DROUGHT & DESERTIFICATION
  
- Within 50 years, 
there could be irreversible drought (permanent  desertification) in the 
southwestern US, Southeast Asia, Eastern South America,  Western 
Australia, Southern Europe, Southern  Africa, and northern Africa. 1(National Oceanic and  Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA), 2009)
      - The percentage of Earth's land area gripped  by severe drought more than doubled from the 1970s to the early 2000s.2 (Dai,  2004)
 - Examples  of recent regional droughts:
     - China’s
 northern region, where 10-meter deep  cracks began to appear in fields.
 Without drastic changes in water use, there  could be tens of millions 
of environmental refugees from China appearing within the next ten  
years.3 (Sept 2010)
      - Having  just faced historic floods in 2009 due to a record rise in Amazon River water  levels, several communities in Brazil’s  Amazonas state have been isolated by drought and can no longer be accessed by  boat, only by foot through the forest. 4,5(Sept 2010)
      - Iraq, China, Chad, Australia, Mongolia,  Africa’s Sahel region,  among others, have been suffering drought conditions in 2010.6,7,8,9,10,11  
  
   
 SHORTAGE: WATER
 
- The world's rivers are
 in a “crisis state” on a global scale. Water supplies for  nearly 80% 
of the world’s populations are highly threatened. Nearly a third of  
sources studied are also highly jeopardized by biodiversity loss.22,23 (US
  researchers Professor Peter McIntyre of the University of 
Wisconsin-Madison and  City College of New York modeler Charles 
Vörösmarty) 
 - Recent regional reports on  water shortage:
- The  Middle East’s water supply has shrunk to a  quarter of its 1960 level.24 (Arab Forum for Environment and  Development (AFED), 2010) 
 - The Tigris and Euphrates  rivers dropped to less than a third of their normal levels due to drought.25 (UN Inter-Agency Information and Analysis Unit (IAU))
 - UK’s increasingly hotter, drier summers  could cause extreme water shortages as river flows are reduced by 80%.26,27 (Britain’s  Government Office for Science, 2010)
  
 - Sources of groundwater for wells, which support half  our world’s population, are running dry.28 (Lance Endersbee, Monasy University, Australia)  
 - 1.1 billion people lack access to safe drinking  water.29 (World Health Organization, 2005)
 
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