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Snowpack helped by
storms, but not enough
Warm storms may
melt snow too early
by ANDREW CREASEY,
Herald and News 3/17/12
Today the snow-water
equivalent, which measures the amount of water within
snowpack, is at 78 percent. Despite an increase from the
mid-60 percent reported last week, there is concern
about the amount of snowpack in the Klamath Basin,
according to Kevin Moore, local spokesman for the
Bureau.
“It will take a
large amount of snowpack to get us where we need to be
for the irrigation season,” he said. “Without an
adequate amount, it makes it very doubtful that we’ll
receive the inflows necessary to sustain our irrigation
releases for the year.”
The Bureau office
already has notified “B user” irrigators they most
likely will not receive surface
water.
The water level in
Upper Klamath Lake, which fluctuates with the runoff
from mountain snowpack, is constrained by a biological
opinion designed to protect two species of endangered
sucker. That minimum level of 4,142.2 feet should be
passed within the next few weeks, so starting irrigation
is not the concern.
The concern is if
the level of Upper Klamath Lake recedes below 4,142.2
feet at any time during the summer, it will trigger a
shut off of irrigation water, according to Hollie
Cannon, executive director at Klamath Water and Power
Agency.
“At this point it
looks almost certain that the water supply will be
limited by July,” he said.
While any
precipitation helps, Cannon has concerns the snowpack
will melt prematurely.
“The storms we’re
having now are good, but the downside is that they’re
warm storms,” he said. “We need the snowpack that’s
there to melt in June and July, not earlier.”
Moore says
if the area has a wet spring, it will take pressure off
the lake and provide irrigators with water. The coming
weather is a step in that direction.
“The last couple
storms and the potential for some more are really a big
deal,” said Greg Addington, executive director of the
Klamath Water Users Association. “It can make all the
difference, but we’ll have to wait and see. We’re not
out of the woods by any means, but it’s helpful.”
If
water levels do not return to normal, several
options are available to mitigate the impacts of a
drought, including land idling, which pays farmers
to not irrigate crops, and using groundwater water
as a source for irrigation. Cannon noted, however,
because groundwater levels have not recharged
following heavy use in the drought of 2010,
groundwater irrigation is only part of the solution.
Despite
the seemingly grim outlook, Upper Klamath Lake has
150,000 acre feet more water than it did in 2010.
With weather in March and April still unknown, there
is a large variability in the current water outlook.
“That’s the
big question: what happens the rest of March and April,”
Cannon said. “But with the recent weather, it is
definitely trending more towards the positive.”
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Page Updated: Sunday March 18, 2012 01:43 AM Pacific
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