THE COLUMBIA RIVER AND CLIMATE CHANGE: CONNECTING GEOLOGY WITH SOCIETY ON A REGIONAL SCALE
ESA requirements, cessation of federal funding for large engineering projects on the river and competition among interest groups limit the ability of the CR to deliver demanded amounts of electricity, irrigation water, and salmon. On top of these limitations, climate change is beginning to take a toll. During the last hundred years, the average annual discharge of the CR has declined by perhaps 10% while average water temperature has increased, particularly during summer. The CR is a snowmelt-fed river. The annual snowpack in PNW mountains has been shrinking and the date of peak snowmelt moving earlier in the spring. In addition, all glaciers that are being measured in the CR watershed are shrinking and some of the lower-elevation glaciers have disappeared. If these climate change effects continue, as forecast by global and regional climate models, the CR will become an even warmer river with even less discharge. Using El Niño and warm North Pacific Ocean decadal events as proxies of a warmer climate future, the CR system can be expected to continue decreasing its production of electricity, crops, and salmon, with major economic and ecosystem fallout. The CR is an example of the effects of climate change on a major river upon which people have come to depend. For teaching climate change and environmental geology, a number of ways to investigate the CR will be presented.