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US Drought Coverage Hits Record High for March: 61% of Lower 48 States Face Severe Water Crisis

2 min · 29. huhti 2026
jakson US Drought Coverage Hits Record High for March: 61% of Lower 48 States Face Severe Water Crisis kansikuva

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Nearly two thirds of the United States is now battling drought, the highest levels ever recorded for this time of year. According to a recent press briefing on America's extreme drought and its climate connection, more than sixty one percent of the lower forty eight states face drought conditions, including ninety seven percent of the Southeast and two thirds of the West. This marks the highest drought coverage since the United States Drought Monitor began tracking in two thousand. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Palmer Drought Severity Index hit its highest March level since records started in eighteen ninety five, with last month ranking as the third driest ever across the nation. Record heat, intensified by a warming atmosphere, combined with an exceptionally dry March to trigger widespread impacts. Water restrictions have taken effect in multiple regions, wildfires have erupted more frequently, and crop losses are mounting, with no major relief expected soon. Climate change leaves a clear fingerprint on this abnormal warmth fueling the historic drought. In parts of states like those in the northern regions, moderate drought has returned to some areas after brief improvements, while abnormally dry conditions rebuild elsewhere. Certain populations face added strains, lacking access to safe water and sanitation due to aging infrastructure, all worsened by shifting climate patterns. The Department of Energy's July twenty nine, twenty twenty five report, A Critical Review of Impacts of Greenhouse Gas Emissions on the United States Climate, offers a contrasting view. It analyzes peer reviewed literature and government data, concluding that claims of rising frequency or intensity of hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, and droughts lack support from United States historical records. The report asserts carbon dioxide induced warming causes less economic damage than often portrayed, warns aggressive mitigation strategies might harm more than help, and notes United States policy actions will have tiny, delayed effects on global climate. NASA Science observations from space highlight how Earth's warming climate amplifies wildland fire activity, especially in northern and temperate forests. Satellites track these fires, aiding preparation and revealing growing risks tied to climate shifts. Emerging patterns show drought and heat dominating the United States Southwest and Southeast, with fires posing broader threats, underscoring ongoing debates over extreme weather trends amid rapid changes. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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jakson Climate Crisis Now: How Human Activity Is Reshaping Weather, Health and Infrastructure Across America kansikuva

Climate Crisis Now: How Human Activity Is Reshaping Weather, Health and Infrastructure Across America

According to NASA, human activity is the principal cause of the warming trend now affecting the planet, and the effects are already visible in stronger heat waves, melting ice, sea level rise, and more severe weather. In the United States, recent climate reporting has focused on the growing strain from extreme heat, drought, and flood risks, especially in the West, the South, and coastal regions. According to the United Nations climate reports, atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide have reached new record highs, which helps explain why dangerous weather extremes keep intensifying. In the United States, those global trends are showing up in practical ways, from hotter urban summers to higher wildfire danger and more expensive disaster recovery. NOAA climate tracking continues to link individual weather disasters with the broader climate patterns that make them more likely or more severe. In Washington, DC, the US Climate Action Summit 2025 brought together climate leaders for a week of events focused on policy, investment, and state level action. That summit reflected a growing pattern in the United States, where states, cities, and private groups are often moving faster than federal action on emissions reduction and adaptation. The U.S. Climate Alliance says governors in its bipartisan coalition are continuing to push state led climate solutions, which has become a major part of the American response. At the same time, recent global climate coverage has highlighted extreme heat in Europe and growing concern over heat related deaths in poorer countries, underscoring that the climate crisis is not limited to one region. The pattern is increasingly clear. Heat is becoming more frequent and more dangerous, water stress is worsening in some places and flooding is becoming more destructive in others, and the United States is facing all of these risks at once. The most important recent insight is that climate change is no longer a distant forecast. It is a live public safety issue, shaping weather, health, infrastructure, and emergency planning across the United States and around the world. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

10. kesä 20262 min
jakson Climate Change Accelerating: US Faces Rising Disasters, Health Risks, and Economic Costs kansikuva

Climate Change Accelerating: US Faces Rising Disasters, Health Risks, and Economic Costs

According to NASA, Earth is warming at an unprecedented rate because of human activity, and the effects are already showing up in stronger heat waves, sea level rise, melting ice, and more severe weather. In the United States, that broader trend is now being reflected in repeated climate related disasters, rising costs, and intensifying impacts on communities, infrastructure, and public health. In the past week, the most notable climate related news has continued to center on extreme weather risk, federal and state response, and the growing use of climate data to plan for hotter and more volatile conditions. The United States Environmental Protection Agency says its climate information program focuses on the health, prosperity, and security of Americans, underscoring how climate change is now being treated not only as an environmental issue but also as a public safety and economic issue. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration tracks billion dollar weather and climate disasters, and its long running data show that the United States has faced a steady stream of costly droughts, tropical cyclones, severe storms, wildfires, floods, winter storms, and freeze events. Recent reporting from climate focused outlets has also highlighted how state leaders are responding. At the Climate Week New York events, governors from the United States Climate Alliance have been promoting stronger state led action on emissions reduction, resilience, and clean energy planning. That matters because many of the most visible climate decisions in the United States are now happening at the state level, especially in places facing repeated heat, flooding, wildfire smoke, and insurance stress. Worldwide, the United Nations has recently warned that atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide remain at record highs, reinforcing that the drivers of warming are still increasing even as countries debate policy responses. The same global pattern is visible in weather impacts, with the United Nations pointing to rising sea levels, floods, droughts, and shifting rainfall as major climate consequences. The clearest emerging pattern is that climate change is no longer a distant forecast. It is an active force shaping daily life, especially in the United States, where the combination of extreme heat, severe storms, wildfire risk, and expensive recovery costs is becoming more frequent and more disruptive. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

6. kesä 20262 min
jakson Extreme Weather Intensifies Across US: Climate Change Driving Costlier Disasters, Record Heat, and Wildfire Risks in 2024 kansikuva

Extreme Weather Intensifies Across US: Climate Change Driving Costlier Disasters, Record Heat, and Wildfire Risks in 2024

Across the United States this week, climate change is showing up not as an abstract idea, but as a pattern of extreme and increasingly costly weather. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reports that the country has already experienced multiple billion dollar weather and climate disasters so far this year, including severe storms and flooding in states like Texas and Oklahoma, part of a trend of more than four hundred such events since 1980. NOAA scientists say the rising toll reflects a warming atmosphere that can hold more moisture, fueling heavier downpours and more dangerous floods. According to the United States Environmental Protection Agency, recent heat waves spreading across the Southwest and parts of the Midwest fit long term projections that climate change will bring more frequent and intense periods of extreme heat. Cities such as Phoenix, Dallas, and St Louis are already preparing heat emergency plans earlier in the season, as nighttime temperatures stay higher and compound health risks, especially for older adults and outdoor workers. Along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts, forecasters are warning of a highly active hurricane season, a concern echoed in new updates from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Warmer ocean surface temperatures, particularly in the Atlantic, are expected to provide more energy for tropical storms, while higher sea levels increase the risk of coastal flooding from storm surge in places like Miami, New Orleans, and Charleston. National outlets such as Inside Climate News report that western states, including California, Arizona, and New Mexico, are entering fire season with dry soils and above average temperatures, conditions that have been linked by scientists at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration to long term warming and shifting precipitation patterns. Fire officials are watching closely after recent years of record breaking wildfires that have sent smoke far across the continent, degrading air quality as far away as the East Coast. Globally, the World Meteorological Organization and the United Nations report that average temperatures over the past year have remained near or above record highs, and that concentrations of planet warming gases such as carbon dioxide and methane have reached new records. Europe and parts of Asia have faced early season heat waves, while heavy rains have caused destructive floods in South Asia and East Africa, reinforcing the scientific consensus that human driven climate change is amplifying both heat and heavy rainfall worldwide. Together, these developments highlight a clear pattern. The United States is experiencing more costly storms, more dangerous heat, and growing wildfire risks, all within a global context of record warmth and rising greenhouse gases, underscoring what NASA describes as unequivocal evidence that Earth is warming and that human activities are the principal cause. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

3. kesä 20263 min
jakson US Drought Coverage Hits Record High for March: 61% of Lower 48 States Face Severe Water Crisis kansikuva

US Drought Coverage Hits Record High for March: 61% of Lower 48 States Face Severe Water Crisis

Nearly two thirds of the United States is now battling drought, the highest levels ever recorded for this time of year. According to a recent press briefing on America's extreme drought and its climate connection, more than sixty one percent of the lower forty eight states face drought conditions, including ninety seven percent of the Southeast and two thirds of the West. This marks the highest drought coverage since the United States Drought Monitor began tracking in two thousand. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Palmer Drought Severity Index hit its highest March level since records started in eighteen ninety five, with last month ranking as the third driest ever across the nation. Record heat, intensified by a warming atmosphere, combined with an exceptionally dry March to trigger widespread impacts. Water restrictions have taken effect in multiple regions, wildfires have erupted more frequently, and crop losses are mounting, with no major relief expected soon. Climate change leaves a clear fingerprint on this abnormal warmth fueling the historic drought. In parts of states like those in the northern regions, moderate drought has returned to some areas after brief improvements, while abnormally dry conditions rebuild elsewhere. Certain populations face added strains, lacking access to safe water and sanitation due to aging infrastructure, all worsened by shifting climate patterns. The Department of Energy's July twenty nine, twenty twenty five report, A Critical Review of Impacts of Greenhouse Gas Emissions on the United States Climate, offers a contrasting view. It analyzes peer reviewed literature and government data, concluding that claims of rising frequency or intensity of hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, and droughts lack support from United States historical records. The report asserts carbon dioxide induced warming causes less economic damage than often portrayed, warns aggressive mitigation strategies might harm more than help, and notes United States policy actions will have tiny, delayed effects on global climate. NASA Science observations from space highlight how Earth's warming climate amplifies wildland fire activity, especially in northern and temperate forests. Satellites track these fires, aiding preparation and revealing growing risks tied to climate shifts. Emerging patterns show drought and heat dominating the United States Southwest and Southeast, with fires posing broader threats, underscoring ongoing debates over extreme weather trends amid rapid changes. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

29. huhti 20262 min
jakson Western US Snow Drought Threatens Water Supplies as Record Heat Triggers Wildfire and Drought Crisis Across 61% of Nation kansikuva

Western US Snow Drought Threatens Water Supplies as Record Heat Triggers Wildfire and Drought Crisis Across 61% of Nation

The western United States faces a severe snow drought this year, according to CBS News ClimateWatch, threatening water supplies across the region and heightening risks for wildfires as snowpack fails to replenish reservoirs. This crisis compounds a broader drought gripping nearly two thirds of the lower forty-eight states, the highest levels recorded for this time of year, as detailed in a recent press briefing on America's extreme drought and its climate connection. Record heat, intensified by a warming atmosphere and the third driest March ever in the United States, has triggered water restrictions, early wildfires, and crop losses, with over sixty-one percent of the lower forty-eight affected, including ninety-seven percent of the Southeast and two thirds of the West. Last month marked the hottest March on record for the Lower forty-eight states, surpassing any previous month by the widest margin, federal data confirms via CBS News. A forecast El Nino could push global temperatures even higher later this year, researchers warn, exacerbating these patterns. Meanwhile, a new report from the American Lung Association ranks the cleanest and most polluted United States cities by ozone and particle pollution levels, spotlighting air quality declines linked to climate stressors. On the policy front, the head of the Environmental Protection Agency defended repealing a key legal determination that underpins federal rules to curb climate change, per CBS News. Separately, a Department of Energy report from July twenty-nine, twenty twenty-five, critically reviews greenhouse gas impacts, concluding that carbon dioxide induced warming may be less economically damaging than thought, and aggressive mitigation could prove more harmful, while United States actions yield undetectably small global effects. Worldwide, the United Nations confirms the past decade as the hottest on record, with Earth pushed beyond its limits, Earth.Org reports. Water sources deplete faster than they restore, United Nations researchers note, and a Nature journal study reveals most sea level rise projections underestimated coastal heights by an average foot. These trends signal emerging patterns of intensified droughts, record heats, and policy divides in the United States, mirroring global warnings of accelerating warming. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

25. huhti 20263 min