Rocky Mountain Snowpack Below 50%; Powell At 31% Of Capacity, Water Agencies In Chaos, Thanks To Shitstain
If you took a look at a map of Rocky Mountain snow right now you would see a lot of red. The mountains that feed the Colorado River with snowmelt are strikingly dry, with many ranges holding less than 50 percent of their average snow for this time of year. The low totals could spell trouble for the nations largest reservoirs, but those dry conditions dont seem to be ringing alarm bells for Colorado River policymakers. Inflows to Lake Powell, the nations second largest reservoir, are expected to be 55 percent of average this year, according to federal data released this week. If forecasts hold true, 2025 would see the third-lowest amount of water added to Lake Powell in the past decade.
Its looking like a pretty poor water supply and spring runoff season, said Cody Moser, a hydrologist with the Colorado River Basin Forecast Center. If Lake Powell drops too low, the reservoir would lose the ability to generate hydropower for about five million people across seven states. Much lower, and it could lose the ability to pass enough water downstream, where tens of millions of people depend on it. Eric Balken, who watches Lake Powell closely as director of the nonprofit Glen Canyon Institute, said this years snow data is concerning, but it isnt driving the same level of concern from policymakers and media outlets that emerged in previous dry years.
Balken said that may be happening for two reasons. First, its because negative outcomes might not be felt immediately. Lake Powell is unlikely to drop low enough to lose hydropower capabilities this summer, but the dry spring is making that more likely to happen in 2026. Second, its because water managers simply have bigger fish to fry.
The federal offices that manage Western water are in disarray amid layoffs and restructuring since Donald Trump returned to the White House. The Bureau of Reclamation, the top federal agency for Colorado River dams and reservoirs, is without a permanent commissioner. All the while, state and federal policymakers are spending most of their time and attention on drawing up new water-sharing rules. The current rules expire in 2026. Talks between states have reached a standstill, and negotiators say theyre working toward a compromise. That chaos within the agencies, the broader negotiations happening on the Colorado River, all of these other factors, I think, are sort of drowning out the severity of the drought situation right now, said Balken. This year got off to a strong start for mountain snow, but took a dip during a dry spell that lasted from December through February. Snowmelt from Colorado accounts for about two-thirds of the water in Lake Powell. A portion of Western Colorado saw less than 15 percent of normal precipitation from December through April.
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https://insideclimatenews.org/news/10052025/dry-winter-colorado-river-reservoirs/