Warming may create substantial water supply shortages in the Colorado River basin

Similar documents
Collaborative Research on Upper Colorado River Basin Streamflow and Drought. Designing and Implementing User-driven Research

Colorado River Basin

Disentangling the Influence of Temperature and Antecedent Soil Moisture on Colorado River Water Resources

Impacts of Drought: Water Resources in the Colorado River Basin

A Tree-Ring Based Assessment of Synchronous Extreme Streamflow Episodes in the Upper Colorado & Salt-Verde-Tonto River Basins

The El Niño: Hydro logic Relief to U.S. Regions

COLORADO RIVER Risk Study Update

Assessing the robustness of spring snowpack as a drought indicator in the Upper Colorado River Basin under future climate change

SLIDES: Response of the System to Various Hydrological and Operational Assumptions: Reclamation Modeling Results

Past Peak Water in the Southwest

A Tree-Ring Based Assessment of Synchronous Extreme Streamflow Episodes in the Upper Colorado & Salt-Verde-Tonto River Basins

HYDROLOGIC DETERMINATION Water Availability from Navajo Reservoir and the Upper Colorado River Basin for Use in New Mexico.

Regional Analysis of Trend and Step Changes Observed in Hydroclimatic Variables around the Colorado River Basin

THE EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON THE HYDROLOGY AND WATER RESOURCES OF THE COLORADO RIVER BASIN

Division of Climate, Atmospheric Science, and Physical Oceanography, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, CA

Recent RiverWare and RiverSMART applications on the Colorado River Basin RiverWare User Group Meeting August 24, 2016

Thriving During Climate and Water Change: Strategies for the 21 st Century

Rio Grande Tree Ring Monsoon Workshop

Water Supply Risk on the Colorado River: Can Management Mitigate?

Maintaining Water Supply Resilience in Extreme Times

Southwest Climate Science Center FINAL TECHNICAL REPORT

Colorado River Overview

Colorado River Reservoir Storage: Reliability, Resilience and Response

The Central Arizona Project (CAP) and Planning for Times of Shortage

THE COLORADO RIVER: INTEGRATING HYDROLOGIC AND MANAGEMENT PERSPECTIVES

A hot drought : Warming is driving much of the Colorado River s decline, scientists say

Colorado River Basin Water Supply and Demand Study. Navigating the Future of the Colorado River Natural Resources Law Center June 9, 2011

Enhancing Water Supply Reliability

Predicting regime shifts in flow of the Gunnison River under changing climate conditions

Impact of future hydrologic extremes on water supply and irrigation water demand under changing climate in Texas

PO Box 466 Moab, UT

2. Primary Climate Change Concerns for CAP

The State of the Colorado River

Using the Paleoclimatic Data Record to Understand Historical Precipitation Patterns

RECLAMATION. Colorado River Basin Water Supply and Demand Study. Managing Water in the West. Executive Summary

Parameter regionalization of a monthly water balance model for the conterminous United States

PRE-PRODUCTION COPY. Colorado River Basin Water Supply and Demand Study. Executive Summary

Trends and temperature sensitivity of moisture conditions in the conterminous United States

Stanley J. Woodcock, Michael Thiemann, and Larry E. Brazil Riverside Technology, inc., Fort Collins, Colorado

Comparison of hedging rule curves depending on available water and current storage in reservoir operation under droughts

GLEN CANYON DAM LTEMP EIS

Revising Reservoir Planning Based On Vulnerability To Sustained Drought In The Past And Future

When will Lake Mead go dry?

Physically-based distributed modelling of river runoff under changing climate conditions

Colorado River Basin Water Supply and Demand Study. Technical Report E Approach to Develop and Evaluate Options and Strategies

Physically-based distributed modelling of river runoff under changing climate conditions

21st Century Climate Change In SW New Mexico: What s in Store for the Gila? David S. Gutzler University of New Mexico

Comparison of Streamflow and Precipitation in the Upper Provo River Watershed

Colorado River: Drought Contingency Planning Wyoming s Little Snake and Green River Basins October 15, 2018

Precipitation elasticity of streamflow in catchments across the world

Climate Change and Drought Scenarios for Water Supply Planning

Variability and Trends in Global Drought. Greg McCabe, USGS, Denver, CO Dave Wolock, USGS, Lawrence, KS

March 26, Colorado River Basin States. Colorado River overview and management. Basin States response to drought

The Colorado River Basin Water Supply and Demand Study. World Water Week Stockholm 2017 August 27 September 1

Colorado River Basin Water Supply and Demand Study. WRRC 2013 Conference University of Arizona Tucson, AZ March 5, 2013

THE CURRENT DROUGHT IN CONTEXT: A TREE-RING BASED EVALUATION OF WATER SUPPLY VARIABILITY FOR THE SALT-VERDE RIVER BASIN

Streamflow of 2013 Water Year Summary

Reducing Lower Basin Shortage Risk and Increasing Resilience in Arizona

Natural Flow at Lee Ferry, AZ

SRP and Research Past, Present and Future

June 2009: How severe is the current drought in the Hill Country? Raymond M Slade, Jr, PH Certified Professional Hydrologist

Development of Stochastic Flow Sequences Based on Observed and Paleo-Reconstructed Data

What makes the Great Salt Lake level go up and down?

Student Corner. Jack McLaren. Reservoir profiles uncover mechanism behind warming waters in the Henry s Fork

The Effect of Draining Lake Powell on Water Supply and Electricity Production. Spreck Rosekrans

Non-linearity of the runoff response across southeastern Australia to increases in global average temperature

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, VOL. 46, W05513, doi: /2008wr007650, 2010

Rio Grande Tree-Ring Monsoon Workshop

aka the basin study Eric Kuhn General Manager 2013 Upper Colorado River Basin Water Conference Colorado Mesa University November 7, 2013

State of the Colorado River System: Drought and the Outlook for Floodplain Management Conference Rancho Mirage, CA September 10, 2015

Colorado River Water Bank Feasibility Study

Preparing for Uncertainty: Mitigating Climate Change Impacts in California s Central Valley

Image courtesy of NASA/GSFC

Full Technical Report: Hydro Power production in a future climate

Evaluation of Interdecadal Drought Variability Using Reconstructed Streamflow Data

RiverWare Model and Analysis Tools for River System Planning and Management

Changing climatic conditions in the Colorado River Basin: Implications for water resources management in the Las Vegas Valley

JOINT WEST SLOPE BASIN ROUNDTABLE RISK STUDY INTRODUCTION AND WORK TO DATE JULY 13, 2016

Home. Colorado River Interactive Simulation - Climate Change Unit. Climate Change Unit

Comment on When will Lake Mead go dry? by T. P. Barnett and D. W. Pierce

The impact of climate change and plantation development on streamflow in the Denmark River catchment, Western Australia

Reconciling Projections of Colorado River Flows. Reconciling Projections of Colorado River Flows. -- A joint effort of NOAA RISAs and partners --

Approval of Shortage Management Actions in Response to MWD Supply Cutbacks and SWRCB Emergency Regulation

Reconciling Projections of Colorado River Stream Flow Over the Next Century

IMPACT OF DROUGHT CONDITIONS ON MISSISSIPPI STREAMS AND RIVERS IN 2000

Risk Study, Phase III Scope of Work

Understanding water-energy-ecology nexus from a coupled human-nature system perspective

Central America Climate Change: Implications for the Rio Lempa

COLORADO RIVER RISK STUDY

The Bathtub Ring: Implications of Low Water Levels in Lake Mead on Water Supply, Hydropower, Recreation, and the Environment

Arizona Lower Basin Drought Contingency Plan Steering Committee Meeting #3 August 23, 2018

Assessing the Risk of Climate Change on the Water Resources of the Macquarie River Catchment

Assessing the impact of projected climate changes on small coastal basins of the Western US

LOSS RATES FROM LAKE POWELL AND THEIR IMPACT ON MANAGEMENT OF THE COLORADO RIVER 1

Climate and Water Supply in the Santa Ana River Watershed

Uncertainty in projections of streamflow changes due to climate change in California

Ensemble flood forecasting based on ensemble precipitation forecasts and distributed hydrological model Hongjun Bao

Aamodt Hydrologic Modeling Using URGWOM to Evaluate Cochiti Recreation Pool Water Needs

TITLE: ATechnical Information regarding Pacific Institute Introduction

Supplement of Human amplified changes in precipitation runoff patterns in large river basins of the Midwestern United States

Transcription:

Click Here for Full Article GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 34, L22708, doi:10.1029/2007gl031764, 2007 BAK680 Warming may create substantial water supply shortages in the Colorado River basin Gregory J. McCabe 1 and David M. Wolock 2 Received 21 August 2007; revised 19 October 2007; accepted 25 October 2007; published 27 November 2007. [1] The high demand for water, the recent multiyear drought (1999 2007), and projections of global warming have raised questions about the long-term sustainability of water supply in the southwestern United States. In this study, the potential effects of specific levels of atmospheric warming on water-year streamflow in the Colorado River basin are evaluated using a water-balance model, and the results are analyzed within the context of a multi-century tree-ring reconstruction (1490 1998) of streamflow for the basin. The results indicate that if future warming occurs in the basin and is not accompanied by increased precipitation, then the basin is likely to experience periods of water supply shortages more severe than those inferred from the longterm historical tree-ring reconstruction. Furthermore, the modeling results suggest that future warming would increase the likelihood of failure to meet the water allocation requirements of the Colorado River Compact. Citation: McCabe, G. J., and D. M. Wolock (2007), Warming may create substantial water supply shortages in the Colorado River basin, Geophys. Res. Lett., 34, L22708, doi:10.1029/ 2007GL031764. 1. Introduction [2] The Upper Colorado River basin (UCRB), defined as that part of the basin that is upstream from the streamgage at Lees Ferry, Arizona (Figure 1), generates approximately 90 percent (%) of the total flow of the Colorado River basin and, through the Colorado River Compact of 1922, supplies water and hydropower for much of the southwestern United States (U.S.). The two main reservoirs in the Colorado River basin, Lake Powell (in the upper basin) and Lake Mead (in the lower basin), account for about 85% of the storage capacity of the entire Colorado River basin. [3] The balance between water supply and demand in the Colorado River basin has become precarious in recent years. The supply of water depends on the allocations prescribed in the Colorado River Compact, the capacity of the basin reservoirs, and the natural flows that supply the reservoirs. The allocations, which were set in 1922, were based on what turned out to be an unusually wet period compared to the remainder of the twentieth (20th) century [Christensen et al., 2004]. Clearly, natural flow variability led to the 1922 allocations being set at high levels that may be difficult to sustain. On the demand side of the equation, population and the accompanying requirements for water have increased 1 U.S. Geological Survey, Denver, Colorado, USA. 2 U.S. Geological Survey, Lawrence, Kansas, USA. This paper is not subject to U.S. copyright. Published in 2007 by the American Geophysical Union. substantially since the Compact was written [Diaz and Anderson, 1995]. [4] The long-term sustainability of the water-supply system in the Colorado River basin will be affected by the future levels of natural flows that replenish the reservoirs. One approach to defining future expectations of flow is to reconstruct historical long-term flow estimates from tree rings [Woodhouse et al., 2006]. This long-term historical context provides an indication of flow conditions that have occurred in the past and may occur in the future. A contrasting approach to predicting future flow conditions in the Colorado River basin is based on climate model simulations. Christensen and Lettenmaier [2006], for example, report 8% to 11% reductions in UCRB runoff by the end of the 21st century. [5] The objective of this study is to evaluate the sensitivity of UCRB water supply to global warming by using a combination of historical flow reconstructions and climate model simulation approaches. In this study, the estimated effects of future global warming on flow and water supply in the UCRB are placed within the context of the long-term reconstructed tree-ring flow record. Also, the effects of global warming are superimposed on the reconstructed flows to get as broad of an assessment as possible of potential future conditions. The study focuses on climatedriven flow and does not address the additional influence of changes in water demand. 2. Methods [6] Upper Colorado River basin water-year (October through September) natural flow values for the period 1906 through 2004 were obtained from the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (http://www.usbr.gov/lc/region/g4000/naturalflow/ current.html). Monthly temperature and precipitation data for the period 1895 through 2004 were obtained from the Precipitation-elevation Regression on Independent Slopes Model (PRISM) dataset (http:www.ocs.orst.edu/prism/). The climate data are provided on a 4-kilometer (km) by 4-km grid and, in this study, were aggregated for each of the 62 U.S. Geological Survey hydrologic cataloging units (HUC8) in the UCRB (Figure 1). Temperature and precipitation data for these units were used as inputs to a monthly time-step water-balance model, which was used to estimate monthly streamflow. Monthly streamflow estimates for all 62 HUC8s were summed by water year (October through September) and aggregated over space to provide a time series of water-year UCRB streamflow. [7] The water-balance model uses an accounting procedure to partition water among various components of the hydrologic system [Wolock and McCabe, 1999]. Inputs to the model for each hydrologic cataloging unit are monthly L22708 1of5

Figure 1. The Upper Colorado River basin (UCRB) is outlined and shaded gray. Hydrologic Unit Code (HUC) 8 regions are shown inside the UCRB outline. The main stem and primary tributaries of the Colorado River are shown in black. The Lower Colorado River basin is outlined, but not shaded. temperature and precipitation. The water-balance model was calibrated by adjusting several model parameters in order to optimize the agreement between estimated and measured flow for the period 1906 2004. The correlation between time series of measured and post-calibration estimated water-year streamflow for the UCRB is 0.93 (p < 0.01). The goodness-of-fit between the water-balance model and measured flow data is indicated by several statistics: the root-mean-squared error equals 14.1% of the mean-annual measured flow; the average bias (estimated measured) equals 0.7% of the mean-annual measured flow; and the Nash-Sutcliffe statistic [Nash and Sutcliffe, 1970] equals 0.76. These goodness-of-fit statistics indicate that the waterbalance model reasonably estimates natural streamflow for the UCRB. [8] The sensitivity of UCRB streamflow to specified changes in temperature is evaluated in this study; only changes in temperature are evaluated because future changes in precipitation are highly uncertain [Wolock and McCabe, 1999; Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 2007]. Two warming scenarios are used in the study: (1) 0.86 degrees Celsius ( C) (T + 0.86 C), which is the measured trend in UCRB annual temperature during the 20th century, and (2) 2 C (T + 2 C), which represents a warmer scenario that is still within the range projected by climate models [Christensen et al., 2004; Hoerling and Eischeid, 2007; Christensen and Lettenmaier, 2006]. Each of the warming scenarios was applied as a uniform change in temperature. [9] In addition to the measured and water-balance estimated values of UCRB water-year flow, a time series of UCRB water-year flow (1490 1998) reconstructed from tree-rings [Woodhouse et al., 2006] was used to provide a reference for long-term streamflow variability in the UCRB. The long-term reconstructed streamflow dataset gives a context for comparison with 20th century streamflow as well as with the estimated effects of warming scenarios. [10] The effects of the warming scenarios (0.86 and 2 C) on UCRB streamflow were evaluated in two ways. The first approach was to directly apply the warming scenarios to 20th century climate data. The monthly temperature data for the period 1901 2000 were raised uniformly (not ramped) by the specified changes in temperature, and the waterbalance model was run with the modified climate inputs. [11] The second approach was to apply the warming scenarios to the driest century of reconstructed streamflow in the tree-ring record. This can be viewed as a worst-case scenario, in which a naturally very dry period is modified consistent with the 0.86 and 2 C warming scenarios. It is not possible to directly apply the warming scenarios to treering reconstructed climate data because such climate data for the UCRB do not exist. Instead, the reconstructed streamflow values for the driest century in the tree-ring record (1573 1672) were adjusted by average percentage changes in estimated streamflow caused by the warming scenarios applied to 20th century data. For example, the 0.86 C warming scenario applied directly to 20th century climate caused an 8% decrease in streamflow (see next section), so the reconstructed streamflow values were decreased by 8% to represent a 0.86 C warming. [12] A simple flow/surplus water-supply model was developed to examine the effects of specified changes in temperature on the likelihood of UCRB flow to meet the minimum flow requirements of the Colorado Compact. The flow/surplus water-supply model uses water-year UCRB flow as input, and a critical threshold (17866 mcm) of annual flow. This critical value was developed from a mass balance analysis of the inflows and depletions (evaporation and consumptive use) of both the Upper and Lower Colorado basins (Eric Kuhn, Colorado Water Conservation District, personal communication, 2005). If naturalized UCRB water-year flow is greater than this specified threshold, then the critical flow value is met; flow in excess of the critical flow value is accumulated as surplus water that can be used in subsequent years to augment water-year UCRB flow. The surplus is permitted to accumulate to a total of 41938 million cubic meters (mcm), which is the current reservoir capacity of the UCRB; surplus in excess of this reservoir capacity passes through the river system as excess streamflow. When naturalized water-year UCRB flow is less than the critical flow value, water is extracted from the accumulated surplus (i.e., from the reservoirs) to reach the critical flow value. If available accumulated surplus is not sufficient to reach the critical threshold, then the critical threshold is not met and the system has failed. This accounting-type model permits a simple examination of the effects of specified climate changes on the likelihood of meeting, or failing to meet, the minimum flow requirements of the Colorado Compact. For each simulation, the initial reservoir storage was set to 41938 mcm. [13] The flow/surplus water-supply model was evaluated by comparing estimated storage in Lake Powell with measured storage data obtained from the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (http://www.usbr.gov/uc/crsp/getsiteinfo). The period 1985 to 2000 was chosen for the comparison 2of5

Figure 2. Boxplot of mean water-year flow (in millions of cubic meters (mcm)) for the Upper Colorado River basin (UCRB) for 100-year moving periods during 1490 1998 (determined using tree-ring reconstructed water-year flows). Also indicated are mean water-year UCRB flows for the 20th century (1901 2000, based on water-balance estimates), 0.86 degrees Celsius ( C) and 2 C warmings (labeled as T + 0.86 C and T + 2 C respectively) applied to the 20th century water-balance estimates, and 0.86 o C and 2 C warmings applied to the driest century (1573 1672) from the tree-ring reconstructed flow time series. because Lake Powell did not finish filling until the early 1980s. The estimated storage values for the entire UCRB were multiplied by 0.79 to approximate Lake Powell storage. (Storage in Lake Powell represents approximately 79% of the total reservoir storage capacity of the UCRB.) The correlation between the estimated and measured storage values is 0.93, the bias is 7.8% of the mean measured storage and the root-mean-squared error is 16.8% of mean measured storage. Despite the simplicity of the flow/surplus model and the simple adjustment of the UCRB total storage estimates to represent Lake Powell storage, the agreement between the measured and estimated storage values is reasonable. 3. Results and Discussion [14] The reconstructed tree-ring streamflow values were aggregated with a 100-year moving average to generate a frequency distribution of 100-year average water-year flow values for the period 1490 1998 (Figure 2). This distribution of 100-year average values is represented in the box plot, where the box is bounded by the lower (25th percentile) and upper quartile (75th percentile) values, the line through the box indicates the median (50th percentile) value, and the vertical lines extending out from the box terminate at the minimum and maximum values. The minimum 100-year average value (the driest century: 1573 1672) was 16406 mcm and the maximum 100-year average value (the wettest century: 1899 1998) was 18541 mcm. The lower quartile, median, and upper quartile values were 17283, 17503, and 17777 mcm, respectively. [15] The 20th century (1901 2000) average water-year flow estimated by the water-balance model was 18799 mcm. (The 20th century average flow is shown in Figure 2 as a horizontal dashed line.) This value is slightly higher than the maximum 100-year period in the tree-ring reconstruction (18541 mcm: 1899 1998). This difference in the average flow values reflects the small bias between the tree-ring record and the water-balance estimates for this mostly overlapping period. [16] When the 20th century temperature record is uniformly increased by 0.86 C, the mean water-year flow estimated by the water-balance model is reduced to 17291 mcm, a reduction of 8% (Figure 2). The horizontal dashed line in Figure 2, indicating the T + 0.86 C mean water-year flow, coincides with the lower quartile line of the tree-ring reconstruction distribution. In other words, within the context of the 500-year tree-ring reconstruction, a uniform increase of 0.86 C changes the 20th century water-year average from the wettest in the tree-ring record to the lower quartile value. [17] A 2 C warming imposed on the 20th century temperature record reduced the water-balance model estimates from 18799 to 15627 mcm, a reduction of 17% (Figure 2). Relative to the distribution of 100-year average flow values based on the tree-ring reconstruction, the T + 2 C scenario caused the average water-year flow to decrease to an unprecedented level. This result is consistent with the findings of Christensen et al. [2004], who reported a 17% decrease in UCRB flow for a 2.4 C warming combined with a 3% decrease in precipitation. In a more recent study, Christensen and Lettenmaier [2006] applied changes in temperature and precipitation from 11 climate models and reported 8% to 11% decreases in UCRB runoff by the end Figure 3. Boxplot of the fraction of time the water-year flow of the Upper Colorado River basin does not meet the flow requirements of the Colorado Compact for 100-year moving periods during 1490 1998 (determined using a simple reservoir model and tree-ring reconstructed wateryear flows). Also indicated is the fraction of time the UCRB water-year flow does not meet the Colorado Compact for the 20th century (1901 2000, based on water-balance estimates), 0.86 degrees Celsius ( C) and 2 C warmings (labeled as T + 0.86 C and T + 2 C respectively) applied to the 20th century water-balance estimates, and 0.86 C and 2 C warmings applied to the driest century (1573 1672) from the tree-ring reconstructed flow time series. 3of5

Table 1. Fraction of the Time the Water-Year Flow of the Upper Colorado River Basin Fails to Meet the Flow Requirements of the Colorado Compact for Various Climate Scenarios and for Current and Unlimited Reservoir Storage Capacity Scenario Current Reservoir Storage Unlimited Reservoir Storage 20th century 0.07 0.00 20th century, T + 0.86 C 0.22 0.15 20th century, T + 2 C 0.37 0.37 Driest century 0.30 0.12 Driest century, T + 0.86 C 0.50 0.49 Driest century, T + 2 C 0.77 0.77 of the 21st century. Hoerling and Eischeid [2007] examined 42 climate simulations for the UCRB and reported average decreases in UCRB flow of 25% by 2030, and 45% by 2060. [18] The two levels of warming also were applied to the driest century (1573 1672). For these scenarios, the average percentage changes in streamflow, based on the 20th century results, were applied to the water-year flows for the period 1573 1672. An 8% reduction in flow was used to approximate the 0.86 C increase in temperature and a 17% decrease in flow represented the effects of a 2 C warming. When the 0.86 C warming (8% reduction in flow) was applied to the driest century, mean water-year flow decreased to 15094 mcm (Figure 2). The 2 C warming (17% reduction in flow) caused the driest century mean wateryear flow to be reduced to 13617 mcm. These average streamflow levels are much lower than any 100-year average flow values in the tree-ring reconstructed record. [19] The flow/surplus water-supply model was used to estimate the fraction of time the flow of the UCRB fails to meet the Colorado Compact (the failure rate). Using moving 100-year periods of tree-ring reconstructed water-year flow, a frequency distribution of failure rate was computed for the period 1490 1998 (Figure 3). The minimum, lower quartile, median, upper quartile, and maximum failure rate values were 0.04, 0.12, 0.14, 0.18, and 0.30, respectively. Notably, the 100-year period with the highest failure rate did not correspond with the 100-year period with the lowest mean-annual flow. The specific temporal sequence of flows has a substantial effect on the failure rate [Jain et al., 2002]. For example, 20 consecutive dry years followed by 20 consecutive wet years would have a higher failure rate than 40 consecutive moderate years. [20] When the 20th century temperature record was uniformly increased by 0.86 C, the failure rate increased to 0.22; this value is within the higher quartile of failure rates based on the tree-ring reconstructed record (Figure 3). A 2 C warming imposed on the 20th century temperature record increased the failure rate to 0.37, a level which exceeds any 100-year period in the reconstructed record. These failure rates for a 0.86 C and 2 C warming applied to the 20th century record are similar to the range of changes in failure rates reported by Christensen et al. [2004] and Christensen and Lettenmaier [2006] for future climate projections. Increases of 0.86 C and 2 C in temperature applied to the driest century resulted in failure rates of 0.50 and 0.77, respectively, which far exceed any 100-year period in the reconstructed record. [21] Reservoir storage was set to a specific level (41938 mcm) in the flow/surplus water-supply model used in this study. This assumption begs the question of whether or not increased reservoir storage could mitigate the effects of the estimated decreases in streamflow. To address this issue, an additional set of analyses was performed in which the reservoir storage capacity was assumed to be unlimited. All streamflow in excess of the required annual threshold (17866 mcm) was permitted to accumulate as surplus and then be available to augment flows during dry years. Results of these analyses (Table 1) show that unlimited reservoir storage caused a decrease in failure rates for the 20th century climate, 20th century climate with a 0.86 C warming, and the driest century (tree-ring reconstruction) scenarios. Unlimited reservoir storage did not, however, reduce the failure rate for the 20th century climate with a 2 C warming scenario or for the scenarios that were generated using flows from the driest century and included a 0.86 C or 2 C warming. For this latter set of scenarios, the estimated flow values are so low that little excess water is available in any year and, therefore, surplus accumulations are not sufficient to accumulate to levels that exceed the current reservoir storage capacity. This result would imply that for the 20th century climate 2 C scenario, increasing the reservoir storage capacity of the Colorado River basin likely would not reduce the fraction of time that the flow of the UCRB fails to meet the Colorado Compact. This result is consistent with findings of Christensen and Lettenmaier [2006] who reported that, due to the large storage to inflow ratio of the Colorado River basin, neither increases in reservoir capacity nor changes in operating polices are likely to mitigate stresses imposed by adverse climate change. 4. Summary [22] These analyses provide a perspective on the possible future of water resources in the Colorado River basin given global warming, within the context of possible climate scenarios based on tree-ring reconstructions. These analyses focused on a warming in the basin and did not consider changes in precipitation, changes in evaporative water losses from reservoirs, or changes in consumptive water use associated with population increases. In addition, the analyses did not consider separately the depletions and obligations to meet the Colorado Compact of the Upper and Lower basins. Additional model development is needed to address these issues. [23] The results of these sensitivity experiments indicate that given current consumptive water use in the UCRB, 1 C to 2 C increases in temperature, assuming no offsetting increases in precipitation, would create increased watersupply problems in the basin. Continued increases in consumptive water use will likely exacerbate and accelerate the problems associated with possible warming. [24] Acknowledgments. We thank Steve Gray (University of Wyoming) and Eric Kuhn (Colorado River Water Conservation District) for helpful comments and advice. 4of5

References Christensen, N., and D. P. Lettenmaier (2006), A multimodel ensemble approach to assessment of climate change impacts on the hydrology and water resources of the Colorado River basin, Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci. Discuss., 3, 3737 3770. Christensen, N. S., A. W. Wood, N. Voisin, D. Lettenmaier, and R. N. Palmer (2004), The effects of climate change on the hydrology and water resources of the Colorado River basin, Clim. Change, 62, 337 363. Diaz, H. F., and C. A. Anderson (1995), Precipitation trends and water consumption related to population in the southwestern United States: A reassessment, Water Resour. Res., 31, 713 720. Hoerling, M., and J. Eischeid (2007), Past peak water in the Southwest, Southwest Hydrol., 6, 18. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (2007), Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis: Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate, 996 pp., Cambridge Univ. Press, New York. Jain, S., C. A. Woodhouse, and M. P. Hoerling (2002), Multidecadal streamflow regimes in the interior western United States: Implications for the vulnerability of water resources, Geophys. Res. Lett., 29(21), 2036, doi:10.1029/2001gl014278. Nash, J. E., and J. V. Sutcliffe (1970), River flow forecasting through conceptual models, I: A discussion of principles, J. Hydrol., 10, 282 290. Wolock, D. M., and G. J. McCabe (1999), Effects of potential climatic change on annual runoff in the conterminous United States, J. Am. Water Resour. Assoc., 35, 1341 1350. Woodhouse, C. A., S. T. Gray, and D. M. Meko (2006), Updated streamflow reconstructions for the Upper Colorado River Basin, Water Resour. Res., 42, W05415, doi:10.1029/2005wr004455. G. J. McCabe, U.S. Geological Survey, Denver Federal Center, MS 412, Denver, CO 80225, USA. (gmccabe@usgs.gov) D. M. Wolock, U.S. Geological Survey, 4821 Quail Crest Place, Lawrence, KS 66049, USA. 5of5