In Spain, last winter, it rained some 40% less than normal. With this year’s early heat spells, the situation has gotten even worse. And the researchers are announcing today that global warming and its effect on the Azores anticyclone have something to do with it.
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The drought. Some will be tempted to say that Spain, just as much as Portugal, is used to it. That’s a fact. But researchers from the Oceanographic Institute of Woods Hole (USA) today report that the Iberian Peninsula has not been this dry for more than 1,000 years. In question, theAzores High and the transformations it is undergoing under the effect of global warming.
Remember that the Azores anticyclone is a zone of high pressure which revolves over the North Atlantic. With significant effects on weather report in Western Europe. And the researchers found that this anticyclone has changed dramatically over the past century. Even about 200 years ago it began to grow, to expand. The trend has only accelerated. At the rhythm of our emissions of greenhouse gas.
Devastating effects to come
The effects on weather report of this widening of the Azores anticyclone were recorded in particular in the stalagmites. For 1,200 years, winters in the western Mediterranean have been getting drier and drier. And according to researchers’ projections, precipitation levels are expected to drop another 10 to 20 percent by the end of the century. Because as long as our greenhouse gas emissions have not slowed down, the Azores High will continue to expand.
The trouble is that winter rains are particularly important for the ecological and economic health of Portugal and Spain. Without them, areas suitable for viticulture, for example, could almost completely disappear by 2050. Olive production could drop by 30% by 2100.
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