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originally posted by: ElGoobero
how expensive will food be?
will we see genuine real shortages?
will there be riots?
refugees?
not going to be a fun fall/winter.
am I being an alarmist or is this a real global event?
originally posted by: ArMaP
a reply to: network dude
If the climate is different, what do you call that?
originally posted by: ToneDeaf
Global shale basins map
Global Drought map
originally posted by: Scubalicious
It’s been raining cats and dogs in the Southern Hemisphere of late, that’s the other half of the world.
Britain officially declared a drought in parts of England on Friday as households faced new water usage restrictions during a period of prolonged hot and dry weather that has already severely tested the
nation’s infrastructure.
Parts of southern, central and eastern England are now in drought status, meaning that water companies will step up efforts to manage the impact of dry weather on farmers and the environment, the Environment Agency said in a statement.
Much of Europe has faced weeks of baking temperatures that have triggered large wildfires, drained water levels of the Rhine River in Germany and seen the source of Britain’s River Thames dry up further downstream than in previous years.
European Union harvest forecasts are now down 16% for grain maize, 15% for soybeans and 12% for sunflowers compared with its average for the previous five years.
Agricultural economists say that has implications not only for food production but also for the dairy and livestock farmers who rely on such items to rear their animals.
Extreme heat in China played havoc on Wednesday despite lower temperatures in some regions, with authorities across the Yangtze river basin scrambling to limit the damage from climate change on power, crops and livestock.
According to the China Meteorological Agency, although the heat wave has subsided somewhat, the drought has not stopped and may well last into the fall.
Along with other provinces in the middle and lowlands of the Yangtze River basin such as Hunan and Anhui, Jiangxi's grain production is most at risk. But other provinces such as Sichuan, Hubei, Henan and Guizhou have also been affected.
According to Li Ge, a farmer in Yugan County in northern Jiangxi, the drought will undoubtedly affect rice production, but the full extent will not be known until late September.