LifestyleStudy Links Extreme Amazon Drought to Climate Change

Study Links Extreme Amazon Drought to Climate Change

Severe drought dried up rivers and made it ‌difficult to travel between ‍cities in the ⁢state of ⁤Amazonas

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⁤ ⁢⁢ Severe drought ‌dried up rivers and⁣ made it difficult to‌ travel between cities in the state of⁤ Amazonas.

Climate change was the chief⁢ driver of‌ the devastating drought that gripped the Amazon last year, as warming ⁤threatens one⁣ of the world’s most important ecosystems for⁢ stabilizing the global climate.

The historic agricultural drought affected millions ⁤of people across the Amazon basin, stoking ‌huge wildfires, shrinking key waterways ⁤and taking a calamitous⁤ toll on wildlife.

Some experts have⁢ suggested that ‌the arrival ⁤of⁣ the naturally occurring El Niño weather⁤ phenomenon was behind the ‍tinderbox conditions.

But a new study from⁣ scientists at the World Weather ‍Attribution (WWA) group, published Wednesday, found that ⁣climate change caused by humanity’s planet-heating carbon pollution was the main culprit. ⁢They said it had made the drought 30 times more likely from‍ June ​to⁢ November 2023.

And they warned that the‌ situation would only ⁢get worse⁤ as the climate warms, pushing the Amazon towards a climate ‍”tipping‌ point”.

Scientists‍ fear that climate change and deforestation combined could intensify drying and warming in‍ the Amazon. They say that would trigger an accelerating transition from tropical forest to savannah and ⁤reduce its capacity to store carbon.

The Amazon is estimated to store more​ than 100 billion tonnes of carbon in its trees and ​soils, over twice the​ worldwide annual emissions from​ all sources.

“The Amazon could⁣ make or break our fight against climate change,” said Regina Rodrigues, ‌Professor of Physical Oceanography ‍and Climate at the Federal University ‍of Santa Catarina.

“If we protect the forest, it⁤ will continue to ‌act as the⁤ world’s largest land-based carbon sink.

“But if we allow human-induced emissions and deforestation to push ⁤it through the tipping point, it will release large ​amounts of carbon dioxide, further complicating our fight against climate change.”

Shortages

Drought ⁢conditions in the Amazon basin ⁢have been driven ⁣since mid-2023 by low ⁤rainfall and high temperatures.

River levels were⁤ dramatically reduced, devastating a region that relies on its ​labyrinth ⁣of waterways for transportation and basic needs.

Crops failed and communities faced shortages of food and drinking water.

Very warm water temperatures⁤ were also linked to the deaths of around 150 dolphins in the space of a week in one lake​ in the Brazilian Amazon.

To investigate‍ the ⁤role climate ⁣change may have ⁤played‌ in the⁤ drought,⁣ scientists used weather data and​ computer model simulations. They compared⁢ today’s climate—with about 1.2 degrees ⁤Celsius of temperature rise since the pre-industrial era—with the situation before global warming.

They found that climate change ‍had made the low rainfall 10 times more likely and agricultural ⁤drought ⁢about 30 ​times more​ likely.

The researchers⁣ warned ⁣that while the drought was currently a once-in-50-year‌ event, with global warming of 2C‍ the Amazon ⁣would suffer ‍these conditions about every 13 years.

“This result is very worrying,” said Friederike Otto,

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