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Climate change linked to Colorado River megadrought — a road that has a bunch of rocks on it

Climate change linked to Colorado River megadroughtCEFR B1

10 Dec 2025

Adapted from U. Michigan, Futurity CC BY 4.0

Photo by Nicolas Barbault, Unsplash

Level B1 – Intermediate
3 min
170 words

A long drought in the southwestern United States, beginning in 1999 and often called a megadrought, now appears linked to human-caused climate change. The Colorado River, which supplies water to seven US states and Mexico, has seen lower flows because of rising temperatures and reduced winter snow as well as lower precipitation.

Researchers Jonathan Overpeck of the University of Michigan and Brad Udall of the Colorado Water Center at Colorado State University report that the recent precipitation drop is due in part to human emissions. They had considered natural variability, but new data and studies changed their view. Overpeck says long-term patterns now favor more dry winters than wet ones.

The updated graphs in this year's Colorado River Basin report reach two main conclusions: the downward precipitation trend is caused by people’s emissions and it is unlikely to reverse without action. They warn that reservoir storage has fallen over the past 26 years and the region is one dry winter away from severe and unprecedented water-use cuts.

Difficult words

  • megadroughtvery long and severe period without rain
  • droughtlong time with little or no rainfall
  • precipitationrain or snow that falls from the sky
  • emissionspollution or gases released by people
  • variabilitythe natural changes in weather or climate
  • reservoira lake or place that stores water
  • unprecedentednever seen before or very new
  • climate changelong-term shift in weather patterns on Earth

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