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Alan F. Hamlet Philip W. Mote Dennis P. Lettenmaier

The Impacts of Climate Change on Pacific Northwest Climate and Streamflow: Implications for Puget Sound, Strait of Georgia, and Coastal Watersheds. JISAO Center for Science in the Earth System Climate Impacts Group and Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering

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Alan F. Hamlet Philip W. Mote Dennis P. Lettenmaier

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  1. The Impacts of Climate Change on Pacific Northwest Climate and Streamflow: Implications for Puget Sound, Strait of Georgia, and Coastal Watersheds JISAO Center for Science in the Earth System Climate Impacts Group and Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Washington Feb, 2005 http://www.hydro.washington.edu/Lettenmaier/Presentations/2005/hamlet_cig_puget_sound_feb_2005.ppt Alan F. Hamlet Philip W. Mote Dennis P. Lettenmaier

  2. Example of a flawed water planning study: The Colorado River Compact of 1922 The Colorado River Compact of 1922 divided the use of waters of the Colorado River System between the Upper and Lower Colorado River Basin. It apportioned **in perpetuity** to the Upper and Lower Basin, respectively, the beneficial consumptive use of 7.5 million acre feet (maf) of water per annum. It also provided that the Upper Basin will not cause the flow of the river at Lee Ferry to be depleted below an aggregate of 7.5 maf for any period of ten consecutive years. The Mexican Treaty of 1944 allotted to Mexico a guaranteed annual quantity of 1.5 maf. **These amounts, when combined, exceed the river's long-term average annual flow**.

  3. Hydroclimatology of the Pacific Northwest

  4. Annual PNW Precipitation (mm) Elevation (m)

  5. (mm) Summer Precipitation Winter Precipitation

  6. Hydrologic Characteristics of PNW Rivers

  7. Sensitivity of Snowmelt and Transient Rivers to Changes in Temperature and Precipitation • Temperature warms, • precipitation unaltered: • Streamflow timing is altered • Annual volume stays about the same • Precipitation increases, • temperature unaltered: • Streamflow timing stays about the same • Annual volume is altered

  8. Ollalie Meadows SNOTEL 3700 ft elevation WY 1995 (normal year)

  9. Ollalie Meadows SNOTEL 3700 ft elevation WY 1992 (Warm Year)

  10. Ollalie Meadows SNOTEL 3700 ft elevation WY 2005 (very warm year)

  11. Pacific Decadal Oscillation El Niño Southern Oscillation A history of the PDO A history of ENSO warm warm cool 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

  12. Effects of the PDO and ENSO on Columbia River Summer Streamflows PDO Cool Cool Warm Warm high high low low Ocean Productivity

  13. Watersheds in the Cascades are even more sensitive due to combined temperature and precipitation effects.

  14. Observed Climate Change and Hydrologic Impacts for the PNW

  15. The earth is warming -- abruptly

  16. Trends in April 1 SWE 1950-1997 Source: Mote et al. (2004)

  17. Decadal Climate Variability Doesn’t Explain the Loss of SWE Due to Warming 1925-46 with 1977-95 1947-97 1916-97 Relative SWE Trends Due to Temperature Effects Alone (% per year)

  18. Trends in timing of peak snowpack are towards earlier calendar dates Change in Date

  19. As the West warms, winter flows rise and summer flows drop Figure by Iris Stewart, Scripps Inst. of Oceanog. (UC San Diego)

  20. Trends in fraction of annual runoff 1947-2003 (cells > 50 mm of SWE on April 1) June March Relative Trend (% per year)

  21. Trends in Simulated Average APR 1 SWE for the Cascades in WA and OR (1950-1995) Effects of TMP and PCP -54% SWE (mm) Effects of TMP -26% Effects of PCP -28% SWE (mm)

  22. Summer Water Availability is Declining 55 years Figures courtesy of Matt Wiley and Richard Palmer at CEE, UW

  23. Global Climate Change Scenarios and Hydrologic Impacts for the PNW

  24. Natural AND human influences explain the observations best. Natural Climate Influence Human Climate Influence All Climate Influences

  25. Four Delta Method Climate Change Scenarios for the PNW ~ + 2.5 C ~ + 1.7 C Somewhat wetter winters and perhaps somewhat dryer summers

  26. Changes in Mean Temperature and Precipitation or Bias Corrected Output from GCMs ColSim Reservoir Model VIC Hydrology Model

  27. Changes in Simulated April 1 Snowpack for the Cascade Range in Washington and Oregon Current Climate “2020s” (+1.7 C) “2040s” (+ 2.5 C) -44% -58% April 1 SWE (mm)

  28. Naturalized Flow for Historic and Global Warming Scenarios Compared to Effects of Regulation at 1990 Level Development Historic Naturalized Flow Estimated Range of Naturalized Flow With 2040’s Warming Regulated Flow

  29. Effects to the Cedar River (Seattle Water Supply) for “Middle-of-the-Road” Scenarios

  30. Will Global Warming be “Warm and Wet” or “Warm and Dry”? Answer: Probably BOTH!

  31. Sustainable management of PNW salmon populations will very likely have to cope with flow variability associated with both “warm and wet” and “warm and dry” scenarios at different times. Such conditions can be incorporated in planning as a test for sustainability though adverse periods, rates of recovery during favorable periods, etc. Natural Streamflows at Dworshak Cool PDO 2040 Warm PDO 2040

  32. Impacts of Climate Change on Puget Sound Fresh Water Inputs

  33. Caveats Runoff from Vancouver Island and fresh water inputs to the Strait of Georgia are not included. Effects of deep ground water, changing urbanization, consumptive water use, dams, and water management are not considered.

  34. Digital Elevation Model of the Puget Sound Drainage Basin at 1/8th Degree Elevation (m)

  35. Current Climate 2040s (+2.5 C)

  36. Changes in (Runoff + Baseflow) to Puget Sound for Comp2040 Scenario (+ 2.5 C)

  37. Observed changes in Seasonal Fraction of Annual Flow in the Fraser River (Note small changes in consumptive use not accounted for in these data) May-Sept -8% Cumulative Trends over 82 years: June-Sept -13%

  38. Implications for Puget Sound, Georgia Basin, and Coastal Watersheds The timing of natural runoff in many near-coastal watersheds of the PNW is very sensitive to small increases in temperature via changes in moderate-elevation snow dynamics. The seasonal timing of runoff originating from low elevation areas, by comparison, may be relatively insensitive to temperature changes. In PNW watersheds with significant snow accumulation we should expect systematic decreases in spring snowpack, increases in runoff in winter (which in some instances may result in greater flooding), earlier peak streamflow in spring, and reduced runoff in summer. Late summer low flows should also systematically decrease, while water temperature should systematically increase. Runoff to coastal areas in summer may also become more variable and more strongly linked to summer climate as warming progresses, because the current linkage to winter climate (via the snowpack) is weakened. The seasonal timing of fresh water inputs to the Strait of Georgia from the Fraser River are less sensitive to rising temperatures than are fresh water inputs to Puget Sound, but show analogous changes in the seasonality of flow. Effects of groundwater, urbanization, consumptive water use, and water resources management need further study. Integrated studies using linked hydrologic and oceanographic models are needed to begin to understand the ecological implications.

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