Issue

Drought

Submitted by: Bec | 5 comments  VIEW COMMENTS


Photographer : Janeen


What is drought?

Drought does not simply mean low rainfall although low rainfall is a sign of drought. A drought is an ongoing, abnormally dry period where a community's normal water needs cannot be met.

The definition of drought differs according to who measures it and what factors they look for. For example:
  • meteorologists monitor drought by looking at rainfall deficiencies.
  • agriculturalists look to its effect upon primary industries.
  • hydrologists examine groundwater levels. Sociologists observe its impact upon communities.

The impact of drought

If you live in a rural area, you have probably had some sort of experience with the effects of drought. Agricultural areas suffer the effects of drought most acutely, although it does ultimately impact upon the cities.

The immediate effects of drought

Drought disrupts cropping programmes, affects the quality of breeding stock, kills animals, and reduces the productivity of farms. This impacts the economy on local and national scales.

The long term effects of drought

Vegetation loss, soil erosion, water quality and salinity issues all put the long-term health of Australia’s rural environment at risk. Bushfires are more prevalent during drought, and can also cause serious environmental damage.

What causes drought in Australia?

Geographical factors make Australia particularly drought-prone. Most of the country gets low, highly erratic rainfall due to a climate phenomenon called the Southern Oscillation, which is a shift in air pressure between Asian and East Pacific regions.

You may have heard of El Niño. El Niño is an extreme manifestation of this phenomenon. It has been the cause of many droughts over the eastern and northern parts of Australia.

How is drought managed?

The Bureau of Meteorology has a Drought Watch Service, which puts out drought alerts based on monthly analyses of rainfall in rural areas. Based on Drought Watch alerts, state governments may make drought declarations, and highlight certain regions that may need assistance. However, the government only grants ‘drought relief’ (financial assistance) when agricultural communities experience ‘exceptional circumstances’—droughts of unusual length or severity.

The requirement for ‘exceptional circumstances’ to exist before farmers can get assistance is a source of dissatisfaction in some rural communities, which struggle constantly against the devastating economic and social impact of drought.

How do I know this?

The Australian Bureau of Meteorology, http://www.bom.gov.au
Discuss Now 5 comments

Rose 06-Aug-2008

I now live in Melbourne. I grew up in Stanhope on a dairy farm (northern Victoria).

Everytime I go home I see the impact the drought is having on both the land and the people that live there.

Over the past 6 years many business have closed, people have sold their farms, many people are in debt and water restrictions continue to tighten.

While the impact of the drought is not as visable in Melbourne as in regional areas, we must all take responsibility for helping to conserve water!

Chadorama 23-Nov-2006

With the recent political realisation that Australia is in a "one of a thousand year" drought, people are coming to terms with the fact that Australia is the second driest continent after Antartica, and our extra effort to conserve water should be the minimum of what we do as consumers.

Agriculture counts for 80% of the total water usage in Australia. The current quota system of water given by the Crown is not efficient, and as we have seen, the idea of "tradeable water credits" is being explored by the SA and Vic governments. Anyone interested in pollution control should look into market permits for pollution, like the system proposed in the Kyoto protocol.

Shelleyw 16-Nov-2006

Wow! I'm the only one who has made comment here so far! And I have more stuff to add - my family are farmers, they have been born and raised on QLD's Darling Downs. (I am a city dweller)

But they do have a tough time, if it's not drought, its a rat or pest plague, or the market floods with the crop they planted that year. Farmers need support in tough times, especially the young people who are born into farming families - listen to this Hack story about Young People in drought. http://www.abc.net.au/triplej/hack/notes/s1723816.htm

Shelleyw 16-Nov-2006

are we farming the right crops? That's a recent discussion that happened on Triple J's Hack.

Listen here - http://www.abc.net.au/triplej/hack/notes/s1768212.htm

what do you think about changing the crops Australian farmers grow?

Shelleyw 13-Nov-2006

This story about water use, water restrictions and how we are going to use water in the future.

it's a story from Triple J's Hack program - http://www.abc.net.au/triplej/hack/notes/s1782234.htm

Check it out.

S