lake Powell has experienced "long-term persistent drought" and below-average water levels since 2002, according to Western Resource Advocates. The organization described the snowpack in Lake Powell's watershed as "rarely" being above average.
This decline in snow-water conditions results from changes in climate rather than weather. Rising temperatures are making droughts more common and more severe, reported NOAA. Warmer temperatures, according to NOAA, allow the atmosphere to hold more moisture before falling as rain or snow.
Less precipitation can decrease water resources, like Lake Powell, and impact other weather events, like wildfires. Increased risk for wildfires exists in the Southwest through June, predicts the National Interagency Fire Center.
Droughts persist due to rising temperatures, but we can mitigate their impact. Education and action regarding climate issues can bring attention to them. Legislation that concerns these issues, like the Drought Contingency Plan that manages and conserves water in Lake Powell, can prevent negative consequences from them.
Success stories of once drought-ridden landscapes, like Lake Urmia in Iran, give cause for hope. Other projects, like one to improve drinking water in Florida, help both drought-affected environments and communities.
Do you think America is in a housing crisis?
Definitely
Not sure
No way
Only in some cities
Click your choice to see results and speak your mind.
Join our free newsletter for good news and useful tips, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
This Is Going To Be A Buckwild Hurricane Season
Heading into the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season, National Weather Service forecasters at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) are predicting 'above-normal hurricane activity in the Atlantic basin this year.' The season, which runs from June 1 to November 30, is estimated to dish out between 13 and 19 total named storms, with six expected to be hurricanes and three to five of those to be major (category 3 or higher) hurricanes with winds exceeding 111 mph. For the record, NOAA is more often right than wrong, with 70 percent confidence. 'NOAA and the National Weather Service are using the most advanced weather models and cutting-edge hurricane tracking systems to provide Americans with real-time storm forecasts and warnings,' the Administration's Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is quoted saying in a late-May press release. 'With these models and forecasting tools, we have never been more prepared for hurricane season,' Lutnick posited. In some sense, that is certainly true. These days, NOAA is equipped to provide a staggering 6.3 billion observations each day, according to WPLG (ABC Miami) hurricane specialist and storm-surge expert Michael Lowry. Despite all the technology and preparation, NOAA's recently (and severely) shortened staff isn't exactly running at full bore, and 24/7 operations are reportedly becoming untenable at many local stations. A recent New York Times op-ed penned by Lowry, titled 'A Hurricane Season Like No Other,' paints a picture of the agency as a husk of its former, pre-DOGE termination of some 800 roles. 'NOAA put out a mayday on May 13 asking remaining staff members to temporarily vacate their posts to salvage what was left of the nation's critical warning network,' Lowry writes. 'Nearly half of local forecast offices are critically understaffed, with a vacancy rate of 20 percent or higher, and several are going dark for part of the day, increasing the risk of weather going undetected and people going unprotected and unwarned,' he adds, citing staff reshuffling as a symptom of the agency's of existential throes. While this all might be, like, a total bummer for our up-to-the-minute surf forecasts this season, it could also be downright deadly for those of us living seaside and in hurricanes' paths. Weather balloons, which, even with the advent of satellites have remained a primary source of hurricane data collection for more than 60 years, are running at reduced rates. Typically launched twice daily from 100 North American, Caribbean, and Pacific sites, 'weather balloons have been shown to markedly improve forecast accuracy, so much so that twice-daily launches are commonly supplemented with up to four launches a day ahead of major hurricane threats,' according to Lowry. They also critically inform 'time-sensitive decisions like evacuation orders.' Meanwhile, nationwide, balloon launches are down between 15 and 20 percent nationwide as we face what will likely be an especially active hurricane season. In some places, skeleton-crew staff at the National Weather Service are so preoccupied with other priorities that weather-balloon flights are suspended altogether. During hurricane private equity toys with the idea of turning public services like weather forecasting into cash cows, it's reported that the National Weather Service—which our tax dollars are still supposedly funding—costs the average American $4 per year. What's your peace of mind worth? Hell, at base level: What's a half-decent, subscription-free surf report worth? When there is no hint of a blueprint, no modicum of a foundation for an alternative weather-forecasting system, administration, and/or agency, is hastily scrapping the one that's in place—and which our very livelihood and lives, let alone recreation depend upon—in anyone's best interest? Could the private sector drum up a service to supplement or perhaps even supplant NOAA and the National Weather Service while doing it better and cheaper, as Project 2025 and its proponents propose? In a perfect world, why not? But then, 'If the private sector could have done it better and cheaper, it would have,' summates Lowry, and the fact of the matter remains: 'it hasn't.' How long do we want to wait? And how long could we have to wait for a reimagined weather service? The first one only took 155 years. Don't hold your breath, though it might not hurt to keep an eye on the Is Going To Be A Buckwild Hurricane Season first appeared on Surfer on Jun 7, 2025
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
NC must be ready to pay for hurricane recovery if FEMA loses funding, Gov. Stein says
North Carolina legislators may need to put hundreds of millions of dollars into the state's rainy-day fund to help with hurricane relief in case the federal government stops supporting disaster recovery, Gov. Josh Stein says. At a press conference marking the start of the Atlantic hurricane season, Stein said Thursday that President Donald Trump's cuts to the Federal Emergency Management Agency could leave states on their own to fund disaster recovery. Cuts to the federal agency that provides emergency aid to individuals and communities after events such as hurricanes, floods and fires constitutes 'a man-made disaster,' Stein said. The governor also said he was concerned about cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, whose National Hurricane Center and National Weather Service forecasts provide the basis for weather-related planning to keep people out of harm's way. 'We are heading into this hurricane season with more uncertainty than usual,' Stein said, because funding for FEMA and NOAA are both in flux. Forecasters at NOAA and Colorado State University both have said they expect a busier-than-average hurricane season, which runs from June 1 to Nov. 30. NOAA's forecasters say the Atlantic and Gulf coasts should expect 13 to 19 named storms in 2025. Of those, six to 10 are forecast to become hurricanes, including three to five that could be major hurricanes, Category 3 or stronger, with winds of at least 111 mph. The Atlantic basin has been in a period of more frequent hurricanes that are stronger and more destructive than in the past, probably due in part to climate change, researchers say. Hurricane Helene, which came ashore on Florida's Gulf Coast last September, was a tropical storm by the time it reached North Carolina, but has been blamed for 107 deaths in the state and caused more than $53 billion in damage, according to estimates made in October. As of May 30, FEMA said it had given North Carolina more than $656 million through the Public Assistance program, which funds state and local governments' response and recovery work, including road repair, debris removal and infrastructure repair. Through FEMA's Public Assistance program, the state received more than $484 million at a 100% federal cost share for 180 days, funding projects for road repair, debris removal, critical infrastructure repair and more. Since Jan. 20, 2025, more than $172 million in Public Assistance reimbursements has been approved to support the recovery efforts in North Carolina. The agency says it also has approved more than $455 million to help storm survivors pay for food, medicine, housing and home repairs, and another $22.4 million to repair private roads and bridges damaged by Helene. Stein and William Ray, the state's director of emergency management, said the beginning of hurricane season is a good time to start an emergency kit, which could be filled and ready to go when the season ramps up in North Carolina, usually beginning in August. has specific guidance on what to put into a hurricane kit and information on evacuation zones and routes. This story was produced with financial support from the Hartfield Foundation and Green South Foundation, in partnership with Journalism Funding Partners, as part of an independent journalism fellowship program. The N&O maintains full editorial control of the work. If you would like to help support local journalism, please consider signing up for a digital subscription, which you can do here.


USA Today
4 hours ago
- USA Today
How do you prepare for a hurricane? What to know for hurricane season 2025.
How do you prepare for a hurricane? What to know for hurricane season 2025. Show Caption Hide Caption Hurricane season will be a busy one, experts say Dr. Michael Brennan, Director of the National Hurricane Center, said he expected a busy hurricane season and urged people to begin to prepare. The Atlantic Hurricane season has begun, and now is the best time to prepare for a possible storm, federal officials said. "Take action TODAY to be better prepared for when the worst happens. Understand your risk from hurricanes, and begin preparations now," the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said. In the Atlantic Basin, which includes storms that form in the Atlantic, the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of America (formerly known as Gulf of Mexico), hurricane season lasts from June 1 until Nov. 30. Historically, 97% of all tropical cyclones in the Atlantic will form between those two dates. How do you prepare for a hurricane? To prepare for an impeding storm, the basics are to create an emergency plan, secure your home, gather supplies, and stay informed. You should know your evacuation route, have a disaster supply kit, and keep up with the latest weather reports. Here's what you should do: How to prepare now for hurricanes What should be in a disaster supply kit? Your kit should have enough non-perishable food, water and medicine to last each person in your family a minimum of three days (store a longer than three-day supply of water, if possible). Electricity and water could be out for days or weeks. You'll also need extra cash, a battery-powered radio and flashlights. You may need a portable crank or solar-powered USB charger for your cell phones. Additionally, it's important to remember specific needs, such as medications, baby supplies, and pet supplies. How do I know when to evacuate? You should evacuate when orders to do so come from your local authorities, or if you live in an evacuation zone. You should start to consider evacuating when a hurricane watch is issued in your area, especially if you live in a storm surge or flood zone. If a major hurricane (Category 3 or above) is coming, evacuation is typically recommended. What do I need to bring to a shelter? Bring your disaster supply kit. Also bring hygiene items, a blanket, pillow, medications, and identification. Snacks, face masks, hand sanitizer, and other personal cleaning items are also good to bring. Important documents are also helpful. What does a hurricane warning mean? A hurricane warning means that hurricane conditions, which includes winds of 74 mph or greater, are expected within your area within the next 24 hours. This is more urgent than a hurricane watch, which only notes that hurricane conditions are possible. When a warning is issued, you should take immediate action to protect yourself and your property, including evacuating if ordered by local officials.