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Hydrologic Implications of Climate Change for the Western U.S. Alan F. Hamlet, Philip W. Mote, Dennis P. Lettenmaier •JISAO/CSES Climate Impacts Group •Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Washington Recession of the Muir Glacier Aug, 13, 1941 Aug, 31, 2004 Image Credit: National Snow and Ice Data Center, W. O. Field, B. F. Molnia http://nsidc.org/data/glacier_photo/special_high_res.html Example of a flawed water planning study: The Colorado River Compact of 1922 The Colorado River Compact of 1922 divided the use of waters of the Colorado River System between the Upper and Lower Colorado River Basin. It apportioned **in perpetuity** to the Upper and Lower Basin, respectively, the beneficial consumptive use of 7.5 million acre feet (maf) of water per annum. It also provided that the Upper Basin will not cause the flow of the river at Lee Ferry to be depleted below an aggregate of 7.5 maf for any period of ten consecutive years. The Mexican Treaty of 1944 allotted to Mexico a guaranteed annual quantity of 1.5 maf. **These amounts, when combined, exceed the river's long-term average annual flow**. What’s the Problem? Despite a general awareness of these issues in the water planning community, there is growing evidence that future climate variability will not look like the past and that current planning activities, which frequently use a limited observed streamflow record to represent climate variability, are in danger of repeating the same kind of mistakes made more than 80 years ago in forging the Colorado River Compact. Long-term planning and specific agreements influenced by this planning (such as long-term transboundary agreements) should be informed by the best and most complete climate information available, but frequently they are not. Cool Season Climate of the Western U.S. PNW GB CA CRB DJF Temp (°C) NDJFM Precip (mm) Global Climate Change Scenarios and Hydrologic Impacts for the PNW Observed 20th century variability °C +3.2°C +1.7°C +0.7°C 0.9-2.4°C 0.4-1.0°C Pacific Northwest 1.2-5.5°C Observed 20th century variability % -1 to +3% +1% +6% +2% -1 to +9% Pacific Northwest -2 to +21% Will Global Warming be “Warm and Wet” or “Warm and Dry”? Answer: 450000 Probably BOTH! Natural Flow Columbia River at The Dalles 350000 300000 250000 200000 2000 1990 1980 1970 1960 1950 1940 1930 1920 1910 150000 1900 Apr-Sept Flow (cfs) 400000 2000 1996 1992 1988 1984 1980 1976 1972 1968 1964 1960 1956 1952 1948 1944 1940 CRB 1936 CA 1932 1928 3 1924 1920 1916 Std Anomalies Relative to 1961-1990 Regionally Averaged Cool Season Precipitation Anomalies 4 PNW PRECIP GB 2 1 0 -1 -2 -3 Schematic of VIC Hydrologic Model and Energy Balance Snow Model Snow Model The warmer locations are most sensitive to warming 2060s +2.3C, +6.8% winter precip Changes in Simulated April 1 Snowpack for the Canadian and U.S. portions of the Columbia River basin (% change relative to current climate) 20th Century Climate “2040s” (+1.7 C) -3.6% -21.4% April 1 SWE (mm) “2060s” (+ 2.25 C) -11.5% -34.8% Trends in April 1 SWE 1950-1997 Mote P.W.,Hamlet A.F., Clark M.P., Lettenmaier D.P., 2005, Declining mountain snowpack in western North America, BAMS, 86 (1): 39-49 DJF avg T (C) Overall Trends in April 1 SWE from 1947-2003 Trend %/yr Trend %/yr DJF avg T (C) Temperature Related Trends in April 1 SWE from 1947-2003 Trend %/yr Trend %/yr DJF avg T (C) Precipitation Related Trends in April 1 SWE from 1947-2003 Trend %/yr Trend %/yr Simulated Changes in Natural Runoff Timing in the Naches River Basin Associated with 2 C Warming 120 Simulated Basin Avg Runoff (mm) 100 80 Impacts: •Increased winter flow •Earlier and reduced peak flows •Reduced summer flow volume •Reduced late summer low flow 1950 60 plus2c 40 20 0 oct nov dec jan feb mar apr may jun jul aug sep 250 Simulated Basin Avg Runoff (mm) Chehalis River 200 150 1950 plus2c 100 50 0 oct nov dec jan feb mar apr may jun jul aug sep 500 Hoh River Simulated Basin Avg Runoff (mm) 450 400 350 300 1950 250 plus2c 200 150 100 50 0 oct nov dec jan feb mar apr may jun jul aug sep 200 Nooksack River Simulated Basin Avg Runoff (mm) 180 160 140 120 1950 100 plus2c 80 60 40 20 0 oct nov dec jan feb mar apr may jun jul aug sep 450 Skagit River Simulated Basin Avg Runoff (mm) 400 350 300 250 1950 plus2c 200 150 100 50 0 oct nov dec jan feb mar apr may jun jul aug sep Mapping of Sensitive Areas in the PNW by Fraction of Precipitation Stored as Peak Snowpack HUC 4 Scale Watersheds in the PNW Changes in Flood Risk in the Western U.S. Regionally Averaged Temperature Trends Over the Western U.S. 1916-2003 3.00 PNW Linear Trend (Deg. C per century) CA PNW 1.50 1.00 0.50 0.00 -0.50 -1.00 nov dec jan feb mar apr may jun jul aug sep 4.00 Linear Trend (Deg. C per century) CA CRB GBAS 2.00 oct GB CRB Tmax 2.50 CA 3.50 CRB Tmin GBAS 3.00 PNW 2.50 2.00 1.50 1.00 0.50 0.00 oct nov dec jan feb mar apr may jun jul aug sep DJF Avg Temp (C) Simulated Changes in the 20-year Flood Associated with 20th Century Warming DJF Avg Temp (C) X20 2003 / X20 1915 X20 2003 / X20 1915 X20 2003 / X20 1915 DJF Avg Temp (C) 20-year Flood for “1973-2003” Compared to “1916-2003” for a Constant Late 20th Century Temperature Regime X20 ’73-’03 / X20 ’16-’03 X20 ’73-’03 / X20 ’16-’03 Summary of Flooding Impacts Rain Dominant Basins: Possible increases in flooding due to increased precipitation variability, but no significant change from warming alone. Mixed Rain and Snow Basins Along the Coast: Strong increases due to warming and increased precipitation variability (both effects increase flood risk) Inland Snowmelt Dominant Basins: Relatively small overall changes because effects of warming (decreased risks) and increased precipitation variability (increased risks) are in the opposite directions. The Evaporation Paradox Many people intuitively associate increasing temperatures with higher evaporation rates, however there is evidence that potential evaporation rates may actually be trending downwards. Longterm pan evaporation data, for example, frequently shows downward trends in the western U.S. Two hypotheses: 1) Pan evaporation records are influenced by increased humidity associated with increased summer precipitation or other effects and are therefore not an accurate representation of potential evaporation. I.e. potential evaporation is actually going up with warming, but pan evaporation data does not show it. 2) Increased humidity and attenuation of solar radiation is actually lowering potential evaporation. Simulated trends in July Avg PotET for Mature Alfalfa over the Southern Plain Region in the Snake River Basin from 1915-2002 8.5 7.5 7 jul Linear (jul) 6.5 6 y = -0.0061x + 7.3589 5.5 2000 1995 1990 1985 1980 1975 1970 1965 1960 1955 1950 1945 1940 1935 1930 1925 1920 5 1915 Reference Crop PotET (mm/day) 8 Conclusions •Climate change will result in significant hydrologic changes in the Western U.S. including reduced natural storage as mountain snowpack, increased flow in winter, and reduced flow in summer. Changes in extremes (droughts and floods) are likely to occur. •Impacts will not be equally distributed, and areas near freezing in mid winter will be the most sensitive to warming related losses of snowpack and streamflow timing shifts. •A number of impact pathways related to water resources management, water quality, and ecosystem function are likely to be activated by these changes. •There is a wide-spread need to incorporate expected changes in climate into long range planning. Water Resources Implications •Reductions in natural storage in mountain watersheds •Potential increases in water demand and evaporation •Increasing drought and altered flood risks •Increasing competition over water resources •Tradeoffs between traditional water resources objectives such as water supply and hydropower production and environmental services related to instream flow •Need for changes in flood control evacuation and refill schedules •Disruption of existing water allocation agreements •Disruption of transboundary agreements Implications Related to Water Quality •Increasing water temperature •Altered sediment transport processes •Altered chemical processes (dissolved gas, BOD) •Altered biological and ecological processes •Need for increased use of managed storage to maintain equivalent dilution flows in summer.