By Nick Bond and Karin Bumbaco
Originally published in The Seattle Times on March 23, 2018
“Low mountain snowpack raises water-supply fears in Washington” was a Seattle Times headline on January 6, 2015. Just one year later, another headline proclaimed, “Snow pack in good shape, likely well into spring”. Given this conflicting information, what can we say about changes in our state’s snow?
Snowpack is arguably the most crucial climate-related variable for the Pacific Northwest. It makes large contributions to spring and summer water supplies for agriculture and fish, and impacts hydropower production, forest and ecosystem health, and recreation. Our snowpack is a key feature of our mountains, and the state would be a much different place without it.
With the end of the snow-building season on the horizon, our current snowpack is in good shape, with near-normal to above-normal snow totals throughout most of Washington state. The Bureau of Reclamation’s March 2018 forecast shows adequate water supply for the state’s key agricultural area in the Yakima Basin, and there isn’t current concern for drought development anywhere in the state.
As is often the case, the present snowpack varies substantially across the western U.S. While northern Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming are also enjoying a good snow year, Oregon, southern Idaho, and the southwestern US are lacking snow, with concerns about summer water supplies. These regions have been hit by the one-two punch of a winter that’s been both drier and warmer than normal.
In Washington state, we have certainly seen how warm winter temperatures can lead to drought. Three years ago was a recent, extreme example. Precipitation was relatively normal during the winter of 2014-15, but with a much higher proportion of rain instead of snow in the mountains. The result was a record low snowpack, with some major impacts on water supplies the following summer. On the other hand, the state saw plenty of snow the following year, and the snowpack was mostly above normal again last winter.
These sorts of fluctuations make it tough to assess local trends in snowpack. Some of this variability is due to El Niño/La Niña – key features of the tropical Pacific atmosphere-ocean system that influence weather patterns far from the equator. The current and expected state of the tropical Pacific is useful for seasonal weather predictions, and plays a role in the swings in the amount of snowpack that we can see from year-to-year. These seasonal predictions are inherently less accurate than weather forecasts for the next few days, with the potential for major surprises. Ultimately, Mother Nature holds the cards and has some tricks up her sleeve.
Along with substantial year-to-year variability, we’ve seen declines in snowpack for Washington state as a whole, particularly when you look back many decades (Mote at al. 2018; Stoelinga et al. 2010). The 2018 study by Philip W. Mote, director of the Oregon Climate Change Research Institute, found that “over 90% of snow monitoring sites with long records across the western U.S. show declines, of which 33% are significant vs. 5% expected by chance”.
It also depends a lot on where and when you look. Average winter temperatures in our mountains have warmed about 2°F over the last 100 years, but total precipitation shows little consistent change. This means that locations well above the usual rain-snow line, such as Harts Pass (~6,500’) in the north Cascades, have negligible trends in April 1 snowpack from the mid-1980s through 2016. It’s a different story for other locations, such as Hurricane Ridge (~4,500’) in the Olympic Mountains, which has a statistically significant declining trend of about 3.5 inches of snow per decade in April 1 snowpack since 1950.
The bottom line is that year-to-year variability will continue to be the dominant effect on our snowpack over at least the next decade or two. At some point, however, these variations will be overwhelmed by a warming of the Pacific Northwest. Years such as 2015, specifically its warm winter temperatures, will become more the rule rather than the exception by about the 2050s.
Such a future promises more winter floods and more summer droughts as precipitation falls more as rain rather than snow. It will still get cold and dark in winter, of course, and the higher elevations will still get snow. The problem is that the area of our mountain watersheds reliably receiving snow — the places that hold fresh water until the summer dry season — will decrease as freezing levels ratchet upwards.
What can be done? A first step is to recognize that changes are happening, even though we cannot be certain how fast. Developing resilience to present day climate fluctuations — such as the conditions we saw in 2015 — through management practices that adjust for changes in supplies and demands, will have substantial payoffs.
References:
Mote, P.W., S. Li, D.P. Lettenmaier, M. Xiao, and R. Engel (2018): Dramatic declines in snowpack in the western US, npj Climate and A tmospheric S cience, doi:10.1038/ s41612-018-0012-1
Stoelinga, M.T., M.D. Albright, and C.F. Mass (2010): A new look at snowpack trends in the Cascade Mountains, J. Climate, doi: 10.1175/2009JCLI2911.1