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Disentangling climate and policy uncertainties for the Colorado River post-2026 operations

Bowen Wang (), Benjamin Bass (), Alex Hall, Stefan Rahimi and Lei Huang
Additional contact information
Bowen Wang: Los Angeles
Benjamin Bass: Los Angeles
Alex Hall: Los Angeles
Stefan Rahimi: Los Angeles
Lei Huang: Los Angeles

Nature Communications, 2025, vol. 16, issue 1, 1-13

Abstract: Abstract Lakes Mead and Powell in the Colorado River Basin underpin water and hydropower supply for the western United States. While the policies currently regulating the basin will expire by 2026, planning remains challenging due to intertwined climate variability and policy uncertainties. Based on streamflow projections from 10 dynamically downscaled CMIP6 global climate models and unique methods that add and remove internal variability, we evaluate future conditions at Powell and Mead under existing and alternative policies. Due to projected streamflow declines, under existing policy, both reservoirs will face substantial risks (>80% likelihood) of reaching dead pool before 2060. Adopting recently proposed alternative policies reduces but doesn’t eliminate such risks. All policies also exhibit tipping points where reservoir levels can change rapidly with a slight change in streamflow. A sustainable policy may require larger reductions to further reduce the reservoirs’ dead pool risks and provide better buffers from sudden changes.

Date: 2025
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DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-63635-4

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