Experts issue warning as major US lakes plunge toward historic lows — here’s what’s happening

Experts are sounding the alarm as Texas enters yet another year of punishing drought — pushing major lakes toward historic lows and raising concerns for communities across the Hill Country.

What’s happening?

South-Central Texas has been stuck in a rainfall deficit since 2022, with San Antonio hit especially hard. According to a report from the San Antonio Express-News, the city is now short nearly 45 inches of rain. That kind of prolonged dry spell doesn’t just wilt lawns — it drains the region’s lifelines: its lakes.

Canyon Lake, located about 40 miles north of San Antonio, is dropping fast. Water managers confirmed the lake has fallen to just over 890 feet above sea level, losing roughly 232 acre-feet of water per day — that’s more than 75 million gallons disappearing daily.

Why is this concerning?

Declining lake levels ripple far beyond an empty shoreline. Lower reservoirs mean higher wildfire risk, struggling farms, and strained drinking-water supplies for fast-growing communities.

Texas has always dealt with dry spells, but the long-term warming trend is now supercharging them — rising temperatures speed up evaporation, weaken water cycles, and make every rainless stretch hit harder. That same warming pattern is also driving droughts to occur more often and last longer than they used to…

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