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Colorado River Flows Will Keep Shrinking As Climate Warms

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A late-afternoon view of the Colorado River in Marble Canyon looking upstream from the Navajo Bridge, near Lees Ferry, Arizona. New research finds 21st century warming reduced Colorado River flows by at least 0.5 million acre-feet, about the amount of water used by 2 million people for one year./Stewart Tomlinson/U.S. Geological Survey.

Editor's note: The following article was prepared by the University of Arizona, Colorado State University and the American Geophysical Union (AGU).

Warming in the 21st century reduced Colorado River flows by at least 0.5 million acre-feet, about the amount of water used by 2 million people for one year, according to new research.

The research is the first to quantify the different effects of temperature and precipitation on recent Colorado River flow, said authors Bradley Udall of Colorado State University and Jonathan Overpeck of the University of Arizona.

“This paper is the first to show the large role that warming temperatures are playing in reducing the flows of the Colorado River,” said Overpeck, UA Regents’ Professor of Geosciences and of Hydrology and Atmospheric Sciences and director of the UA Institute of the Environment. The new paper has been accepted for publication in Water Resources Research, a journal of the American Geophysical Union.

From 2000-2014, the river’s flows declined to only 81 percent of the 20th-century average, a reduction of about 2.9 million acre-feet of water per year. One acre-foot of water will serve a family of four for one year, according to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.

From one-sixth to one-half of the 21st-century reduction in flow can be attributed to the higher temperatures since 2000, report Udall and Overpeck. Their analysis shows as temperature continues to increase with climate change, Colorado River flows will continue to decline.

Current climate change models indicate temperatures will increase as long as humans continue to emit greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, but the projections of future precipitation are far less certain.

Forty million people rely on the Colorado River for water, according to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. The river supplies water to seven U.S. Western states plus the Mexican states of Sonora and Baja California.

Udall, a senior water and climate scientist/scholar at CSU’s Colorado Water Institute, said, “The future of Colorado River is far less rosy than other recent assessments have portrayed. A clear message to water managers is that they need to plan for significantly lower river flows.”

The study’s findings, he said, “provide a sobering look at future Colorado River flows.”

The Colorado River Basin has been in a drought since 2000. Previous research has shown the region’s risk of a megadrought – one lasting more than 20 years – rises as temperatures increase.

Overpeck said, “We’re the first to make the case that warming alone could cause Colorado River flow declines of 30 percent by midcentury and over 50 percent by the end of the century if greenhouse gas emissions continue unabated.”

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation estimates annual natural upper Colorado River flow based on data recorded from streamgages at Lees Ferry. At that location, Colorado River streamflow reflects water that has drained from the upper basin, which includes Colorado, Wyoming, Utah and New Mexico. Credit: U.S. Geological Survey

The team began its investigation because Udall learned that recent Colorado flows were lower than managers expected given the amount of precipitation. The two researchers wanted to provide water managers with insight into how future projections of temperature and precipitation for the Colorado River Basin would affect the river’s flows.

Udall and Overpeck began by looking at the drought years of 2000-2014. About 85 percent of the river’s flow originates as precipitation in the Upper Basin – the part of the river that drains portions of Wyoming, Utah, Colorado and New Mexico. The team found during 2000-2014, temperatures in the river’s Upper Basin were 1.6 degrees F (0.9 C) higher than the average for the previous 105 years.

To see how increased temperatures might contribute to the reductions in the river’s flow that have been observed since 2000, Udall and Overpeck reviewed and synthesized 25 years of research about how climate and climate change have and will affect the region and how temperature and precipitation affect the river’s flows.

Water loss increases as temperatures rise because plants use more water, and higher temperatures increase evaporative loss from the soil and from the water surface and lengthen the growing season.

In previous research, Overpeck and other colleagues showed current climate models simulated 20th-century conditions well, but the models cannot simulate the 20- to 60-year megadroughts known to have occurred in the past. Moreover, many of those models did not reproduce the current drought.

Those researchers and others suggest the risk of a multidecadal drought in the Southwest in the 21st century is much higher than climate models indicate and that as temperatures increase, the risk of such a drought increases.

Udall said, “A megadrought in this century will throw all our operating rules out the window.”

Udall and Overpeck found all current climate models agree that temperatures in the Colorado River Basin will continue rising if the emission of greenhouse gases is not curbed. However, the models’ predictions of future precipitation in the Basin have much more uncertainty.

Overpeck said, “Even if the precipitation does increase, our work indicates that there are likely to be drought periods as long as several decades when precipitation will still fall below normal.”

The new study suggests Colorado River flows will continue to decline.

Udall said, “I was surprised at the extent to which the uncertain precipitation aspects of the current projections hid the temperature-induced flow declines.”

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation lumps temperature and precipitation together in its projections of Colorado River flow, he said.

“Current planning understates the challenge that climate change poses to the water supplies in the American Southwest,” Udall said. “My goal is to help water managers incorporate this information into their long-term planning efforts.”

The Colorado Water Institute, National Science Foundation, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the U.S. Geological Survey funded the research.

Comments

Current climate change models indicate .... 

And like the models of the past, they are likely to be horribly wrong.  They attribute 1/6 to 1/2 to warming temperatures?  Now there is precise science.  With the upper Colorado snowpack at 150% of average, I suspect the river will be ripping this year.

But then they are likely basing their conclusions on manipulated data so it is no wonder they always get it wrong.  

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-4192182/World-leaders-dup...


No problem.  We'll just build a big pipeline from Great Slave Lake to the upper Colorado and there'll be a never ending water supply.

And Canada will pay for it.

 


Is it strange that I now quickly scroll through an article just to see what's EC's primary complaint is?


EC just can't believe a thing that does not support his conspiracy theory.

The problem is EC, the Colorado is over allocated, just like most of the streams and rivers in the west,


The problem is EC, the Colorado is over allocated,

I totally agree.  The issue is not warmer temperatures, it is over allocation.  Within Colorado, we handle that well with tiered water rights.  Unfortunately, the state has committed to letting too much water leave the state where water rights are handled differently.  


Sorry, I guess I wasn't clear.  Of course it is over allocated.  Man caused climate change makes it even worse.

Just like the increase of CO2 and acidity in the oceans, we need to reduce our greenhouse gasses or we will pay much more than we ever made in temporary monetary increases


Man caused climate change makes it even worse.

Argalite you should stop reading the fake news. 

The temperature of Earth's troposphere (where the greenhouse effect occurs) has hardly changed for 25 years.

Life evolved and thrived with CO2 at much higher levels than now. If CO2 caused any of the other effects claimed (ocean acidity, extreme weather, health, etc.) the earth and oceans would be barren.


I am not a man-made climate change denier, more of a healthy skeptic of the state of the current science and it is exactly because of articles like this one. Unless things were taken completely out of context the only place this study should be published is in the Onion. Here's why.

"Current climate change models indicate temperatures will increase as long as humans continue to emit greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, but the projections of future precipitation are far less certain."

OK, so precipitation is not able to be predicted well at this point. I have no issues so far but then they make this statement.....

"About 85 percent of the river's flow originates as precipitation in the Upper Basin"

Does that not mean that they are relying on models they have deemed poor or "far less certain" to account for 85% of their own predictions?

But they go on......

"Previous research has shown the region's risk of a megadrought - one lasting more than 20 years - rises as temperatures increase." Followed later by...... "models cannot simulate the 20- to 60-year megadroughts known to have occurred in the past. Moreover, many of those models did not reproduce the current drought."

     And ......

"researchers and others suggest the risk of a multidecadal drought in the Southwest in the 21st century is much higher than climate models indicate"

I could go on and on but this study appears to be one contradiction after another. Honestly I've read this a number of times and my head is spinning.... That said I did take a rather nasty fall this week (really) so maybe I'm not thinking clearly. If so, someone humor me and help explain how these statements make any kind of sense.


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