Western US enters spring with record-low snowpack and heat risks

Much of the Western United States has experienced one of its warmest winters on record, leaving snowpack at historic lows and prompting warnings of drought and wildfires this summer. An early March heat wave pushed temperatures into triple digits across multiple states. Experts describe the conditions as unprecedented, with no historical parallels.

In Park City, Utah, skiers encountered patches of grass on slopes throughout much of the winter, signaling a season that largely failed to materialize. Snowpack, which provides 60 to 70 percent of the Northwest's water supply and is vital for the Colorado River Basin serving seven states, now stands at record lows, according to the federal Colorado River Basin Forecasting Center. Hydrologist Cody Moser reported that the upper Colorado River basin's snow cover fell from 40 percent of normal in early March to 25 to 30 percent recently, based on the Snow Telemetry network's half-century of data. Marianne Cowherd, a climate scientist at Montana State University, noted, “There is no analog... This limits our ability to look to the past for insight.” She added that precipitation arriving as rain rather than snow leads to evaporation or runoff to the ocean, bypassing storage in rivers and reservoirs. “Even when we’re getting precipitation, we’re not storing it,” Cowherd said. We lack reservoir capacity to hold needed water volumes, she warned, as warmer temperatures accelerate melt while lower spring solar angles may slow it. A mid-March heat dome brought temperatures up to 35 degrees Fahrenheit above normal, shattering over 1,500 daily records in 11 states and setting a national March high of 112 degrees Fahrenheit in four cities, per Climate Central. The World Weather Attribution Initiative deemed the event “virtually impossible” without climate change. Clair Barnes of Imperial College London’s Centre for Environmental Policy stated, “The role of climate change is clear,” highlighting risks from early-season extremes before bodies acclimatize. These conditions threaten Lake Powell's power generation levels as early as August, according to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. Denver Water declared a Stage 1 emergency, mandating 20 percent usage cuts and outdoor watering bans. CEO Alan Salazar said, “This winter was unusually warm and did not deliver the snow we need... a reminder of the impacts of climate change on our water supply.” Early vegetation growth amid heat raises wildfire dangers, warned August Isernhagen of the Truckee Meadows Fire Protection District, citing potential for unprecedented fire season conditions. While an El Niño pattern or late snow could mitigate risks, Cowherd said such outcomes appear unlikely based on forecasts.

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U.S. map illustration highlighting uneven state warming: hotter highs in West, warmer lows in North, contrasting averages and extremes.
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Study finds most U.S. states are warming in uneven ways that averages can miss

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A study in PLOS Climate reports that U.S. warming trends vary sharply by state and by whether researchers look at temperature averages or extremes. Using data from 1950 to 2021 for the 48 contiguous states, the authors found that 27 states showed statistically significant increases in average temperature, while 41 showed warming in at least one part of their temperature range—such as hotter highs in parts of the West and warmer cold-season lows in parts of the North.

Building on the record-low snowpack and early heat risks entering spring, a prolonged March heat wave shattered temperature records across the Western US, from Tucson to Casper. Described as the earliest and most widespread in the Southwest, climate change made it far more likely, compounding winter droughts and raising long-term wildfire and ecosystem threats.

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The National Interagency Coordination Center released projections on Wednesday showing every state in the Western US at above-normal risk of wildfires this summer. Factors including drought, low snowpack, rapid snowmelt, and a recent heat wave have expanded the threat area dramatically since March. Experts warn of challenging conditions ahead.

Record flooding last month pushed several northern Michigan dams close to failure, with water nearly spilling over a key barrier in one city. The events have renewed calls to address the nation's aging dams amid intensifying storms driven by climate change.

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A new study shows Alaska's glaciers respond sharply to warmer summers. Researchers tracked more than 3,000 glaciers using radar satellites and found that each 1 degree Celsius rise in average summer temperature adds roughly three weeks to the melt season.

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