Earth ChangesS


Hourglass

India to tackle drought shortfalls 'with imports'

India Drought
© Agence France-PresseThe annual monsoon is running at 26% below average.

New Delhi - India will import lentils, edible oil and other staples to cope with any shortfalls caused by a widespread drought that has badly hurt crops, the finance minister said Friday.

The statement by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee came as the country of nearly 1.2 billion people faces its weakest monsoon in at least seven years.

"We shall go for imports" of "whichever commodity will be in short supply," Mukherjee told a state farm ministers' meeting in the Indian capital.

He noted supplies of pulses and edible oil were already running short. India is the world's largest consumer and importer of pulses.

But Mukherjee said India has enough grain stocks to tide it through for the moment.

"We are starting the drought year with good buffer stocks," Mukherjee said.

"The government has the experience to deal with such situations and we need not lose confidence in ourselves," he added.

The government would not announce the timing of any imports so as to avoid market prices being automatically jacked up, he said.

Cowboy Hat

Cattle, crop losses mount in Texas drought

Dallas - A vast swathe of Texas remains in the grip of a scorching drought, which has cost billions of dollars and is cleaving America's largest beef cattle herd.

One county has seen its entire cotton harvest wiped out and losses for cattle, crops and the state's fast growing game farming industry are seen mounting with no relief in sight. Texas is second only to California in U.S. farm production and the sector's sales for the state topped $21 billion in 2007.

The drought-stricken area straddles the central Texas hill country, near the capitol Austin, and stretches south through San Antonio to the Rio Grande Valley on the U.S./Mexico border, which is a key citrus and cattle region.

According to the U.S. Drought Monitor here, much of this area is experiencing exceptional drought conditions. That is the worst possible ranking and it is the only part of the country that currently falls into this category.

Other areas of south/central Texas are suffering extreme conditions. In most of the affected counties the rains began to taper off sharply around September of 2007. In at least nine counties, the drought is the worst on record.

Cow Skull

Flashback Texas Drought So Bad They're 'Hoping for a Hurricane'

Lubbock - If not for the triple-digit heat, central Texas rancher Debbie Davis could almost think it was a different season entirely.

"The (pasture) grass looks like it's the dead of winter," said Davis, who raises beef cattle and Texas Longhorns northwest of San Antonio. The region is enduring its driest 22-month span going back to 1885. "It's horrible. It's probably the worst I've ever seen."

Usually it's West Texas that's hot and dry. Now, central and southern Texas are alone in the nation in experiencing the two most severe stages of drought. About 11 percent of the state was in "extreme" or "exceptional" drought as of June 30, up from 8 percent the previous week.

That's bad news for farmers and ranchers in the nation's No. 2 agriculture state behind California, who could lose billions in crops and livestock.

Ranchers are sending many more cattle to sale barns, which has driven prices down. There's little pastureland to graze on and the cost to ship hay in from out of state is high as is the price of supplemental feed.

Three years ago in a drought that spanned more than a year, Texas lost $4.1 billion, a crop and livestock record for a single year.

Compass

In California drought is the new normal

"Drought" sounds so temporary, but there's nothing temporary about the decreasing availability of water in Southern California.

As such, we need a new word - and a new attitude - to deal with the region's new reality: Water shortage is the new normal, and it's time to adjust accordingly.

Last week, state leaders began hearings on legislation to resolve California's water crisis. Solutions could include building a canal to carry water around the ecologically fragile Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, and mandates that Californians reduce water consumption.

Balancing the water claims of farmers, fishermen, environmentalists, households and industrial users is about as easy as negotiating a Middle East peace agreement. Yet, the status quo is unacceptable.

The situation in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta has only worsened in the last few year. After a judge halted much of the water pumping from the delta to protect the tiny Delta smelt, some farmers in the San Joaquin Valley had to fallow fields for lack of water. Communities all over Southern California have imposed water-use restrictions. Meanwhile, the environmental damage to the delta is also blamed for shutting down commercial salmon fishing.

Footprints

Flashback California facing worst drought in modern history

Echo Summit - State officials reported a Sierra Nevada snowpack smaller than normal on Thursday and said California may be at the beginning of its worst drought in modern history. Residents were immediately urged to conserve water.

The snowpack was about 61% of its usual depth across the 400-mile-long mountain range, according to the state Department of Water Resources, which released the findings as part of the second snow survey of the season.

Department Director Lester Snow said the results indicate California could be heading for a third dry year.

"We may be at the start of the worst California drought in modern history," Snow said in a statement. "It's imperative for Californians to conserve water immediately at home and in their businesses."

Measurements of snow depth and snow water content in the Sierra are important because they help hydrologists forecast how much water California can expect to get in the coming year.

Cloud Lightning

Hurricane Wave Sweeps 20 to Sea in Maine

rough surf hurricane bill
Robert F. Bukaty/Associated Press

A young girl died and nine people were hospitalized Sunday after a rogue wave from Hurricane Bill slammed into a viewing platform near the ocean at a park in Maine.

A group of about 20 people had gathered on the platform at Thunder Hole in Acadia National Park to watch the waves, which had been stirred up by the hurricane, when five of them were swept out to sea, the Coast Guard said. The spot is a popular tourist attraction, where waves crashing into a rugged granite crevice can create thundering reverberations and high salt sprays. The platform is 10 to 15 feet above the water line, and waves along the coast were running up to 12 feet during the afternoon, according to the Coast Guard.

"This is absolutely the effects of Hurricane Bill," Sonya Berger, a park ranger, told The Associated Press.

Network

Heavy drought continues in northern China

Many regions in Northern China continue to suffer from drought, despite the recent rainfall. The worst drought in 60 years has dried up half of the arable land in Liao-ning province, threatening three million residents.

In hard hit Chaoyang County, over 80 per cent of the crops have died due to the drought. Many farmers will lose their only source of income. But, the region is undergoing trial runs for an agricultural insurance program. Farmers can enjoy reimbursements for losses caused by the drought.

Over 10,000 farmers have been reimbursed by insurance companies, totaling 200,000 yuan. Local authorities have pledged to expand the program to other regions. The measures will help reduce losses during natural disasters. And efforts are underway to provide drinking water to affected residents and their livestock. Liao-ning and Jilin province have used artificial rain to relieve drought stricken areas.

Phoenix

Greece: Thousands flee as fire and destruction advance on Athens

Image
© Milos Bicanski / Getty ImagesFire and smoke illuminate the sky behind the Acropolis in Athens, as wildfires come within 20 kilometres of the Greek capital.
Raging fires were closing in on the Greek capital Athens last night, having already forced thousands of people to flee, razed acres and acres of forest and olive groves, and demolished scores of buildings in the northern suburbs.

Struggling to extinguish the blazes, which sent black clouds of smoke spewing over the Acropolis, the Greek government called on EU allies for reinforcements. Italian planes joined the 20 Greek aircraft dumping gallons of water on the flames, and more were expected from France and Cyprus. "The fire is raging, rekindled by the constant change in the wind's direction," said fire brigade spokesman Giannis Kapakis.

Bizarro Earth

5.8 Earthquake Strikes Off Indonesia's Sumatra Island

A 5.8-magnitude earthquake struck off Indonesia's Sumatra island, meteorologists said, but there were no immediate reports of casualties or damage.

The quake hit at 2:20 pm (0720 GMT) with the epicentre 139 kilometres (86 miles) southwest of Gunungsitoli city in North Sumatra province, 86 kilometres deep, the Indonesian Meteorological and Geophysics Agency said.

No tsunami warning was issued.

Bizarro Earth

5.0 Earthquake Hits Philippines

An earthquake measuring 5.0 on the Richter scale rocked the Philippine Islands Region at 4:27 p.m. Sunday Hong Kong time (0827 GMT), according to a bulletin released by the Hong Kong Observatory.

The epicenter was initially determined to be at 20.1 degrees north latitude and 121.5 degrees east longitude, about 230 kilometers north-northeast of Laoag, the Philippines.