16 May 2017

When is a drought a drought?

Author(s) Ilan Kelman, Reader in Risk, Resilience and Global Health at University College London, England and Professor II at the University of Agder, Kristiansand, Norway, University College London

Droughts are complicated, often more human-caused than precipitation-caused (Wilhite and Glantz, 1985). Nonetheless, precipitation and water certainly have a role to play, by definition.

In discussions of the ongoing California drought, much of the emphasis is on industrial and agricultural water use. A few commentators have the knee-jerk reaction that it must be climate change only. It might eventually be proven that climate change contributed, even contributed significantly.

But it is useful to see powerful statements and frightening imagery about how overusing water in a desert does, unsurprisingly, lead to drought. A good summary comes from Andrew Revkin.

Meanwhile, Taiwan reports water rationing due to a drought. The article begins with the environment “The shortage is due to reduced rainfall” connects to human use “leaving water levels in reservoirs far below capacity” and then accepts many vulnerability factors in that “a leaky delivery system, silt build-up in reservoirs and wastage are also being blamed”.

We could speculate about climate change’s role. Do we need to? There seems to be so many vulnerability factors present–although we do not know the relative proportions–that invoking the hazard driver of climate change to blame the drought would not label the root causes of it.

It is not good to see these droughts happening nor their effects on society and the environment. It is good to see how prominently vulnerability factors are mentioned for these two droughts.

As with this blog’s title, back to another ancient article from “Nature” about “Taking the naturalness out of natural disasters” (O’Keefe et al., 1977). We revisited the ethos that no disasters are “natural” in an article last year (Gaillard et al. 2014) highlighting that we need to blame humanity, not climate change, for disasters.

Today’s droughts confirm that view.


Note: This blog’s title comes from Glantz and Katz (1977).

 

Citations

Gaillard, JC, M.H. Glantz, I. Kelman, B. Wisner, Z. Delica-Willison, and M. Keim. 2014. “Taking the ‘naturalness’ out of natural disaster (again)”. Natural Hazards Observer, vol. 38, no. 3, pp. 1,14-16.

Glantz, M.H. and R.W. Katz. 1977. When is a drought a drought? Nature, 267, 192-193.

O’Keefe, P., K. Westgate, and B. Wisner. 1976. Taking the naturalness out of natural disasters. Nature, 260, 566-567.

Wilhite, D.A. and M.H. Glantz. 1985. Understanding the Drought Phenomenon: The Role of Definitions. Water International, 10(3), 111-120

This post was first published on the MAHB-UTS Blog. You can read the original version here: https://mahb.stanford.edu/blog/when-is-drought-drought/


Ilan Kelman is Reader in Risk, Resilience and Global Health at University College London, England and Professor II at the University of Agder, Kristiansand, Norway.

His overall research interest is linking disasters and health, including the integration of climate change into disaster research and health research. That covers three main areas: (i) disaster diplomacy and health diplomacy http://www.disasterdiplomacy.org ; (ii) island sustainability involving safe and healthy communities in isolated locations http://www.islandvulnerability.org ; and (iii) risk education for health and disasters http://www.riskred.org

You can visit Ilan's website at http://www.ilankelman.org and follow him on Twitter @IlanKelman.

Explore further

Hazards Drought
Share this

Please note: Content is displayed as last posted by a PreventionWeb community member or editor. The views expressed therein are not necessarily those of UNDRR, PreventionWeb, or its sponsors. See our terms of use

Is this page useful?

Yes No Report an issue on this page

Thank you. If you have 2 minutes, we would benefit from additional feedback (link opens in a new window).