Lake Mead is Slowly Drying Out Midwest Cornfields are Failing as Well-Water Disappears
Water Woes Have Profound and Often Deadly Consequences
As we watched Iran explode in anger and frustration, with unofficial death tolls as Tehran’s forces massacred protesters, and were hanging others they caught after a very quick trial, most of the world focused on the meagre lifestyles, sky rocketing inflation and prices that required suitcases of cash to shop for groceries that got pricier in hours. But there’s another huge issue in Iran: the capital city is almost out of water. Major cities around the world share the same fate – taps are dry. Cape Town almost went down. Khartoum is shuddering with water woes. Mexico City is struggling. And the big cities in the American Southwest are running dry, fighting over Colorado River water based on long-standing allocations that exceed the capacity of actual available water.
The Ogalla Aquifer (aka High Plains Aquifer), which cuts through the plains states deep into Texas, began losing water when wells switched to diesel pumps to irrigate crops. There are parts of that major water source that are bone dry. Sure, there’s plenty of fresh water in the Great Lakes, but aside from the states around those lakes ready to fight if that water is diverted, water is very heavy and very expensive (in money and energy) to transport. It is a global problem, notwithstanding flooding from mega-storms sucking water from warming seas.
As Julia Jacobo, writing for ABC News (January 21st) addresses an issue that has forced millions into forced migration into lands where they are unwanted, this is a result of our unwillingness to contain climate change: “The world is now in water bankruptcy, according to the UN: What that means… as irreversible damage experienced by water systems has pushed many basins around the world beyond recovery, recent research has shown.
“Some of the worst impacts include chronic groundwater depletion, overallocation of water, deforestation, pollution and degradation to land and soil, according to a report released Tuesday by the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH)… As a result, many regions around the world are experiencing a ‘post-crisis condition,’ which entails irreversible losses of natural water capital and an inability to bounce back to historic baselines, the researchers said.
“The Middle East and North Africa are among the water bankruptcy ‘hot spots’ due to high water stress, climate vulnerability, low agricultural productivity, energy-intensive desalination, sand and dust storms and complex political economies, according to the report… Of the world's large lakes, 50% have lost water since the early 1990s, according to the report. A quarter of humanity directly depends on those lakes, the researchers said.
“In addition, 50% of global domestic water is now derived from groundwater, and 40% of irrigation water is drawn from aquifers being steadily drained. Of the world's major aquifers, 70% are showing long-term decline… Global glacier mass has declined 30% since 1970, with entire low- and mid-latitude mountain ranges expected to lose functional glaciers within decades, according to the report… An ‘overwhelming majority’ of the statistics listed were caused by humans, the researchers said… As a result, 2 billion people worldwide live on sinking ground and 4 billion people face severe water scarcity at least one month every year, according to the report… Between 2022 and 2023, 1.8 million people were living under drought conditions. Starvation is a great motivator, and the resulting anger spawns wars all over the Earth.
Writing for the January 20th Independent, Josh Marcus brings the number close to home: “More than two-thirds of the country [US] is facing unusual dryness or full-blown drought conditions, despite winter being known for heavier precipitation, according to a Washington Post analysis of recent U.S. Drought Monitor data… The conditions touch every state except for the usually drought-prone California, which has had a wet winter.
“The dryness has scientists, local officials, and resource planners alarmed, as the conditions can reduce local water supplies and drive up the risk of wildfires… States with the highest percentage of their area in severe drought include Georgia, Maine, North Carolina, Florida, New Mexico, and Virginia, the paper found.
“In Utah, about 93 percent of the state is experiencing moderate to extreme drought, and temperatures this winter have been nearly 10 degrees above the average… Two-thirds of U.S. territory, including regions in 49 states, are undergoing unusual dryness or full-on drought conditions, amid an unusually warm and dry winter season (AP)… ‘We had green grass and weeds growing in our city even into January, leading me to be more worried about mowing’ instead of shoveling snow. I’ve never seen anything like it,’ Jon Meyer, Utah’s assistant state climatologist, told the paper.
“The conditions have set off alarm bells across the country, especially in regions like the Mountain West, which is dependent on snowfall both for winter tourism dollars and water supplies from snowmelt… Colorado is in a snow drought, and the snowpack is the lowest on record for this time of year, according to Colorado Public Radio, following a December 2025 that was the warmest on record… ‘It’s as grim as it gets right now,’ Brad Udall, water and climate research scientist at the Colorado Water Center at Colorado State University, told the broadcaster.” But climate change is so much more than lost tourist dollars, as so many sky resorts cannot make money. Water is life.
I’m Peter Dekom, and those who have the power to reverse this trend, but who choose to cry “hoax” at the reality of climate change are participating in mass killings and misery…no matter how passionately they live in a world of denial.