LAS VEGAS (KLAS) — A 50% likelihood of snow Friday evening within the Colorado Rockies is perhaps the final hurrah for a winter that has fallen quick this 12 months.
Present snowpack ranges within the Higher Colorado River Basin hit 90% of regular on Friday. The area contains elements of Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming, offering the runoff that collects in reservoirs alongside the river and ultimately reaches Lake Powell and Lake Mead.
And 90% is best than the place snowpack stood on Monday, when it had declined to 86%. It has been a unstable finish to winter, with huge swings reasonably than a gentle improve to peak ranges. Snowpack measurements — SWE, or snow water equal — typically peak the primary week of April, when temperatures heat and extra snow melts than new accumulation from snowfall.
The black line on the graph under reveals 2025 SWE measurements collected at SNOTEL stations throughout the basin:
“Southern Nevada should expect a lean water year with less than normal streamflow predicted for the Virgin River and the Colorado River inflow to Lake Powell,” in keeping with the U.S. Division of Agriculture’s Nevada Water Provide Outlook Report, dated April 1 however distributed Friday afternoon. The Nevada report gives element on the japanese Sierras and Northern Nevada, however none of that water reaches Las Vegas, which depends on the Colorado River for 90% of its water. The remaining 10% comes from wells.
Streamflow into Lake Powell for April via June is projected at 74% of regular. The Virgin River is projected to movement at 61% of regular at Littlefield, Arizona.
Water scarcity ranges based mostly on end-of-year measurements at Lake Mead at the moment have Southern Nevada in a Tier 1 water scarcity, unchanged from final 12 months. In 2023, snowpack ranges ended the winter at 160% of regular, offering a short-term rescue alongside the Colorado River within the twenty third 12 months of a “megadrought.” The additional water that 12 months constructed ranges at Lake Mead, which had fallen to 25% of capability. The nation’s largest reservoir is at the moment at 33% capability.
Snowpack within the Colorado Rockies southeast of Denver on March 21, 2025, when ranges had been at 97% of regular. (Greg Haas / 8NewsNow)
Over the previous two years, water conservation agreements have helped protect ranges at Lake Mead. That effort has helped stabilize Lake Mead and Lake Powell, however a below-average snowpack may deliver issues seen over the previous few years, significantly in the summertime of 2022. That is when Lake Mead hit its lowest level — 1,041.71 toes above sea stage — because the reservoir was initially stuffed within the Thirties.
The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation — which runs Hoover Dam, Glen Canyon Dam and others that handle the water movement upstream from Lake Powell — faces a deadline on the finish of 2026 to implement up to date tips for river operations.
The trail to a remaining determination on that plan is already seeing obstacles, with Nevada, Arizona and California difficult the alternatives chosen by Reclamation because the Biden administration ended. These states, often called the Decrease Colorado Basin states, have requested the Trump administration to incorporate a selection that addresses issues at Glen Canyon Dam.
There was no public response but.
This is a have a look at SWE measurements going into the weekend:
The very best snow circumstances this 12 months occurred in Wyoming, which feeds into Flaming Gorge Reservoir and down the Inexperienced River, the Colorado River’s largest tributary. The worst circumstances got here in Southern Utah, together with the Decrease San Juan area, which reached solely 15% of regular:
Higher Inexperienced: 105%
Decrease Inexperienced: 92%
White-Yampa: 95%
Colorado Headwaters: 95%
Gunnison: 82%
Soiled Satan: 73%
Decrease San Juan: 15%
Dolores: 73%
Higher San Juan: 65%(Totals as of April 4 offered by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation)
The USDA’s report indicated a lot better circumstances for Northern Nevada.
“Snowpacks are 94-103% in the Sierra basins, 122-151% across the northern Nevada, 86% in Eastern Nevada, 88% in the Upper Colorado, and 30% in the Spring Mountains on April 1. April 1 is typically when basin snowpacks reach their highest snow water total before melt begins. This year snowmelt started early due to a week of warm temperatures between March 21-27,” the report mentioned.
Water from snowfall within the Spring Mountains (Mt. Charleston and the encompassing space) performs an essential half in recharging aquifers within the area, however it’s far wanting regular ranges this 12 months.