Scientists are warning Utah
officials that the Great Salt Lake is shrinking far faster than experts
previously believed, and calling for a major reduction in water consumption
across the American West in order to prevent the lake from disappearing in the
next five years.
Researchers at Brigham Young
University (BYU) led more than 30 scientists from 11 universities and advocacy
groups in a
report released this week showing that the lake is currently at
37% of its former volume, with its rapid retreat driven by the historic
drought that's continuing across the West.
Amid the climate
crisis-fueled megadrought, the continued normal consumption of
water in Utah and its neighboring states has led the Great Salt Lake to lose 40
billion gallons of water per year since 2020, reducing its surface level to 10
feet below what is considered the minimum safe level.
"Goodbye, Great Salt
Lake," tweeted the Environmental Defense Fund on Friday.
Scientists previously have
warned that increased average temperatures in Utah—where it is now about 4°F
warmer than it was in the early 1900s—are to blame for a 9% reduction in the
amount of water flowing into the lake from streams.
The authors of the BYU study
are calling on Utah officials to authorize water releases from the state's
reservoirs and cut water consumption by at least a third and as much as half to
allow 2.5 million acre feet of water to reach the lake and prevent the collapse
of its ecosystem as well as human exposure to dangerous sediments.
"This is a crisis,"
BYU ecologist Ben Abbott, a lead author of the report, told The Washington Post. "The
ecosystem is on life support, [and] we need to have this emergency intervention
to make sure it doesn't disappear."
The shrinking of the Great Salt
Lake has already begun creating a new ecosystem that is toxic for the shrimp
and flies that make it their habitat, due to the lack of freshwater flowing in.
That has endangered millions of birds that stop at the lake as they migrate
each year.
The loss of the lake may also
already be exposing about 2.5 million people to sediments containing mercury,
arsenic, and other toxins.
"Nanoparticles of dust
have potential to cause just as much harm if they come from dry lake bed as
from a tailpipe or a smokestack," Brian Moench, president of Utah
Physicians for a Healthy Environment, told the Post. Last month, Moench's group applauded as
Republican Gov. Spencer Cox's administration, under pressure from residents, walked
back its position supporting a plan to allow a magnesium
company to pump water from the Great Salt Lake.
Abbott called the rapid
shrinking of the lake "honestly jaw-dropping."
"The lake's ecosystem is
not only on the edge of collapse. It is collapsing," Abbott toldCNN. "The lake is mostly lakebed
right now."
-Julia Conley, Common Dreams
I took this photo of the Great Salt Lake in February, 1974.
-Glen
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