News
Release from
The Central Nebraska Public Power and Irrigation District
Date:
June 27, 2007
Contact: Tim Anderson, Public Relations Manager
Phone: (308) 995-8601
Lake
McConaughy Inflows Plummet
(HOLDREGE, Neb.) -- Don't tell folks familiar with Lake
McConaughy that the drought is over.
Generous rainfall this spring pulled much of Nebraska out
of persistent drought conditions, but the Panhandle and the
North Platte River watershed above Lake McConaughy haven't
been as fortunate.
Nothing illustrates the lack of precipitation better than
recent inflow data at Lake McConaughy. Inflow measured at
the Lewellen river gauge on June 25 was only 84 cubic feet
per second (cfs), or 4.5 percent of the average June 25 measurement
since storage began in 1941.
The lowest daily inflow ever recorded -- 38 cfs -- occurred
on June 24, 2002.
Drought has gripped the North Platte River watershed since
2000. Lack of snow in the Rocky Mountains of Wyoming -- the
primary source of Lake McConaughy's water supply -- resulted
in low runoff and inflows to federal reservoirs on the North
Platte River that store water for irrigation in eastern Wyoming
and western Nebraska. Most of the water that flows into Lake
McConaughy comes as return flows from upstream surface water
irrigation projects.
Rivers and streams already suffering from a lack of precipitation
have also been affected by additional groundwater development.
Wells that are hydrologically connected to surface water
streams intercept groundwater that would otherwise move back
to the stream, further lowering instream flows and inflows
to Lake McConaughy.
During May and June -- the time of year when stream flows
are typically at their highest -- inflows to Lake McConaughy
averaged 388 cfs, or 22 percent of the May-June average of
1,780 cfs since 1941.
"We had projected the possibility that inflows to Lake
McConaughy could fall to record lows this year," said
Cory Steinke, civil engineer with The Central Nebraska Public
Power and Irrigation District. "Below average snowfall
in the mountains, long-range precipitation forecasts above
the lake, stream flow trends over the past several years,
and the impact of groundwater development on stream flows
all pointed to the very real possibility that the bottom
would fall out of inflows. Unfortunately, that's exactly
what has happened."
On May 1, Lake McConaughy was four feet lower than it was
on May 1, 2006. However, precipitation below the lake raised
stream flows and enabled Central to delay releases for several
weeks. As a result, the lake is now about three feet higher
than it was at the end of June last year. The lake's peak
elevation this year was reached last week at 3,220.3 feet
above mean sea level.
Precipitation in the Platte River valley also made it possible
for Central to divert excess river flows into Elwood Reservoir,
adding more than 15 feet to the lake's water level. Central
received permission from the Nebraska Department of Natural
Resources to divert water from the Platte into the reservoir
over the course of several days in June when flows exceeded
existing instream flow water rights and target flows established
by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
"The precipitation in and around the irrigated area
has been more than welcome," Steinke said, "but
the inflow data at Lake McConaughy reminds us that water
supplies are still well below normal."
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