Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Sierra snowpack could be reduced, study says

- By Deborah Netburn Los Angeles Times (TNS)

LOS ANGELES – The California snow season, which started this month, is off to a good start.

A series of December storms covered the Sierra Nevada with heavy snow, leaving the snowpack at 106 percent of average, according to the state’s snow survey.

But a new study suggests that California­ns won’t always be able to rely on melting snow to trickle down the mountains each spring, filling state reservoirs for use over the long, dry summers.

According to a new report, the size of the Sierra snowpack could shrink by as much as 79 percent by the century’s end if humans don’t limit greenhouse emissions.

“We are currently relying on snow to store the precipitat­ion we get in the winter for use during the summer,” said Andrew Jones, a climate scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, who worked on the study. “In the future, we’ll have to radically restructur­e the way we manage water in California.”

Experts estimate that the Sierra Nevada snowpack provides about one-third of the state’s fresh water each year.

In the new work, published last

month in the journal Geophysica­l Research Letters, scientists looked specifical­ly at how future climate conditions could affect the snowpack directly upstream of 10 of the state’s largest reservoirs.

Using five climate models that assume continued high global greenhouse gas emissions, the researcher­s found that on average, the snowpack could face a 54 percent reduction in volume in the next 20 to 40 years and a 79 percent reduction in the next 60 to 80 years. However, not all regions of the state would be affected equally by this loss of winter water storage.

Reservoirs in the northern part of the state would be more affected than those in the central and southern regions, the authors said. That’s because the Sierra Nevada is not quite as high in Northern California as it is in other parts of the state.

“As the world is warming, the snowline is moving up the mountains,” Jones said. “That means that lower elevations will be affected more quickly by this reduction than those in higher elevations.”

The snowpack above the state’s northern reservoirs such as Shasta, Oroville and Folsom is expected to shrink by 59.5 percent in 20 to 40 years and by 83.8 percent by the end of the century.

Reservoirs in the central part of the state could see reductions of 48.4 percent by midcentury and 73.4 percent by the end of the century, according to the report. In the southern regions, the snowpack could shrink by 48.8 percent by midcentury and 75.6 percent by the end of the century, the authors said.

That doesn’t mean less precipitat­ion will fall up north in the future, but that it will come as rain rather than snow.

That’s a problem for water managers trying to balance both water storage and flood control.

“Under our current system, we would have to let much of that rain flow to the ocean because we wouldn’t be able to store it in the reservoirs,” Jones said.

The study also revealed that the time of year when the snowpack starts to melt could move up by as much as four weeks by 2099.

Scientists now expect the snowpack to reach its peak at the beginning of April. But years from now,

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