Climate Change Drove Drought in the Amazon
The world’s largest river and rainforest was parched
by extreme temperatures last year that would have been highly unlikely without
climate change, scientists said.
Manuela Andreoni
By Manuela Andreoni
Reporting from Rio de Janeiro.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/24/climate/amazon-drought-low-water.html?searchResultPosition=7
Published
Jan. 24, 2024
Updated
Jan. 29, 2024
Climate
change fueled the remarkable 2023 drought that drained major rivers, fueled
huge wildfires and threatened the livelihoods of millions of people in the
Amazon rainforest, scientists said on Wednesday.
Deforestation
of the Amazon, the world’s largest and most biodiverse rainforest, has
decreased rainfall and weakened the ability of trees and soil to retain
moisture, researchers found. That made drought more acute and caused the forest
to be less resilient to environmental destruction and events like wildfires.
The Amazon
River, the world’s largest by volume, and several of its tributaries reached
their lowest levels in 120 years of record-keeping last year. One fifth of the
world’s freshwater flows through the rainforest.
A severe
drought would have still occurred if humans hadn’t so profoundly changed the
climate. But the burning of fossil fuels gave it the ranking of “exceptional,”
the highest category in the U.S. Drought Monitor classification system,
according to the study published by the World Weather Attribution initiative,
an international collaboration among scientists that focuses on rapid analysis
of extreme weather events.
As global
greenhouse emissions continue to increase, the world will see more extreme
drought, said Ben Clarke, an author of the study and a researcher at the
Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at Imperial
College London. “We’re now in the highest classification, so we don’t have any
more to assign.”
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The study
is further evidence that global warming caused by human activity is
accelerating the devastation of the world’s largest and most biodiverse
rainforest. Parts of the Amazon have started to transform from rainforest that
stores huge amounts of heat-trapping gases into drier regions that are
releasing the gases into the atmosphere. The result is a double blow to the
global struggle to fight climate change and biodiversity loss.
Awareness
about the drought’s severity grew after more than 150 river dolphins suffocated
to death in October. The drought cut off thousands of people living in remote
communities who can only travel by boat. And it fueled wildfires that made the
air some of the most hazardous in the world.
The drought
also forced a major hydropower plant to shut down in Brazil and severely
reduced the output of others in the region, causing power outages in Ecuador
and Venezuela. Countries in the region are highly dependent on river flows to
generate electricity, and some had to turn to diesel-powered plants to meet
demand.
The group
of scientists from Brazil, the Netherlands, Britain and the U.S. used
peer-reviewed methods to check whether and to what extent the drought has been
influenced by climate change and the El Niño climate pattern, which is
associated with drought in the region.
The El Niño
did reduce rainfall, scientists found. But increased temperatures caused by the
burning of fossil fuels made the lack of rainfall 10 times as likely as it
would have been in a hypothetical world where humans hadn’t transformed the
climate, they said. Global warming also made the dehydration of soil and plants
as well as the reduced river flows 30 times as likely.
Though the
study only covered the drought from June to November last year, the dry
conditions have persisted into the region’s rainy season, marking the first
time that has happened in such a significant section of the forest.
Rains have
brought some relief to major rivers, but many remain below normal levels for
this time of year. The drought is expected to end when El Niño subsides, which
scientists expect within a few months.
Scientists
said that governments can mitigate the impact of future droughts by decreasing
levels of deforestation, restoring forests and helping communities adapt.
While
Brazil and Colombia have recently slashed rates of deforestation in the Amazon,
the forest continues to lose tree cover. It has already shrunk by almost a
fifth of its original size.
Fueled by
global warming, the drought affected some of the most pristine sections of the
forests, said Regina Rodrigues, a professor at Brazil’s University of Santa
Catarina and one of the authors of the study.
“We have to
reduce emissions,” she said. Otherwise the forest “will not survive climate
change.”
Manuela
Andreoni is a Times climate and environmental reporter and a writer for the
Climate Forward newsletter. More about Manuela Andreoni
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