Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Klamath River subject of
climate study
Scientists
will examine effects of climate on water supplies
By SARA HOTTMAN,
Herald and News Aug. 4, 2011
“There are
competing interests in every watershed, particularly
in Klamath,” said David Raff, basin studies
coordinator for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.“ The
droughts in 2001 and 2010 demonstrate there are
significant competing interests in water there.”
Stakeholders in
Klamath River water include irrigators on the
federal Klamath Reclamation Project who pull their
water from Upper Klamath Lake, which feeds the
Klamath River, as well as the federal agencies that
protect endangered fish in the water bodies and the
tribes that consider them sacred.
Through drought
years, irrigators have had to go without surface
water as federal agencies preserved water for fish
habitats.
The two-year,
$1.955 million study will explore the potential
effect of climate change on water supplies for
agriculture and fish, then ultimately identify
strategies to cope with those impacts in hopes of
balancing all stakeholders’ needs.
“There’s no
limit to the types of strategies that can be
explored,” he said, mentioning aquifer storage,
above-ground storage, or conservation measures.
Scientists
widely believe that higher global temperatures —
colloquially called climate change or global warming
— are caused by too much carbon entering the
atmosphere, both trapping heat and changing the
atmosphere’s chemical composition.
Loss of
storage
In a watershed
like the Klamath River Basin, higher temperatures
could result in less snowpack, the area’s method of
natural water storage. Less snowpack would affect
snow melt into water bodies and underground
aquifers, reducing available water for irrigators
and fish.
Half the funding
for the study came from U.S. Department of the
Interior’s WaterSMART program, a method to implement
measures in the Secure Water Act, said Peter Soeth,
with the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.
The 2009 Secure
Water Act is intended to give state and federal
agencies authority to plan for the impact of climate
change, among other threats, on water supplies.
The Oregon and
California water resource departments will pay the
other half, Soeth said. The departments jointly
sought the federal funding, which was awarded in a
competitive application process.
Previous
study found climate change will reduce winter
snowpack
Researchers with the state and federal WaterSMART
basin climate change study are approaching it with a
clean slate, gathering data before drawing
conclusions, said David Raff, basin studies
coordinator for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.
But
Climate Leadership Initiative, a Eugene based group
led by Langell Valley rancher Roger Hamilton, has
already presented its ideas about how climate change
will affect Klamath Basin producers.
Gradual
changes in climate will begin to make an impact in
about 30 years, the group said in November during a
presentation at Oregon Institute of Technology.
Among their findings:
•
Temperatures in the Klamath Basin will increase
nearly four degrees by 2040. Summers will be drier
and winters will be wetter. Higher temperatures mean
winter snows will become winter rains, diminishing
snowpack by 60 percent in the region.
• With
diminished snowpack, underground aquifers will not
be as replenished by snowmelt. Groundwater will
become a scare resource.
• Losing
snowpack, natural storage, could be devastating to
agriculture, tribes, refuges, and other groups that
depend on surface and groundwater replenishing
itself each year.
Hamilton, senior policy analyst for the Climate
Leadership Initiative, at the time said that over
the next three decades growers could work to reduce
their carbon emissions to help slow climate change.
“The
bad news is there are impacts,” Hamilton said in the
fall. “The good news is we’re doing it to
ourselves.”
Conserving water and energy through low-flow
irrigation, irrigation sensors that track how much
moisture a field needs, and solar panel power could
help mitigate climate change, researchers said.
Many
local growers, especially the larger operations, are
already taking such steps both to save money on
operations and use environmentally friendly
practices.
Side Bar
Study satisfies part of KBRA
The study’s conclusions will fulfill a small section
of the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement, which
says signatories — including Oregon, California,
U.S. Department of the Interior and U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation — will work to identify and mitigate the
effects of climate change, said David Raff, basin
studies coordinator for the U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation.
“It’s
separate from the KBRA,” Raff said. “But it’s meant
to be complimentary to that activity.”
In the
agreement, lead parties are called on to track
climate change impacts in the Klamath Basin in order
to “collaboratively respond to climatic change in a
manner that is to protect basin interests.”
The $1
billion agreement signed last year is an effort to
establish sustainable water supplies and affordable
power rates for irrigators, help the Klamath Tribes
acquire a 92,000-acre parcel of private timberland,
and fund habitat restoration in the region.
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Page Updated: Monday August 08, 2011 02:25 AM Pacific
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