Park City has been getting hotter and dryer for years, at a rate of 1.5 inches of snow less per year since 1990 a least. The 2025 water year, ending October 1, was the driest in 85 years in Park City, since the dust bowl of the dirty thirties, with only 13 inches of precipitation or 60% of average and nothing all summer. Then we had 7 inches of rain by New Years so the Calendar year looks average and we forgot about the drought. This pattern has been predicted by Brian McInerney of the NWS for the last 30 years. Our new Rain Hydrology of extreme events.
The last four months and counting were 10
degrees warmer than average with some days almost 30 degrees above normal.
We were breaking some daily temperature records by 5 degrees and had the
warmest winter ever by 2.5 degrees. We are losing as much as a month on
either end of the ski season. This is anecdotally evident to us all, for
even a blind man knows when it is not snowing.
Average Park City temperatures
are up 3-5 degrees over 125 years (The Industrial Age) and Summer
morning low average temperatures are up 10 degrees over the past
50 years (The Undeniable Age). Normal weather changes are being
compounded by climate change and are exponential and not linear. This
was predicted by Simon Wang of USU 20 years ago with the weakening and vacillating
of the polar jet streams due to the poles heating faster.
The ski season has lost a month on
each end. Peak runoff is in May now and the
total volume has been diminished by 1-2 acre-feet per square mile per
year. No wonder the lake is drying up. Statewide snowpack is less than 50%
of average this year. The Great Salt Lake should expect much less than 40%
of average runoff and should hit its historical low next fall and
could see ecosystem collapse within 5 years. That is not to mention ‘;’
the increased toxic dust clouds in the Wasatch that kill people,
last for weeks, reach Park City, exacerbate early runoff and diminish the historical
lake effect snows. The choice is ours.
The Lake collapse was predicted 30
years ago, using Ai, by Dr. Upman Lall of the UoU. We did not listen and we pumped extra water
from the ample 83-84 runoff to the West Desert to evaporate. We would love that water back now for the
unintended consequences. The Lake is
only 10,000 years old and has never died up, yet. There are 150 terminal lakes in the
world experiencing collapse. None have been saved.
Meanwhile The State Legislature was fasting
and praying for another big runoff year like 2023 and proposing
authority and funding for more water use development on the Bear
River. They proposed to remove the protection of natural steams,
recreation attributes and the benefits of Public Welfare clauses from
Water Right approval criterion. Trump
has offered to fix The Lake but then it would have to be called The Great Trump
Lake and this should probably be a state thing.
The State could reclaim some Water Rights
or buy 8-million-acre feet (Flaming Gorge lake) of water from users,
mostly farmers, at a cost of 2-3 billion dollars to fix The
Lake. The State allocated only 5-10 percent of that to study the
problem. They would like to drain the North Arm to the South Arm to
cover up the dust but some people and all of the The Birds live up north. The State has turned to private sector philanthrope
for a solution and the Romney family has given them 100 million dollars but we
need deeper pockets for this one.
I believe that the only way to save The
Lake, short of banning farming and cows, is to have The Church step in and
help. They have the money, water, political ware-with-all, authority,
dominion over all, responsibility for overpopulation, and the most to gain from
saving our little Vatican city from ruin. It would be like the seagulls
eating the crickets to save Zion.
The Colorado River, likewise,
is expecting less than 30% the average annual runoff volume while Lake
Powell and Mead are only 25% full. The River was originally allocated
for 17-million-acre feet in the Colorado Compact of 1922, and now only flows
5. Something has to give. Lake Powell is looking at Minimum Power
pool in 1-2 years, where we have to burn more carbon to replace the lost power. Dead Pool could be in 5-10 years, where we
lose control of the outflow in the Grand Canyon for Compact deliveries. And
no one is talking seriously about replumbing the Glen Canyon dam outlet to
insure Lower Basin states get their legal allocation, even if the Upper Basin
wanted to give it to them.
Western Governors met in DC with
the Feds and their lawyers to renegotiate The Compact and
devise a plan for cuts by the end of the year, since the state's representatives
could not do it on time and punted. The Compact was created to avoid
the Feds and lawyers. How's that working out. This is The Tragedy
of the Commons mixed with Russian Roulette, Game Theory, where the only way to
win is to cheat. What we need is some Quantum
Entanglement, synchronized cooperation, to battle our human nature of greed,
fear. We privatize profit and ethics while socializing
cost and morality.
The Supreme Court doesn't want it so
we could give this problem to Trump. Legal or not he could just take over
the basin and stop people from growing hay or eating cows and we could all be great
again. California could desalinate water to grow rice and Arizona
could stop growing cotton or pumping their share into the ground. Grow cotton in Alabama and rice in Viet
Nam. Colorado could stop sealing its headwaters
share and Utah could stop cooling Ai-Bitcoin data centers in the high desert
(put them in cold Alaska). As far as
Wyoming, Nevada, New Mexico, Mexico, Native Americans, the fish, the river, the
riparian habitat and the littoral environment, well, no one seems to care.
Solutions to both The Lake and The River range from creating free and fair markets for water so we all pay the true price, cost, value and worth of this commodity, while maintaining the inalienable right of minimum human water needs. This would encourage adjustment of the Prior Appropriation doctrine of ‘first in time, first in right’, ‘use it or lose it’ priority system. We would finally be incentivized to address climate change and alternative energy instead of burning carbon (put solar panels on your roof to power your house and car). We might even grow less hay to feed less cows, if the price is right. We might want to vote green; to save the planet and make money doing it at the same time. We need to recognize water, lakes and rivers, and most other natural resources, for the best beneficial use for all. There is enough water out there, we just need to choose wisely how to use it.
