Report: Great Lakes Water Levels Dropping
Scientists say decline response to climate change
Great Lakes water levels could drop by up to two feet by the turn of the century as temperatures rise, according to a recent series of reports released by the Union of Concerned Scientists.
The water decline is a response to global climate change, according to the report by the group of scientists and citizens that advocates for science-based solutions to environmental problems. Warming temperatures reduce ice cover and increase evaporation. Lake Huron and Lake Michigan are projected to have the greatest changes.
"Less winter ice and warmer temperatures in the summer could mean a decrease of one to two feet in Great Lake levels by the end of the century," said Melanie Fitzpatrick, a climate scientist with the organization.
The series of reports, Confronting Climate Change in the U.S. Midwest, aims to explain the current effects and predict potential consequences of climate change on Midwest states. The reports cover Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, Wisconsin, Indiana, Minnesota, Missouri and Ohio.
Other projections of the report for the end of the century if climate change is unchecked:
-Each summer, Chicago would face 70 days with temperatures greater than 90 degrees, and at least two major heat waves.
-Spring and winter in Michigan would see a 25 percent increase in precipitation.
-All summers in Wisconsin would be hotter than in 1988, the state's hottest summer on record.
-Indiana, as well as several other states, would experience warmer winters. That extends the growing season by six weeks. It also allows pests more time to destroy crops.
-Snow days in Minnesota would decrease by a third.
-Cincinnati would face more than 85 days with temperatures greater than 90 degrees. Cleveland could see more than 60 days that are that warm.
The carbon emissions that contribute to global warming in the Midwest are higher than the entire west or east coasts. according to the World Resources Institute, a center for policy research on global environmental and resource issues. The region is the seventh largest contributor worldwide.
Fitzpatrick cited manufacturing, power production and transportation as possible reasons for the high levels in the region.
"Most of the electricity in many of these states comes from coal-fired emissions," she said.
The 2009 reports are different from the organization's reports released in 2003, Fitzpatrick said.
"These state reports go down to a very small scale," she said. "The last reports were looking at effects on the Midwest as a whole, and these are much more telling of what may happen to an individual region."
They also include forecasts for what would happen if causes of climate change was addressed.
"In the first report, we used a single possible future," Fitzpatrick said. "Here, we are comparing two possible futures, to show we have a choice and to show what we can do to avoid the changes."
Changes to agricultural production, seasonal temperature levels, precipitation and deterioration in air quality are effects of climate change shared by all the states included in the study.
"This is really a place that we need to be looking at the emissions," Fitzpatrick said. "These reports are a very strong message of what is happening."
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6 Comments so far
Show AllAhhh, RE-CYCLED news.... This was also broadcast a few years back. If one were to check, last year the great lake water districts, both in the US and in Canada, restricted the taking of ground water from around to lakes to be exported beyond the 'recharge' area. The one exception was extraction for 'bottled' water, because it was argued that more bottled water came into the area than actually left the area.
Water issues are real, and they exist not only in African and middle eastern countries, but here as well. Yearly fluxuations should not be used to 'justify' one point of view over another, but long range availability and projection charts are usually beneficial. I recommend two USGS circulars, #1323 Groundwater Availability in the US, and #1331 Climate Change & Water Resource Management: A Federal Perspective. Both are available for free download from the USGS.
Oh, and no, I'm NOT confusing 'ground water' with 'surface water' issues, they really are the same resource.
BTW, the headline is misleading. Right now, the Lake levels are rising, due to a cold year with much ice and above average precip.
How does ice influence the great lake levels? Would it be ice dams on the St. Clair and Niagra rivers?
Also, what people called the heavy ice cover on lake Erie last winter would have been considered below-average ice cover and a few decades ago. Heck, when I lived in the DC area in the 1970s' even much of far-southward and salty Chesapeake Bay used to freeze over solid (at least the north half) many winters.
I think ice makes for higher lake levels because it inhibits evaporation. With ice covering the water there is less surface for evaporation. Of course a certain amount of sublimation (ice to water vapor) does go on.
As a resident along Lake Michigan shores, I would like to see the water Chicago takes from the Lake returned clean (to maintain Lake levels) rather than flushed down the Mississippi. At the same time less water should be allowed to flow out the Detroit River, even if that means building locks for the frieghters. These Lakes must be preserved even if we have to spend a lot of money to maintain them.
Far worse things may happen than a measly 2-foot drop in the level of the Great Lakes.