…The rain that fell Wednesday across the state will help, but not much. The Southeast baked under a strong upper-level ridge that persisted through the summer, and without a tropical storm to dump a sudden burst of rain, the average rainfall deficit in
Officials at Duke Energy are already bemoaning difficulties with some of its water-based electricity generators. Forestry officials say the drought-fueled wildfires charred some 37,000 acres of land — about double the 10 year average — and may get larger and more intense in 2008 as the tinder-dry landscape becomes more susceptible to fires triggered by lightning.
North Carolina Agriculture Commissioner Steve Troxler said if 2007's weather repeats itself, the state's agriculture business will be devastated. Farmers lost an estimated $382 million in crops in the past year, and Troxler said the ground is now so dry that there isn't enough moisture to germinate crops.…
…"If we, as citizens, do not conserve (water), we jeopardize industry being able to continue, which jeopardizes jobs, and that hurts families," said Gov. Mike Easley while asking residents to cut consumption by at least 30 to 40%. Easley has urged local governments to significantly raise water prices on those who use it excessively.
Forecasters don't expect any immediate relief. The National Weather Service expects the La Nina climate pattern — in which colder water in the tropical Pacific push the jet stream and wet weather north and away from the southeastern
That pattern usually brings rainfall of 3 to 5 inches below normal in the six-month span covering winter and spring — a tough forecast in a state that needs steady, above-average rainfall. The weather service puts the chances of
But forecasters also note that the summer months are unpredictable. A tropical system or slightly above average rainfall could alleviate much of the drought conditions, said Doug LeComte, a drought specialist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's
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