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Climate Change in the Pacific Northwest

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Presentation on theme: "Climate Change in the Pacific Northwest"— Presentation transcript:

1 Climate Change in the Pacific Northwest
and Implications for the Snake River Basin JISAO Climate Impacts Group and the Department of Civil Engineering University of Washington September, 2001 Alan F. Hamlet Andy Wood Dennis P. Lettenmaier

2 (mm) Winter Precipitation Summer Precipitation

3 Hydrologic Characteristics of PNW Rivers

4 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

5 Effect of 1992 Winter Climate on Two PNW Rivers
Cedar River Western Cascades (caused predominantly by warm temperatures) Columbia River at The Dalles (caused both by warm temperatures and decreased precipitation)

6 Changes in Mean Temperature and Precipitation from GCMs
ColSim Reservoir Model VIC Hydrology Model

7 Climate Change Scenarios 2020s

8 Climate Change Scenarios 2040s

9 The main impact: less snow
April 1 Columbia Basin Snow Extent

10 Columbia River at The Dalles 2020s “Middle-of-the-Road” Scenario

11 Columbia River at The Dalles 2040s “Middle-of-the-Road” Scenario

12 Water Resources in the Columbia River Basin
System objectives affected by winter flows Winter hydropower production (PNW demand) System objectives affected by summer flows Flood control Summer hydropower production (California demand) Irrigation Instream flow for fish Recreation

13 Simulated Reliability of Water Resources Objectives
for “Middle-of-the-Road” Scenarios

14 1 Palisades 2 Milner 3 Oxbow 4 Ice Harbor 5 Kiona 5 4 3 1 2

15 Snake River at Palisades

16 Snake River at Milner

17 Snake River at Oxbow

18 Snake River at Ice Harbor

19 Climate Change Implications for the Snake River Basin
Considered in isolation, the upper basin is probably well protected against relatively small temperature related streamflow timing shifts, but is vulnerable to uncertain reductions in precipitation, and basinwide considerations. Irrigation and summer streamflows in the lower basin are vulnerable to temperature related streamflow timing shifts and potential reductions in precipitation. Upper basin storage and irrigation demand may be indirectly affected by expected reductions in summer streamflows in the lower basin and main stem of the Columbia, since limited reservoir storage in the lower basin (Dworshak) is available to maintain streamflows in the lower basin (e.g. at Lower Granite). Maintaining water temperature at acceptable levels may also pose considerable challenges.


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