https://www.npr.org/2022/01/07/ [login to see] /western-megadrought-climate-lake-powell-glen-canyon-reservoir
On a turquoise lake in a sandstone desert, Ross Dombrowski is trying to figure out what to do about the rock growing behind his houseboat. The rock, spectacular and rust red, like most in southern Utah, wasn't visible below the water's surface when Dombrowski moored his houseboat on Lake Powell last year.
Today, it's three stories tall.
"I would never think it would get to this," he says, looking at the shrinking lake. "But it has."
Despite recent rain and record snowfall in California's Sierra Nevada, the Western U.S. is experiencing one of its driest periods in a thousand years — a two-decade megadrought that scientists say is being amplified by human-caused climate change. The drought — or longer-term aridification, some researchers fear — is forcing water cutbacks in at least three states, and reviving old debates about how water should be distributed and used in the arid West.