What to Expect By the End of Summer
What to Expect By the End of Summer
The craziness seems to be speeding up, doesn't it? It's not difficult to see that we're on a trajectory to a radically different world than the one we've been used to in the post-WWII era. The hard part is trying to predict when things will happen and pin them down to a useful time frame. With Memorial Day marking the beginning of the social (though not astronomical) summer season, let's peer into the crystal ball and see what we might expect to live through by the end of summer.First: it's going to be a hot one. The NOAA's most recent monthly climate trends report anticipates higher than average temperatures across almost all of the continental United States, save for a couple very lucky bubbles in the Pacific Northwest and the Northern Plains states. The desert Southwest and New England should prepare for a real scorching by the end of summer, with no end in sight for the western drought. This means more wildfires than usual, although with the climate in flux, what's “normal” anymore anyway?By all accounts, there's a food shortage coming. Sara Menker, an expert food insecurity analyst, told the UN Security Council on May 19th that global wheat stocks were lower than expected, with only about ten weeks left at the current rate of consumption (and that was over a week ago), with other grains like maize and rice (and cooking oil) also in low supply. That means some serious hunger by the end of summer, before the next grain harvest is due in the Northern hemisphere.That next harvest is also looking to be smaller than usual. The Russia/Ukraine war in one of the world's most important breadbaskets will impact food supplies, of course. But so will the rising heat, ongoing drought and climate crisis, fertilizer shortage and price hikes, export bans in countries who want to safeguard their domestic food supply first, and continuing logistical bottlenecks. Some farmers in the southern Plains have already abandoned their crops. Readers in the United States already feel the shortage as higher food prices, but it means that many people in poorer countries are likely to be priced out of food altogether, much as they were after the Great Recession in 2007.
Hurricane Florence as seen from the ISS in 2018. Photo by NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. CC BY 2.0
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This is just the beginning. Above-normal heat is forecast for most of the U.S. this summer.
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About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.