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Current Drought - U.S. Drought Monitor

The U.S. Drought Monitor releases a new map every Thursday, highlighting parts of the United States and its territories that are in various stages of drought. The map uses five classifications: abnormally dry (D0), showing areas that may be going into or are coming out of drought, and four levels of drought ranging from moderate (D1), severe (D2), extreme (D3), to exceptional (D4).

The USDA uses the drought monitor to trigger disaster declarations and eligibility for low-interest loans. The Farm Service Agency uses it to help determine eligibility for their Livestock Forage Program, and the Internal Revenue Service uses it for tax deferral on forced livestock sales due to drought. State, local, tribal, and basin-level decision makers use it to trigger drought responses, ideally along with other more local indicators of drought.

 

Related Case Studies & Action Plans

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  • Sub-sample of image: 2007 drought at Lake Lanier, by Tom Wilson.

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  • Still image of an aqueduct canal near Salinas, Puerto Rico, extracted from the FEMA video "Recharge Project: Aquifer Storage and Recovery Project in Salinas, Puerto Rico"

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  • Confluence of the Ruby and Beaverhead rivers, just south of Twin Bridges, Montana. Public domain photo by Mike Cline

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  • Drought on Ailuk Atoll in 2013, Republic of the Marshall Islands. Unmodified photo by PACC, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/, via Flickr