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Effects of Climate Change on the Hydrology and Water Resources of the PNW and the Columbia River Basin JISAO Climate Impacts Group and the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Washington January, 2003 Alan F. Hamlet Dennis P. Lettenmaier Topography of the Pacific Northwest Elevation (m) Areas with December temperatures near freezing Annual PNW Precipitation (mm) (mm) Winter Precipitation Summer Precipitation Hydrologic Characteristics of PNW Rivers Normalized Streamflow 3.0 2.5 Snow Dominated 2.0 Transient Snow 1.5 Rain Dominated 1.0 0.5 0.0 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 Month 5 6 7 8 9 Sensitivity of Snowmelt and Transient Rivers to Changes in Temperature and Precipitation 900000 700000 600000 500000 400000 300000 200000 100000 1974 1974 1974 1974 1974 1974 1974 1974 1974 1974 1973 1973 1973 1973 1973 0 1973 •Streamflow timing is altered • Annual volume stays about the same 800000 Flow (cfs) Temperature warms, precipitation unaltered: Water Year 900000 800000 600000 500000 400000 300000 200000 100000 1974 1974 1973 1973 1973 1973 1973 0 1973 •Streamflow timing stays about the same •Annual volume is altered 700000 Flow (cfs) Precipitation increases, temperature unaltered: Water Year Historic Analogues for the Effects of Climate Change Normal Conditions Ollalie Meadows (3700 ft elevation) WY 1995 Near Normal Precipitation Near Normal Temperatures normal precipitation normal snowpack Unusually Warm Year Ollalie Meadows (3700 ft elevation) WY 1992 Near Normal Precipitation Warm Temperatures ( + 3.5 F) normal precipitation normal snowpack Effect of 1992 Winter Climate on Two PNW Rivers 1200 1000 Flow (cfs) (caused predominantly by warm temperatures) 800 1992 600 avg 400 200 Sep Aug Jul Jun May Apr Mar Feb Dec Oct Jan 0 Nov Cedar River Western Cascades 600000 400000 1992 300000 avg 200000 100000 Sep Aug Jul Jun May Apr Mar Feb Jan Dec Nov 0 Oct (caused both by warm temperatures and decreased precipitation) 500000 Flow (cfs) Columbia River at The Dalles Quantifying and Evaluating the Hydrologic Impacts of Climate Change Changes in Mean Temperature and Precipitation from GCMs VIC Hydrology Model ColSim Reservoir Model Climate Change Scenarios 2020s Climate Change Scenarios 2040s The main impact: less snow April 1 Snowpack (mm) Current Climate 2020s 2040s PNW Average Monthly Snowpack Composite “Middle of the Road” Scenarios Average Snow Water Equivalent (mm) 250 Current Climate comp 2020s 200 comp 2040s 150 100 50 0 oct nov dec jan feb mar apr may jun jul aug sep Columbia River at The Dalles for “Middle-of-the-Road” Scenarios DALLES 500000 400000 Base 300000 2020s 2040s 200000 100000 aug jun apr feb dec 0 oct Average Flow (cfs) 600000 Effects to the Cedar River (Seattle Water Supply) for “Middle-of-the-Road” Scenarios 9000 8000 6000 Simulated 20th Century Climate 2020s Climate Change Scenario 2040s Climate Change Scenario 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 Date 9/2 8/5 7/8 6/10 5/13 4/15 3/18 2/18 1/21 12/24 11/26 10/29 0 10/1 Inflow (acre-ft) 7000 Spatial Effects Corra Linn Chief Joseph Ice Harbor The Dalles Effects of Basin Location 20000 aug 100000 50000 0 20000 aug jun apr feb dec 0 300000 comp 2040 comp 2020 200000 100000 0 aug comp 2020 40000 Base jun comp 2040 60000 400000 apr Base 80000 500000 dec 100000 600000 oct 120000 Average Flow (cfs) DALLES 140000 oct Average Flow (cfs) ICE HARBOR feb jun apr feb dec 0 comp 2020 aug comp 2020 40000 comp 2040 150000 jun 60000 Base 200000 apr comp 2040 250000 feb Base 300000 dec 80000 350000 oct 100000 Average Flow (cfs) CHIEF JOSEPH 120000 oct Average Flow (cfs) CORRA LINN Water Resources in the Columbia River Basin System objectives affected by winter flows Winter hydropower production (PNW demand) System objectives affected by summer flows Flood control Summer hydropower production (California demand) Irrigation Instream flow for fish Recreation 100 95 90 Current Climate 85 2020s Scenario 80 2040s Scenario 75 70 Lake Roosevelt Recr. Snake Irrigation Main Stem Fish Flows Snake Fish Flows Non-Firm Energy Firm Energy 65 Flood Control Reliability of Objective (%) Simulated Reliability of Water Resources Objectives for “Middle-of-the-Road” Scenarios Quantifying Uncertainties Range of Uncertainties in Summer Streamflow Simulations at The Dalles for 2040s Scenarios 600000 500000 20th Century Climate 400000 High (PCM) 300000 Low (ECHAM4) 200000 Middle of the Road 100000 aug jun apr feb dec 0 oct Average Flow (cfs) The DALLES Flood Control Snake River Navigation Snake Irrigation McNary Fish Flow Lower Granite Fish Flow Grand Coulee Recreation Non-Firm Energy Firm Energy Range of Uncertainty in Water Resources Sensitivity for 2040s Scenarios 100 90 80 70 Current Climate ECHAM4 2040's PCM 2040's 60 50 Number of Occurences Frequency of Drought Comparable to Water Year 1992 in the Columbia River Basin (data from 1962-1997) 16 x 4.7 14 12 10 8 x2 6 x 1.3 4 x 1.3 2 0 Base Mean 2020s Mean 2040s Scenario ECHAM4 2040s PCM 2040s An Example of Water Management Tradeoffs Associated with Adaptation (from Payne et al. 2003) Percent of Control Run Climate Effects to Hydropower and Fish Flows 2040-2069 140 120 PCM Control Climate and Current Operations 100 PCM Projected Climate and Current Operations PCM Projected Climate with Adaptive Management 80 60 Firm Hydropower Annual Flow Deficit at McNary Effects to Hydropower and Fish Flows Percent of Control Run Climate 2070-2098 140 PCM Control Climate and Current Operations 120 PCM Projected Climate and Current Operations 100 PCM Projected Climate with Adaptive Management 80 60 Firm Hydropower Annual Flow Deficit at McNary Free Streamflow Scenarios for the PNW http://www.ce.washington.edu/~hamleaf/climate_change_streamflows/CR_cc.htm Areas of Concern for Water Management •Limited reservoir storage is available, and there is little opportunity to build more (storage/streamflow ratios are 10% to 30% in most basins--vulnerable to timing shifts) •Water systems are operated closer to their supply limits now than in the past (effective management is more important) •Use of historic streamflow record for long-range planning •Use of statistical streamflow forecasting tools based on 30-year streamflow record •Inflexibility and fragmentation of water management institutions and entities •Different changes in Canada and US may disrupt existing management framework and agreements Conclusions PNW hydrology is predominantly controlled by winter conditions in the mountains. Warmer temperatures produce streamflow timing changes in most PNW basins. Changes in precipitation produce changes in streamflow volumes. Basins encompassing the midwinter snow line are most sensitive to warming. The primary impact of warming in the PNW is loss of mountain snowpack. For the scenarios investigated, both warm/wet and warm/dry scenarios result in decreased snow water equivalent in the Columbia basin. Warmer temperatures generally results in higher winter flows, lower summer flows, and earlier peak flows in spring Effects to the Columbia water resources system are largely associated with reduced reliability of system objectives affected by summer streamflows (water supply, irrigation, summer hydropower, instream flow). Conclusions (cont.) There are significant uncertainties regarding changes in precipitation and the resulting intensity of reductions in summer streamflows and increases in the frequency of droughts. However, a consistent and robust result is that some reduction in summer streamflow and increase in drought frequency is present in all scenarios by the 2040s for the Columbia basin. The greatest impacts to the Columbia system are for the warm/dry scenarios, which produce the strongest reductions in summer streamflows and the greatest increases in drought frequency. The reductions in summer streamflows in these scenarios are likely to exacerbate existing conflicts over water, the impacts of regional growth, and weaknesses in infrastructure, water management practice, and management institutions.