Berliner Boersenzeitung - Deadpool: US mega drought spells trouble at Hoover Dam

EUR -
AED 4.32182
AFN 82.262768
ALL 97.889674
AMD 452.732813
ANG 2.10576
AOA 1078.988694
ARS 1460.811676
AUD 1.808653
AWG 2.120912
AZN 2.00049
BAM 1.955078
BBD 2.377293
BDT 144.426666
BGN 1.953881
BHD 0.443514
BIF 3507.653733
BMD 1.17665
BND 1.49951
BOB 8.135996
BRL 6.379682
BSD 1.177415
BTN 100.482455
BWP 15.595169
BYN 3.853026
BYR 23062.349449
BZD 2.364987
CAD 1.604381
CDF 3394.63644
CHF 0.935318
CLF 0.028529
CLP 1094.790994
CNY 8.431175
CNH 8.439702
COP 4697.953547
CRC 594.605689
CUC 1.17665
CUP 31.181238
CVE 110.224296
CZK 24.644916
DJF 209.664157
DKK 7.461411
DOP 70.466972
DZD 152.223964
EGP 58.071582
ERN 17.649757
ETB 163.405301
FJD 2.644228
FKP 0.86208
GBP 0.864073
GEL 3.200704
GGP 0.86208
GHS 12.1855
GIP 0.86208
GMD 84.134958
GNF 10211.619549
GTQ 9.052657
GYD 246.319038
HKD 9.236606
HNL 30.761947
HRK 7.531266
HTG 154.589482
HUF 399.193377
IDR 19104.332557
ILS 3.935696
IMP 0.86208
INR 100.876837
IQD 1542.350097
IRR 49566.401414
ISK 142.398592
JEP 0.86208
JMD 187.92699
JOD 0.834256
JPY 170.717276
KES 152.020778
KGS 102.89788
KHR 4730.454134
KMF 491.840015
KPW 1058.985622
KRW 1608.73416
KWD 0.359055
KYD 0.98125
KZT 611.461992
LAK 25370.954349
LBP 105492.188268
LKR 353.244056
LRD 236.068842
LSL 20.710516
LTL 3.474343
LVL 0.711744
LYD 6.342008
MAD 10.567598
MDL 19.832929
MGA 5298.268577
MKD 61.537902
MMK 2470.426162
MNT 4216.645015
MOP 9.519606
MRU 46.730729
MUR 52.890159
MVR 18.121555
MWK 2041.715435
MXN 21.948944
MYR 4.983096
MZN 75.258156
NAD 20.710516
NGN 1801.326978
NIO 43.325657
NOK 11.876216
NPR 160.77446
NZD 1.957611
OMR 0.452406
PAB 1.17737
PEN 4.174858
PGK 4.86339
PHP 66.61609
PKR 334.240855
PLN 4.244543
PYG 9383.053325
QAR 4.303111
RON 5.057478
RSD 117.184932
RUB 92.830315
RWF 1692.532513
SAR 4.411366
SBD 9.809646
SCR 16.58551
SDG 706.577172
SEK 11.255897
SGD 1.502106
SHP 0.924663
SLE 26.415732
SLL 24673.776596
SOS 672.874393
SRD 43.989059
STD 24354.289331
SVC 10.302327
SYP 15298.723108
SZL 20.695589
THB 38.335862
TJS 11.449918
TMT 4.130043
TND 3.430333
TOP 2.755837
TRY 47.026364
TTD 7.985153
TWD 34.147593
TZS 3107.45741
UAH 49.103536
UGX 4223.440352
USD 1.17665
UYU 47.25255
UZS 14784.79152
VES 128.81205
VND 30767.056806
VUV 139.348855
WST 3.049888
XAF 655.737139
XAG 0.032118
XAU 0.000355
XCD 3.179957
XDR 0.815533
XOF 655.751066
XPF 119.331742
YER 284.925921
ZAR 20.832814
ZMK 10591.263284
ZMW 28.522194
ZWL 378.880975
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Deadpool: US mega drought spells trouble at Hoover Dam
Deadpool: US mega drought spells trouble at Hoover Dam / Photo: Patrick T. FALLON - AFP

Deadpool: US mega drought spells trouble at Hoover Dam

Millions of gallons of Colorado River water hurtle through the Hoover Dam every day, generating electricity for hundreds of thousands of homes.

Text size:

But the mega drought affecting the western United States is sending reservoir levels plummeting towards deadpool -- the point at which the dam can no longer produce power.

"We are 23rd year of drought here in the Colorado River Basin and Lake Mead has dropped down to 28 percent," explains Patti Aaron of the US Bureau of Reclamation, which operates the dam. She was referring to the vast lake created by the building of the dam.

"There isn't as much head so there isn't as much pressure pushing the water into the turbines, so there's less efficiency and we aren't able to produce as much power."

Hoover Dam was a feat of American hope and engineering.

Construction began in 1931 as the country was withering under the Great Depression.

Thousands of workers toiled 24 hours a day to build what was then the largest hydroelectricity facility in the world.

The dam stopped up the Colorado River, creating Lake Mead, the biggest reservoir in the United States.

At its height, the lake surface sits over 1,200 feet (365 meters) above sea level. But after more than two decades of drought it is now less than 1,050 feet -- the lowest since the lake was filled, and falling about a foot a week.

If it drops to 950 feet, the intakes for the dam will no longer be under water and the turbines will stop.

"We're working very hard for that not to happen," said Aaron. "It's just not an option to not produce power or not deliver water."

- Melting snowpack -

The Colorado River rises in the Rocky Mountains and snakes its way through Colorado, Utah, Arizona, Nevada, California and northern Mexico, where it empties into the Gulf of California.

It is fed chiefly by the huge snowpack that gets dumped at high altitudes, melting slowly throughout the warmer months.

But reduced precipitation and the higher temperatures caused by humanity's unchecked burning of fossil fuels means less snow is falling, and what snow there is, is melting faster.

As a consequence, there is not as much in a river that supplies water to tens of millions of people and countless acres of farmland.

Boaters on Lake Mead, many of whom come from Las Vegas and its surrounding towns, say they are doing their part to protect supplies.

They point to the drought-tolerant landscapes they have installed instead of lawns, and the high percentage of indoor water that is recycled in desert towns.

"But you've got farmers in California growing almonds for export," said Kameron Wells, who lives in nearby Henderson, Nevada.

Householders in southern California have grumbled about the fate of their luscious lawns since being ordered to limit their outdoor watering to one or two days a week at the start of the summer.

But there, like in the desert periphery of Las Vegas, there is plenty of new construction, with huge houses being put up in the resort settlement of Lake Las Vegas.

And from the air, the vibrant green of dozens of golf courses mark an otherwise dust bowl landscape.

- 'Out of sight, out of mind' -

Climatologist Steph McAfee of the University of Nevada, Reno, says the US west has always been something of an improbability.

"The average precipitation in Las Vegas is something like four inches (10 centimeters) a year," she told AFP.

"And to make it possible to have cities like Las Vegas and Phoenix and Los Angeles we rely on water that falls in the mountains as snow in parts of the West that are obviously much, much wetter."

The last two decades of drought are not, McAfee says, actually that unusual in climatic terms, according to tree ring reconstructions.

But "what's going on now is that we're having a drought, and temperatures are much warmer and when temperatures are high, things dry out faster.

"That is a consequence of climate change... driven by human greenhouse gas emissions."

On Lake Mead, boat seller Jason Davis manoeuvers his craft towards Hoover Dam, where thousands of tonnes of concrete loom over the water in graceful modernist lines, and a ring of mineral deposits shows where the water level used to be.

For him, the lake is not just a battery for the huge generators in the dam, but a waterscape whose beauty and peacefulness are worth protecting.

"You know, people who haven't been here don't appreciate it," he says as a sunset rages in the desert sky above.

"It's like, out of sight, out of mind. Hey, we're using too much water.

"Well, if you if you haven't seen these rings, you don't quite comprehend.

"Hopefully it's not too late."

(U.Gruber--BBZ)