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Mid-Winter Snowpack Report
Good news, bad news for springtime water supplies
Contact:
Renee
Bodine (602) 280-8778
or George Couch (602) 280-8806
PHOENIX, Feb. 7, 2007 - Although Arizona’s
recent winter storms have raised snowpack levels, the state is still lagging
behind the 30-year average by 30 percent.
“This winter’s low snowpacks pose a serious threat to the upcoming spring and
summer runoff season, as well as for agriculture, and the natural resources of
the state,” said Larry Martinez. Martinez is the water supply specialist for
NRCS. “We are in need of more precipitation at this time and I am hoping this
weather pattern breaks sometime soon to a more wet cycle for the remainder of
the winter.”
The USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) has just released its
February 1 Arizona Basin Outlook Report, which provides a seasonal water supply
outlook for key watersheds in Arizona.
Contained in the report is snowpack data from Arizona’s 15 automated snow
telemetry (SNOTEL) sites and 23 snow courses manually measured by a team of
cooperative snow surveyors. The report shows that snowpack levels have risen
substantially in the northern watersheds since the last report was issued on
January 15.
Among the findings in the report, the statewide snowpack was measured at 71
percent of the 30-year average on February 1, compared with 44 percent on
January 15. “All key watersheds are reporting below average snowpack levels at
this time,” said Martinez. “If the current trend continues, this means less
snowmelt runoff later in the season, especially for those streams that feed the
reservoirs supplying water to central Arizona.”
Arizona’s long-range runoff forecasts closely mirror the states below-average
snowpack readings. As a result, water users can expect well below median
streamflow volumes through May. These volume forecasts range from 49 percent of
median on the Virgin River at Littlefield, Arizona to 86 percent of median on
the Little Colorado River at Woodruff, Arizona.
In the report, recent snow surveys show the snowpack in the Salt River Basin to
have a snow water content measured at 86 percent of the 30-year average, while
in the Verde River Basin, water content of the snowpack was measured at 69
percent of average. In the Little Colorado River Basin, water content of the
snowpack was measured at 73 percent of average, while in the San Francisco-Upper
Gila River Basin, snow water content of the snowpack was measured at 97 percent
of average. Along the central Mogollon Rim, the snowpack was measured at 78
percent of average. At the Grand Canyon, snow surveys show the combined snowpack
to have an extremely low water content monitored at 28 percent of average. On
the Navajo Nation, the water content of the Chuska Mountains and Defiance
Plateau snowpacks were measured by tribal surveyors at 56 and 75 percent of
average, respectively. At the San Francisco Peaks, the snowpack was measured at
60 percent of average.
Among other findings reported by NRCS include combined Salt River Project (SRP)
reservoir storage monitored at 61 percent of capacity with 1,409,495 acre-feet
in storage on February 1, compared to 78 percent of capacity at this time a year
ago. An acre foot of water equals 325,851 gallons and is enough to supply two
families for a year. At San Carlos, February 1 reservoir storage was monitored
at 31 percent of capacity with 272,500 acre-feet in storage, compared to 21
percent of capacity a year ago. “Incredibly, in-state reservoir storage levels
remain in fair shape in spite of the on-going drought, thanks to the huge winter
of 2005, which filled interior reservoirs to full capacity by springtime. The
substantial runoff generated from the active summer monsoon of 2006 also
benefited reservoir storage in recent months,” Martinez said.
On the Colorado River, below average reservoir storage at Lake Powell continues
to raise concern. At Lake Powell, reservoir storage stands at 11,703,000
acre-feet, or 48 percent of capacity on Feb. 1. “Most areas in the Upper
Colorado River basin currently have below average snowpacks as monitored
February 1 by the snow surveyors,” Martinez said. “As a result, inflow to Lake
Powell is now predicted at 74 percent of the 30-year average (5,900,000
acre-feet) for the forecast period April-July, the time of year when greatest
runoff normally occurs each season on the river. This is compared to 91 percent
of average inflow forecast on January 1 when upper basin precipitation
conditions were better,” Martinez added. Additionally, NRCS automated SNOTEL
monitoring stations show the upper basin snowpack to be at 75 percent of the
30-year average on February 1.
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