Southern Great Plains

The states of Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas regularly experience some of the most extreme weather on the planet. Climate change is expected to lead to hotter and drier conditions that will challenge agricultural producers across the region's vast rural areas. Urban centers will also need to adapt to new conditions to ensure a reliable water supply for people and industry.

    Key Points:

  • Increasing frequency and intensity of precipitation, warmer ocean temperatures, extreme heat, and rising sea levels are degrading the air, lands, and waters that people in the Southern Great Plains rely on for economic, recreational, and cultural activities.
  • These impacts compound existing burdens on disadvantaged communities that have the fewest resources to prepare and adapt to climate change.
  • People are adapting through nature-based solutions, reliance on Indigenous and local knowledges, and resilient infrastructure that enhances public health and the region’s economy.
  • Since 2018, many of the region’s largest cities have released climate resilience or sustainability plans, and have started incorporating social justice considerations into their planning processes.
  • Throughout the region, a major shift in energy generation from fossil fuels toward renewables is underway, creating new jobs, cleaner air, and reducing emissions. Wind and solar energy generation and battery storage capacities have grown, with the region accounting for 42% of national wind-generated electricity in 2022.

View the Southern Great Plains chapter of the Fifth National Climate Assessment >>

 


Looking for previous Southern Great Plains content?

Banner Image Credit

Photo by Thomas Shahan: Cynomys ludovicianus (Black-tailed Prairie Dog) - Wichita Mountains, Oklahoma. Used via a Creative Commons license, CC BY-NC 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/.

Last modified
21 November 2023 - 9:45am