Basin water forecast near normal
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March 8, 2014 |
The snowy blanket that builds in winter and
feeds Columbia River rivers and streams through
spring and summer has shown a much desired
growth spurt thanks to a wet February and
continued precipitation in early March.
The NOAA Weather Service’s Northwest River
Forecast Center says that, in the most likely
scenario, water runoff from British Columbia,
Montana, Idaho, Oregon and Washington this
January-July will combine to provide 98 percent
of the average volume as measured at The Dalles
Dam on the lower Columbia. The forecast is
compared to the 1981-2010 average. It takes into
account projected flows from the upper Columbia
and the Snake River.
That forecast, 93.3 million acre feet, is up by
16 percent when compared to an early February
forecast. After low precipitation totals in
October-January, a Feb. 1 forecast estimated
that only 75.6 MAF would run past The Dalles
during January-July.
Precipitation totals across the Columbia-Snake
river basin were for the most part at or below
50 percent of average for the October-January
period.
But storm clouds flooded in. The area upstream
of the mid-Columbia’s Grand Coulee Dam had 24,
86, 61 and 63 percent of average precipitation
during the first four months of the water year,
which began Oct. 1, 2013. In February
precipitation in the upper Columbia was 133
percent of average, and during the first five
days of March precipitation was 426 percent of
the 30-year average.
The precipitation totals above The Dalles were
149 percent of average in February, and 380
percent of average for the first five days of
March. Wetter yet was the Snake River basin,
which saw 163 percent of its average
precipitation in February in the area upstream
of Ice Harbor Dam, located in southeast
Washington on the lower Snake. Precipitation in
the Snake region, mostly in southern Idaho, was
at or below 50 percent of average in
October-January.
The most likely scenario as described in the
NWRFC’s March 6 forecast is for January-July
runoff past the lower Snake’s Lower Granite Dam
at 105 percent of the 30-year average. That’s up
17 percent from a forecast made one month
earlier. That forecast is made based on current
conditions (precipitation, snowpack snow-water
equivalent, soil moisture content, runoff
to-date and other factors). It includes a 10-day
weather forecast.
The Clearwater River basin is loaded. The
January-July runoff forecast, as measured at
Spalding, Idaho, is expected to be 124 percent
of average, which is up 19 percent since the
early February forecast. The Clearwater flows
into the lower Snake along the Idaho-Washington
border.
The forecast for the upper Columbia area above
central Washington’s Grand Coulee Dam is 96
percent of the 30-year average runoff volume.
That forecast is up by 12 percent since early
February.
The snow-water equivalents in snowpacks in
western Montana and north Idaho are at or above
average. In Montana drainages feeding the
Kootenai River, SWE measurements taken at
Natural Resources Conservation Service SNOTEL
sites are at 109 percent of average as of March
6. That’s up from 92 percent of average for Feb.
15. The Flathead drainage has 124 percent of its
average SWE through March 5; the upper Clark
Fork 144 percent, the Bitterroot 152 percent,
the lower Clark Fork 126 percent and the Idaho
panhandle 103 percent.
The March 5 NWRFC forecast pegs Kootenai River
runoff for April-September, as measured at Libby
Dam in northwest Montana, at 97 percent of
average.
Central Idaho’s Clearwater and Salmon river
drainages has 121 percent of their average
snowpack SWE as of March 5 and northeast Oregon
rivers that flow into the lower Snake, such as
the Grande Ronde, Imnaha, Powder and Burnt, had
99 percent of average snowpack.
April-September water volume forecasts for most
rivers feeding into the Columbia and Snake are
normal to above normal for this time of year,
according to the NWRFC. Forecasts for basins
west of the Cascades, southeast Oregon, and
southwest Idaho are below normal.
The runoff forecast for southwest Washington’s
Cowlitz River, as measured at Castle Rock, is up
by 6 percent from a month earlier, but still
only 84 percent of normal for the
April-September period, according to the
Wednesday forecast. The runoff forecast for the
Willamette River at Salem is 90 percent of
average, up 4 percent since early February.
The Bureau of Reclamation's March 2014 Total
Water Supply Available forecast for the Yakima
Basin issued Thursday indicates that there will
be a full water supply for both senior and
junior water rights this coming irrigation
season. The Bureau operates numerous dams in the
Columbia-Snake basin from hydro production,
irrigation and other uses. Dams operated by both
the Bureau and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
are also operated with the goal of improving
survival of migrating fish species such as
salmon.
"We are currently expecting the water supply to
be near normal," said Chuck Garner, Yakima
Project River Operations supervisor. "February
snowfall was incredible with a nearly continuous
stream of storms hitting the Cascades throughout
much of the month. In February, the snowpack
went from 54 percent to 95 percent of average in
the upper basin and from 63 percent to 97
percent of average in the lower basin.
“This points out that the remaining spring
conditions can have a significant impact on the
eventual water supply this season."
Reclamation will issue water supply forecasts
monthly through July. Specific water delivery
levels will not be determined until later in the
year after reservoir storage begins to decline.
The March TWSA forecast is based on flows,
precipitation, snowpack, and reservoir storage
as of March 1, along with estimates of future
precipitation and river flows. Other future
weather conditions that determine the timing of
the run-off and the demand for water are also
critical in determining streamflows,
prorationing, and the extent to which the
reservoirs fill.
"The Yakima Basin weather outlook is favorable
and the reservoir system storage on March 1 was
a healthy 110 percent of average," Garner said.
"We expect the reservoirs to fill and the runoff
to provide for early season demands."
In the event that spring precipitation and
runoff are unfavorable, Reclamation still
expects an adequate supply. Since weather
conditions can be unpredictable at times, Garner
recommends that water conservation always be a
consideration in the Yakima Basin.
For more information, visit http://www.usbr.gov/pn/hydromet/yakima
Bureau reservoirs in southern Idaho for the most
part have “big holes to fill” after steep
drawdowns last summer, according to the Bureau’s
Ted Day. But relatively ample snowpacks should
allow most to refill, though Anderson Ranch in
the Boise River system could be in question.
But, after shortages last year, “it’s likely
we’ll have adequate water to make it through the
irrigation season” with minimal rationing, Day
said.
The Owyhee and Malheur river basins have been
little helped by February and March storms. The
two rivers’ are “still pushing near record low
snowpack,” Day said. According to SNOTEL data,
the two basins are at 57 percent of average SWE
for this time of year.
The lowest SWE in the Columbia basin through
midweek was western Oregon’s Willamette River at
50 percent. Oregon’s Deschutes-John Day-Crooked
river region is at 63 percent of average SWE. |
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