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Subject: US battles epic drought, little relief in sight
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*Perilous Times and Global Warming

US battles epic drought, little relief in sight*

AFP - Sunday, October 28

ATLANTA, United States (AFP) - - As California battles wind-whipped 
wildfires, vast areas of the United States are struggling with an epic 
drought that has millions of people fearing their taps could run dry.

In the southeastern United States, farmers are struggling with failing 
crops, environmentalists warn of impending disaster and three states are 
locked in battle over the use of a rapidly dwindling manmade lake.

"Nearly half of the Southeast is in extreme drought and water supplies 
have reached critical levels in some cities," says Michael Halpert, head 
of forecast operations at the official Climate Prediction Center.

In California, a week of infernos destroyed hundreds of houses and 
businesses, forced 300,000 people to flee their homes.

Many parts of the state have experienced record low rainfalls this year 
as temperatures shot to all-time highs, leaving vast swaths of parched 
countryside at the mercy of fires propelled by powerful winds.

Los Angeles recorded just 8.15 centimeters (3.21 inches) of rain in the 
year to June 30, making it the driest year on record since 1877. The 
city draws half its water from the Sierra Nevada mountains, which have 
provided only around 20 percent of normal levels.

Meteorologists fear a dry winter will prolong the drought in many of the 
affected regions.

Forecasters say a major storm could still barrel in from the Atlantic 
and bring badly-needed rains to the southeastern United States, but 
point out there is only one month left in the six-month hurricane season.

"With the hardest-hit areas needing more than a foot (30 centimeters) of 
rain to pull out of drought, this drought is not going away soon," said 
government forecaster Randy Schechter.

He said drought was expected to persist from northeastern Alabama to the 
mid-Atlantic states, and might redevelop in Florida, which has had some 
rainfall in recent weeks. In the western United States, drought is 
likely to continue from southern California into Arizona, Schechter said.

The worst hit is the southeastern state of Georgia, that is largely 
under level four, or "extreme" drought. Officials say this is the worst 
drought the state has experienced since 1892, if not in history.

Much of Georgia has been placed under a state of emergency, and Governor 
Sonny Perdue has requested federal aid.

Of major concern are the rapidly dropping water levels at Lake Lanier, a 
38,000 acre (15,378 ha) reservoir.

The man-made lake supplies drinking water to three million people, 
mainly in Atlanta, and feeds the Chattahoochee River, which runs along 
the Alabama border and into Florida.

Perdue wants to reduce the amount of water that is released from the 
lake into the river, but Alabama says this would lead to the closure of 
a power plant and industrial facilities, while Florida has warned it 
would threaten an endangered mussel species.

Perdue has sought help from US President George W. Bush and filed a 
lawsuit requiring the water flow to be reduced.

"Drought is a natural disaster, and we are experiencing the single worst 
drought on Georgia's history. On top of that, we are mired in a man-made 
disaster of federal bureaucracy," he said at a recent news conference on 
the banks of the withering Lake Lanier.

The drought has left cattlemen with significant shortages of hay. "It's 
a very precarious situation right now," said Curt Lacy, a livestock 
economist at the University of Georgia. "I don't see how we will not 
have to liquidate cows due to the lack of hay supplies we have in the 
state this year."

In mid-Atlantic Maryland, "just about every crop was affected," said 
Buddy Hance, deputy secretary of the state's Agriculture Department. A 
farmer himself, Hance says his crop of soybean and corn this year was 70 
percent below average.

"Many livestock producers have found it difficult to maintain feed 
supplies. Hay is in short supply and grass is almost non-existent on 
some farms," the South Carolina Farm Bureau Federation said.

Across the region, authorities have imposed restrictions on water use, 
and Georgia even ordered utilities companies to cut consumption by 10 
percent.

And as firefighters in California battle massive blazes, officials in 
the Southeast are urging residents to exercise utmost caution around the 
states' bone-dry forests.

In Georgia, which has about 8,000 forest fires in an average year, 
forestry officials say the extended drought has set the stage for 
record-breaking fire activity, at a time when the state is worried about 
dwindling water supplies.

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