The Maui News

Snowmelt fills rivers in US Southwest, easing drought fears

- By DAN ELLIOTT The Associated Press

DENVER — A welcome surge of melting snow is pouring out of the Rocky Mountains and into the droughtstr­icken rivers of the southweste­rn U.S., fending off a water shortage but threatenin­g to push rivers over their banks.

Last winter brought aboveavera­ge snowfall to much of Colorado, Utah and Wyoming, so an abundance of snowmelt is rushing into the Colorado River, the Rio Grande and other waterways after a desperatel­y dry 2018.

“It couldn’t have come at a better time,” said Greg Smith, a hydrologis­t with Colorado Basin River Forecast Center, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion. “There’s this big sense of relief this year that we’ve kind of rebounded.”

Colorado was blanketed by 134 percent of its normal snowfall last winter. Utah was even better, at 138 percent. Wyoming peaked at 116 percent.

That will put so much water into the Colorado River that Lake Powell, a giant reservoir downstream in Utah and Arizona, is expected to rise 50 feet this year, said Marlon Duke, a spokesman for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamatio­n, which manages Powell and dozens of other reservoirs.

The reservoir is rising so fast — 6 to 15 inches a day — that the National Park Service warned people to keep cars and boats at least 200 yards from the shoreline to keep them from being submerged overnight.

The influx into Powell will allow the Bureau of Reclamatio­n to send enough water downstream into Lake Mead in Arizona and Nevada to avoid a possible water shortage there. Arizona, California and Nevada rely heavily on the reservoir.

Last year, the bureau predicted a better than 50 percent chance that Mead would fall so low that Arizona — which has the lowest-priority rights to the reservoir — would have to take a cut in its share in 2020. The shortage now might be put off until after 2021, Duke said.

The Colorado River is expected to send more than 12 million acre-feet into Powell this year, 112 percent of average and a huge improvemen­t over last year, when scant snow in the Rocky Mountains produced only 4.6 million acre-feet for the reservoir. An acre-foot, or 1,200 cubic meters, is enough to supply a typical U.S. family for a year.

The bureau expects to release 9 million acre-feet from Powell to Mead for the fifth consecutiv­e year.

The news is also good for the Rio Grande, which flows from Colorado through New Mexico and then along the Texas-Mexico border to the Gulf of Mexico.

Elephant Butte, a massive reservoir on the Rio Grande in New Mexico, had dropped as low as 10 percent of capacity, but it could reach 30 percent this year, said Carolyn Donnelly, a water operations supervisor for the Bureau of Reclamatio­n.

Besides replenishi­ng reservoirs — a boon to cities and farms that depend on them — the surging rivers mean good rafting conditions, but some sections are so wild that guides are avoiding them.

The National Weather Service issued alerts about potential flooding in several states but only a few local problems have been reported. Still, the risk could last for days because so much snow remains in the mountains after a cold May delayed the melt.

Enough snow is left that the Snowbird ski resort in Utah and Arapahoe Basin and Aspen in Colorado are still open, at least on weekends.

Weather and climate experts say it’s too early to declare the Southwest’s two-decade-long drought over because wet years sometimes provide temporary relief from prolonged dry spells.

Becky Bolinger, Colorado’s assistant state climatolog­ist, said that even if the drought is ending, another will follow.

“Our region is vulnerable to drought and vulnerable to increasing frequency of drought,” she said.

 ?? AP photo ?? Melting snowpack is creating raging rivers that are running high, fast and icy cold. This June 10 photo shows the Big Cottonwood Creek, in the Big Cottonwood Canyon, near Salt Lake City.
AP photo Melting snowpack is creating raging rivers that are running high, fast and icy cold. This June 10 photo shows the Big Cottonwood Creek, in the Big Cottonwood Canyon, near Salt Lake City.

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