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Drought Hotspots Around the World 2023-2025

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Environment

Source: UNCCD

Context: The UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) and the U.S. National Drought Mitigation Centre released a Drought Hotspots Around the World 2023-2025 report highlighting intensifying drought hotspots between 2023–2025.

Key Summary of Report Drought Hotspots Around the World 2023-2025:

Global Escalation: Droughts have intensified across Africa, the Mediterranean, Latin America, and Asia — termed “slow-moving catastrophes.”

Africa’s Hunger Emergency: Over 90 million people in Eastern and Southern Africa face acute hunger; maize crop losses in Zimbabwe crossed 70%.

Energy Crisis in Zambia: Zambezi River flow dropped to 20% of its long-term average, leading to 21-hour daily power blackouts and halted essential services.

Spain’s Olive Oil Crash: Two years of drought cut Spain’s olive oil output by 50%, triggering price surges across Europe.

Panama Canal Disruption: Drought reduced daily transits from 38 to 24 ships, disturbing global trade and food prices.

Amazon River Crisis: Lowest water levels on record stranded communities, killed river dolphins, and exposed ecological vulnerability.

Child Marriages & Dropouts: Drought-linked poverty doubled child marriages in Ethiopia and caused mass school dropouts in Zimbabwe.

Wildlife Loss: Over 100 elephants died in Zimbabwe; 200+ river dolphins perished in the Amazon due to extreme heat and water scarcity.

India and Drought Hotspots:

Monsoon Variability: India faces increasing intra-seasonal rainfall variability, worsening water security and crop yield uncertainties.

Food Price Vulnerability: As droughts reduce rice and sugar output in Asia, India sees rising pressure on food prices and inflation.

Hydrological Stress: River basins such as Godavari and Krishna face recurrent drought conditions due to over-extraction and mismanagement.

Socioeconomic Impact: Drought-prone states like Maharashtra, Rajasthan, and Karnataka experience farmer distress and migration pressures.

Factors Driving Drought Hotspots:

Climate Change: Rising global temperatures intensify evapotranspiration, leading to prolonged dry spells and failed rains.

El Niño Amplification: The 2023–2024 El Niño event exacerbated dry conditions across critical agricultural belts worldwide.

Overexploitation: Unsustainable groundwater extraction, deforestation, and mismanaged irrigation aggravate hydrological imbalance.

Poor Governance: Inadequate early warning systems and lack of adaptive land and water policies deepen vulnerability.

Impacts of Drought Hotspots:

Food Insecurity: Droughts have triggered a 100% rise in maize prices in Zambia and threatened staple crops like wheat and rice globally.

Energy Collapse: Hydropower shortages in Zambia and Türkiye disrupted electricity for hospitals, factories, and homes.

Biodiversity Loss: Droughts caused mass wildlife deaths—100 elephants in Zimbabwe and thousands of fish and dolphins in Amazonia.

Forced Migration & Malnutrition: Somalia and Amazon regions saw mass displacement and acute child malnutrition rise to emergency levels.

Recommended Measures:

Early Warning Systems: Establish real-time monitoring of drought and impact pathways to trigger faster responses.

Nature-Based Solutions: Restore watersheds, promote drought-resistant indigenous crops, and reforest degraded lands.

Gender-Sensitive Adaptation: Protect women and girls from drought-linked vulnerabilities such as child marriage and education loss.

Transboundary Cooperation: Protect river basins and trade routes through international partnerships.

Drought-Resilient Infrastructure: Invest in off-grid power, water harvesting systems, and sustainable agriculture technologies.

Financial Mobilization: Scale up climate financing through platforms like IDRA for preparedness in developing countries.

Conclusion:

Droughts are not isolated weather events but system-wide emergencies affecting ecosystems, economies, and people. The 2023–2025 hotspots are a stark warning to prioritize global cooperation, resilient planning, and inclusive adaptation. Without urgent action, these “creeping catastrophes” could become the norm in a warming world.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

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