Amazon may be headed for another bad drought

LIMA, (Reuters) – Drought has cut Peru’s Amazon  River to its lowest level in 40 years and it is already below  the minimum set in 2005, when a devastating dry spell damaged  vast swaths of South American rainforest in the worst drought  in decades.

Scientists in Peru and Brazil say the lack of rainfall,  which is typical for this time of year, should continue for a  few more weeks until the start of the rainy season.

But there is some concern that the dryness could persist as  what is shaping up to be an intense hurricane season in the  Atlantic sucks humidity away from the Amazon.

“The formation of hurricanes is very much related, more  hurricanes means less rain for us,” said Marco Paredes, head of  Peru’s meteorological service in Iquitos, some 500 miles (800  km) from the capital of Lima. “It’s an inverse relationship.”

The headwaters of the river start in Peru and its  meteorological service said on Friday the height of the river  in the Amazon city of Iquitos has fallen to 347 feet above sea  level (105.97 meters), 19.6 inches (50 cm) less than where it  was in the previous severe drought.
Officials worry the intensity and frequency of droughts  could become more severe.
“This situation is critical,” Robert Falcon of Peru’s civil  defense agency said of expected food shortages and outbreaks of  illness. “The scientists are already saying that because of  climate change these events will become more frequent.”

Falcon is bracing for a drought like the one that hit five  years ago, when sinking water levels severed connections in the  lattice of creeks, lakes and rivers that make up the Amazon’s  motorboat transportation network.

Thousands of people, fish and boats were stranded as rivers  ran dry to expose cracked dirt on their banks.

At the time of 2005 drought, scientists said it stemmed in  part from a hurricane season that broke numerous records and  caused the catastrophic Katrina storm that devastated New  Orleans.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has  forecast 14 to 23 named storms this year, with 8 to 14  developing into hurricanes, nearly matching 2005’s record of  15. It expects the lack of rainfall to persist.