climate change in idaho

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Climate Change in Idaho Philip Mote Climate Impacts Group University of Washington With contributions from Alan Hamlet, Nate van Rheenan, Richard Slaughter, Don Reading, Lara Whitely Binder, Rick Palmer Climate Science in the Public Interest [email protected] (206) 616-5346

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Climate Change in Idaho. Philip Mote Climate Impacts Group University of Washington With contributions from Alan Hamlet, Nate van Rheenan, Richard Slaughter, Don Reading, Lara Whitely Binder, Rick Palmer. [email protected] (206) 616-5346. Climate Science in the Public Interest. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Climate Change in Idaho

Climate Change in Idaho

Philip Mote Climate Impacts Group

University of Washington

With contributions from Alan Hamlet, Nate van Rheenan, Richard Slaughter, Don Reading, Lara

Whitely Binder, Rick Palmer

Climate Science in the Public Interest

[email protected](206) 616-5346

Page 2: Climate Change in Idaho

The Climate Impacts Group

Goal: help the region become more resilient to climate variations and climate change

Primary research areas: climate dynamics, water,

salmon, forests, coasts

application of the research in managing these sectors

Supported by NOAA Office of Global Programs

http://www.cses.washington.edu/cig/

Page 3: Climate Change in Idaho

Three main points Humans are changing global climate,

and these changes will become more evident

Warming will reduce snowpack and exacerbate summer water shortages; some of these changes are already becoming apparent in Idaho

Future warming introduces a climate-driven depletion of the SRP aquifer

Page 4: Climate Change in Idaho

The context: recent drought

Page 5: Climate Change in Idaho
Page 6: Climate Change in Idaho

Dry spring 2004

Page 7: Climate Change in Idaho

Warm too

Page 8: Climate Change in Idaho

Several years of moisture deficit

Page 9: Climate Change in Idaho

…and above-average temperatures

Page 10: Climate Change in Idaho
Page 11: Climate Change in Idaho

QuickTime™ and a

TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Idaho’s climate is partly driven by the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO)

warm phase cool phase

If this graph does not appear, see http://jisao.washington.edu/pdo/

Page 12: Climate Change in Idaho
Page 13: Climate Change in Idaho
Page 14: Climate Change in Idaho

The context

Recent warm dry climate is not just PDO

Page 15: Climate Change in Idaho

Three main points Humans are changing global

climate, and these changes will become more evident

Warming will reduce snowpack and exacerbate summer water shortages; some of these changes are already becoming apparent in Idaho

Future warming introduces a climate-driven depletion of the SRP aquifer

Page 16: Climate Change in Idaho

Science of climate change

Thousands of peer-reviewed scientific papers Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Major reports in 1990, 1996, 2001 Conclusions:

“An increasing body of observations gives a collective picture of a warming world and other changes in the climate system.”

“There is new and stronger evidence that most of the warming observed over the last 50 years is attributable to human activities.”

Page 17: Climate Change in Idaho
Page 18: Climate Change in Idaho

Carbon dioxide (CO2): up 32%

Page 19: Climate Change in Idaho

Appears to be higher than any time in past ~23 million yrs

~70% of CO2 emissions come from fossil fuel burning

From a long term perspective, these changes are enormous

CO2 over the last 160,000 yr

Page 20: Climate Change in Idaho

Has increased ~150% since 1750

Current concentration has not been exceeded in at least 420,000 years

Slightly more than 50% of CH4 emissions originate from human activities

More potent greenhouse gas than CO2, per molecule, but less abundant

Methane (CH4)

Page 21: Climate Change in Idaho

Global average temperature

1860 1880 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000

0.8

0.4

0

-0.4

-0.8

degr

ees

Cel

sius

Page 22: Climate Change in Idaho

Could these measurements be wrong?

Urbanization?

Stations too sparse?

Satellite measurements show no warming?

Perhaps 10% of warming; lots of natural evidence

Warming patterns very big

Surface definitely warming; troposphere warming 1960-2001 but not 1979-2001

Page 23: Climate Change in Idaho
Page 24: Climate Change in Idaho

1928

2000

The South Cascade glacier retreated dramatically in the 20th century

Courtesy of the USGS glacier group

Page 25: Climate Change in Idaho

those satellite observationsModels: troposphere (0-5 miles) should warm faster

than surface But satellites show little warming since 1979: does

this mean that surface measurements are unreliable?

Page 26: Climate Change in Idaho

those satellite observationsThe complete picture: troposphere has warmedNational Academy: satellite measurements “in no way

invalidates the conclusion that surface temperature has been rising

Emerging understanding: ozone depletion a factor?

Page 27: Climate Change in Idaho

Some evidence that it’s not natural

Rate of change appears to be unusual Pattern of change matches that

expected from increasing greenhouse gases

Solar, volcanic forcing would have led to cooling in the past ~30 years

Page 28: Climate Change in Idaho

Long-term context

source: Mann et al., EOS

Page 29: Climate Change in Idaho

Carbon dioxide: up 32%

Page 30: Climate Change in Idaho

Natural Climate Influence Human Climate Influence

All Climate Influences

Page 31: Climate Change in Idaho

Solar output varies - but not much

Figure courtesy of NOAA National Geophysical Data Center

Page 32: Climate Change in Idaho

Three main points Humans are changing global

climate, and these changes will become more evident

Warming will reduce snowpack and exacerbate summer water shortages; some of these changes are already becoming apparent in Idaho

Future warming introduces a climate-driven depletion of the SRP aquifer

Page 33: Climate Change in Idaho
Page 34: Climate Change in Idaho
Page 35: Climate Change in Idaho

21st century temperature change

IPCC (www.ipcc.ch)

Page 36: Climate Change in Idaho

Temperature change, 2071-2100 minus 1961-1990

Page 37: Climate Change in Idaho

Projected PNW Climate Change

2020s Temperature

Precipitation

Low + 0.8°F + 2 %

Mean + 2.5°F + 7%High + 3.4°F + 14 %

2040s Temperature

Precipitation

Low + 2.7°F - 3 %

Mean +4.0°F + 7%High + 4.9°F + 14 %

Based on an increase in equivalent CO2 of 1% per year. Benchmarked to the decade of the 1990s.

Projected changes in average annual PNW temperature and precipitation for the decades of the 2020s and 2040s.

high confidence lower confidence

Page 38: Climate Change in Idaho

Not what we expect in a warming world - but maybe models are wrong about precip?

Page 39: Climate Change in Idaho
Page 40: Climate Change in Idaho

Main Impact: Less SnowApril 1 Snow Extent for the Columbia

River Basin

Page 41: Climate Change in Idaho

Snake System Flows – Jackson Lk

Flow at Jackson Lake

0

50

100

150

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300

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400

Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep

tho

us

an

d a

cre

-fe

et

base

comp2020

comp2040

Page 42: Climate Change in Idaho

Snake System Flows – Milner

Flow at Milner

0

500

1000

1500

2000

2500

Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep

tho

us

an

d a

cre

-fe

et

base

comp2020

comp2040

Page 43: Climate Change in Idaho

Snake System Flows – Boise/PayetteFlows into Boise and Payette Rivers

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep

tho

us

an

d a

cre

-fe

et

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comp2020

comp2040

Page 44: Climate Change in Idaho

Snake System Flows – Dworshak R.

Flow at Dworshak

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep

tho

us

an

d a

cre

-fe

et

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Page 45: Climate Change in Idaho

Snake System Flows – Clarkston

Flow at Clarkston

0

1000

2000

3000

4000

5000

6000

7000

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9000

10000

Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep

tho

us

an

d a

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-fe

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comp2020

comp2040

Page 46: Climate Change in Idaho

Overall Streamflow changes - 2020s

-40%

-20%

0%

20%

40%

60%

Oct

Dec

Feb

Apr

Jun

Aug

-30%

-20%

-10%

0%

10%

20%

30%O

ct

De

c

Fe

b

Ap

r

Jun

Au

g

-40%

-20%

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

Oct

Dec Fe

b

Apr

Jun

Aug

-60%

-30%

0%

30%

60%

90%

120%

Oct

De

c

Fe

b

Ap

r

Jun

Au

g

-40%

-20%

0%

20%

40%

Oct

De

c

Fe

b

Ap

r

Jun

Au

g

Clarkston Dworshak

Boise

Milner

Jackson Lk

Page 47: Climate Change in Idaho

Three main points Humans are changing global

climate, and these changes will become more evident

Warming will reduce snowpack and exacerbate summer water shortages; some of these changes are already becoming apparent in Idaho

Future warming introduces a climate-driven depletion of the SRP aquifer

Page 48: Climate Change in Idaho

Mote 2003(b)

Decrease Increase

Page 49: Climate Change in Idaho

Trends in timing of spring snowmelt (1948-2000)

Courtesy of Mike Dettinger, Iris Stewart, Dan Cayan

+20d later–20d earlier

Page 50: Climate Change in Idaho

As the West warms,winter flows rise and summer flows drop

Figure by Iris Stewart, Scripps Inst. of Oceanog. (UC San Diego)

Page 51: Climate Change in Idaho

Three main points Humans are changing global

climate, and these changes will become more evident

Warming will reduce snowpack and exacerbate summer water shortages; some of these changes are already becoming apparent in Idaho

Future warming introduces a climate-driven depletion of the SRP aquifer

Page 52: Climate Change in Idaho

Snake River Plain Aquifer

Page 53: Climate Change in Idaho

Groundwater Table

evaporation losses from goundwater irrigation

aquifer recharge from surface water irrigation

Surface WaterInputs from

Ground Water

Groundwater Table

Surface WaterInputs from

Ground Water

Current Climate Warmer Climate

+ -

-

evaporation losses from goundwater irrigation

aquifer recharge from surface water irrigation

Page 54: Climate Change in Idaho

Estimated Steady State Reductions in Snake River Plain Aquifer Discharge for Two Global Warming Scenarios

SRP Aquifer Discharge to Snake River

-8

-7

-6

-5

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-2

-1

0

Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep

Ch

an

ge

fro

m B

as

e C

as

e (

ka

f)

+ 3° F

+ 4.5° F

Page 55: Climate Change in Idaho

Implications

• Warming increases ET and reduces recharge: both effects reduce SRP Aquifer discharge to the Snake River

• A warmer climate will require greater effort to maintain current levels of aquifer discharge

• Beyond SRP aquifer, downstream water users will additionally be affected by loss of snowpack.

Page 56: Climate Change in Idaho

Three main points Humans are changing global

climate, and these changes will become more evident

Warming will reduce snowpack and exacerbate summer water shortages; some of these changes are already becoming apparent in Idaho

Future warming introduces a climate-driven depletion of the SRP aquifer

Page 57: Climate Change in Idaho

Extra slides

Page 58: Climate Change in Idaho

Enhanced greenhouse effect

0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6

N2O

O3

CFCs

CH4

CO2

W/m2

Page 59: Climate Change in Idaho
Page 60: Climate Change in Idaho

Decrease Increase

Page 61: Climate Change in Idaho

and climate damage

Floods

Estuary conditions: prey, predators, competitors

Low summer streamflow, high temp

????

Page 62: Climate Change in Idaho

00.1

0.20.30.40.5

0.60.70.8

0.91

Temperature

Sea levelpressurePrecipitation

Correlations of modeled and observed climate variables

Page 63: Climate Change in Idaho

Earth’s radiation budget

From Kiehl and Trenberth, 1996

Page 64: Climate Change in Idaho

Implications Upstream of Milner, water supplies

likely to be changed less by warming (low sensitivity, high storage)

Downstream summer water supplies are already being eroded by loss of snowpack, especially in sensitive areas such as N. Fork Clearwater (Dworshak inflows).

Water temperature problems in the lower basin may be exacerbated.