Monday, May 25, 2026

What is the current state of the Rio Grande in New Mexico?

 


I now have comprehensive information to provide a thorough and current answer. Let me compose the response.

Rio Grande in New Mexico: Crisis Conditions in May 2026

The Rio Grande in New Mexico is in one of its most critical states on record, experiencing historically early drying, depleted reservoirs, a statewide drought emergency, and dire consequences for both farmers and endangered wildlife.


Record-Low Flows and Early Drying

The river is drying up far earlier in the season than at any point in recent decades. In previous dry years — 2022 and 2025 — the Albuquerque reach didn't go dry until July; in 2026, water managers were warning of imminent drying as early as mid-May. The San Acacia reach in Socorro County went dry on March 27, the earliest recorded drying in that stretch in over 30 years. As of May 21, the Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District (MRGCD) reports the river has "dropped to one of its driest points in decades," and that the district only has enough water to serve the six Middle Rio Grande pueblos under their "prior and paramount" water rights. The USGS gauge at Albuquerque recorded an instantaneous flow of just 17.2 cubic feet per second — compared to a historical median of 2,740 cfs for this time of year.[1][2][3][4][5]

The Root Causes

The crisis stems from a cascade of compounding hydrological failures:[2]

  • Historic low snowpack: Snow water equivalent was only 4% of median for the Rio Chama Basin and 13% of median for the Rio Grande headwaters as of mid-April[6][7]
  • Earliest snowmelt on record: Record-high March temperatures caused snowpack to melt and run off weeks ahead of schedule, giving the river an early but short-lived pulse[2]
  • Near-empty reservoirs: Most reservoirs along the Rio Chama and Rio Grande hold less than 15% of capacity — Heron Reservoir at 11%, El Vado at 13%, and Elephant Butte at just 13%[7][6]
  • Third consecutive dry year: The Bureau of Reclamation has characterized 2026 as a "third consecutive dry year," compounding an already depleted system[2]

If summer monsoon rains fail to materialize, Elephant Butte Reservoir could fall to as low as 2% of capacity by late August.[6]

Governor's Drought Declaration

On May 19, 2026, New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham issued an executive order declaring statewide drought and severe fire conditions, calling it "the worst drought conditions on record". The order directed state agencies to coordinate action, implement firework bans, and launch water conservation measures. New Mexico simultaneously launched a new drought information portal at Drought.nm.gov. As of mid-May, approximately 94% of New Mexico was under drought conditions, with 61% of the state in Severe (D2) drought and 17.5% in Extreme (D3) drought.[8][9][10][11]

Municipal Water Crisis

The Albuquerque Bernalillo County Water Utility Authority — which serves the state's largest city — stopped drawing water from the Rio Grande on April 24, switching entirely to groundwater reserves. Irrigation deliveries to communities like Corrales (north of Albuquerque) have already been suspended by the MRGCD. Farmers in the Middle Rio Grande Valley are being told to expect "little to no water availability during summer and fall if seasonal rainfall does not return".[12][1]

Endangered Species Emergency

The crisis is catastrophic for the Rio Grande silvery minnow (Hybognathus amarus), an endangered species that now occupies only about 5–7% of its historic range and whose population has collapsed by over 99% from historical levels. As the river dries and fragments into isolated pools, biologists are forced to conduct emergency fish rescues — physically netting minnows from shrinking puddles and relocating them to flowing sections. In a last-ditch conservation effort, the Bureau of Reclamation released a temporary surge of water into the Albuquerque reach around May 19–20, 2026, hoping to trigger spawning behavior in the minnow before conditions become unsuitable. However, this flow pulse was characterized as temporary and limited in scope.[13][14][15][16][5][17]

Legal and Interstate Water Tensions

The crisis intensifies long-running legal disputes over the river's water. A proposed settlement in Texas v. New Mexico — a decade-long Supreme Court case over Rio Grande Compact obligations — was filed with the Supreme Court's Special Master in August 2025. Under that proposed agreement, New Mexico must reduce groundwater depletions by 18,200 acre-feet per year over the next decade and fallow roughly 8,300 acres of farmland. Meanwhile, water advocates warn that the Middle Rio Grande is now also on a trajectory toward a compact violation, which veteran water managers say leads inevitably to more litigation.[18][12]

Looking Ahead

The only near-term hope is the summer monsoon season. The National Weather Service indicates above-average precipitation chances beginning in June–July, but even a strong monsoon would provide limited relief given how depleted reservoirs are. Water experts are increasingly frank: "This is not going to end," said Norm Gaume, former Interstate Stream Commission director and president of New Mexico Water Advocates. "We've lost our renewable water supply".[12][2]


  • https://www.kunm.org/kunm-news-update/2026-05-14/parts-of-the-rio-grande-could-run-dry-in-albuquerque-by-the-end-of-may  
  • https://www.mrgcd.com/2026/05/12/news-release-water-managers-brace-for-dry-conditions-along-sections-of-the-rio-grande/     
  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ajsEljQHKcE 
  • https://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/uv?site_no=08330000&legacy=1 
  • https://www.kob.com/new-mexico/rio-grande-faces-early-drought-conditions/  
  • https://www.kob.com/new-mexico/2026-could-bring-another-summer-of-dry-rivers-in-new-mexico/   
  • https://www.usbr.gov/newsroom/news-release/5325  
  • https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/Data/pdf/current/current_NM_cat.pdf 
  • https://www.governor.state.nm.us/2026/05/20/governor-declares-statewide-drought-and-severe-fire-conditions-agencies-will-coordinate-community-and-water-protection-efforts/ 
  • https://www.plantmaps.com/en/us/state/new-mexico/current-drought-conditions 
  • https://losalamosreporter.com/2026/05/20/governor-declares-statewide-drought-and-severe-fire-conditions-agencies-will-coordinate-community-and-water-protection-efforts/ 
  • https://searchlightnm.org/following-season-of-low-snowpack-experts-say-middle-rio-grande-is-in-trouble/   
  • https://www.amigosbravos.org/rio-grande-silvery-minnow/ 
  • https://www.fws.gov/rivers/carp/press-release/2022-07/taking-action-support-endangered-rio-grande-silvery-minnow 
  • https://webapps.usgs.gov/MRGESCP/documents/endangered-and-threatened-wildlife-and-plants-final-rule-to-list-the-rio-grande-silvery-minnow-as-an-endangered-species 
  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G71ubOT1zzY 
  • https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/rio-grande-albuquerque-sees-surge-001100823.html 
  • https://nmwateradvocates.org/lower-rio-grande-settlement-who-pays-how-it-works/ 
  • https://www.kob.com/new-mexico/rio-grande-water-levels-dropping-as-demand-increases/ 
  • https://science.nasa.gov/earth/earth-observatory/rio-grande-runs-dry-then-wet-150244/ 
  • https://nmwateradvocates.org/water-supply-record-shortfalls-crisis-nm-2025/ 
  • https://www.weather.gov/media/epz/DGT/DGT_EPZ_04072026.txt 
  • https://ibwcsftpstg.blob.core.windows.net/wad/DailyReports/flowdata.htm 
  • https://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/uv?site_no=08276500&legacy=1 
  • https://www.weather.gov/abq/DroughtNEW 
  • https://snoflo.org/flow/report/new-mexico/ 
  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uIZkYOjRYFE 
  • https://www.drought.gov/states/new-mexico 
  • https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/602/22o141/ 
  • https://webapps.usgs.gov/mrgescp/documents/rio-grande-silvery-minnow-fish-rescue-2024-annual-report 
  • https://coyotegulch.blog/2025/07/16/the-riogrande-has-gone-dry-in-albuquerque-john-fleck-inkstain-net/ 
  • https://www.texenrls.org/articles/vol-no-55-2-water-rights/ 
  • https://scholarworks.uark.edu/alr/vol78/iss4/6/ 
  • https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/22O141 
  • https://snoflo.org/report/flow/texas/rio-grande-at-rio-grande-village/ 
  • https://water.usgs.gov/nwc/NWC/sw/graphs/S08276500.html 
  • https://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/inventory/?site_no=08220000 
  • https://www.facebook.com/wdbj7/posts/new-drought-monitor-05212026-conditions-continue-to-worsen-as-our-extreme-catego/1411551554352457/ 
  • https://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/uv?site_no=08220000&legacy=1 
  • https://www.reddit.com/r/Albuquerque/comments/1s8ocli/rio_grande_water_levels_no_longer_sufficient_to/ 
  • https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/CurrentMap/StateDroughtMonitor.aspx?NM 
  • https://www.reddit.com/r/Albuquerque/comments/1m35rgn/sad_days_for_rio_grande_fish/ 
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rio_Grande_Silvery_Minnow_v._Bureau_of_Reclamation 
  • https://truthout.org/articles/new-mexico-governors-drought-order-avoids-the-words-climate-and-emergency/ 
  • https://www.facebook.com/krqenews/videos/as-water-managers-warn-of-the-rio-grande-drying-up-through-the-metro-once-again-/978357021248043/ 
  • https://www.youtube.com/shorts/UDj2Tn44D8U 
  • https://webapps.usgs.gov/mrgescp/documents/Fish-Rescue-Annual-Report-2024-Final.pdf 
  • https://www.weather.gov/media/epz/DGT/DGT_EPZ_02032026.txt 
  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w_DfjjBgaOI 
  • https://www.aol.com/news/rio-grande-albuquerque-sees-surge-235616068.html 
  • https://www.facebook.com/krqenews/posts/as-water-managers-warn-of-the-rio-grande-drying-up-through-the-metro-once-again-/1394088916098910/ 
  • https://webapps.usgs.gov/mrgescp/documents/rio-grande-silvery-minnow-population-monitoring-during-june-2024 

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Message from Charles Aulds

 In January 2026, President Trump threatened the use of military force to seize Greenland. That same month, the countries of Iceland, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Belgium, Sweden, Norway, Germany, Finland, France and Slovenia all agreed to commit forces to a NATO mission (led by Denmark, of course) to defend Greenland against US aggression.


Where was Canada?

For all its defiant talk, the government of Canada was silent about Greenland because (I just learned) Canada was participating in a joint military exercise with the USA ("Operation Noble Defender") which was held at the former Thule Air Base, now the Pituffik Space Base. Here (zoom out, and you'll get a good idea of how remote that location is).

Donald Trump posted this only yesterday afternoon:

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Which events created the sand dunes in Saskatchewan in the context of past climate change on the prairies?

 


How Saskatchewan's Sand Dunes Were Created

Saskatchewan's dune fields — the Great Sand Hills, Elbow/Douglas dunes, and the Athabasca Sand Dunes — are products of two distinct sets of climate-driven events: an initial glacial origin, followed by repeated reactivations during Holocene droughts.

1. Glacial origin (≈18,000–11,000 years ago)

At the Last Glacial Maximum ~18 ka, the Laurentide (Wisconsin) Ice Sheet — nearly 2 km thick over the prairies — was grinding bedrock into fine "rock flour." As it retreated after ~13 ka, it left the raw sediment that would become the dunes.

The actual sand bodies were deposited by two glacial mechanisms:

  • Glaciolacustrine deltas in proglacial lakes. The Great Sand Hills and Elbow Sand Hills sit in the bed of Glacial Lake Bursary, where meltwater rivers built large sandy deltas. As the lake drained via the South Saskatchewan Spillway, those deltas were exposed to wind.

  • Outwash and till from retreating ice. Meltwater rivers carried sandy debris from moraines and till sheets onto the exposed plains.

The Athabasca Sand Dunes (the world's most northerly major active dunes) formed the same way but from different parent rock: meltwater eroded the Athabasca Sandstone of the Canadian Shield and dumped sand into a much larger ancestral Lake Athabasca / Glacial Lake McConnell. As that lake fell to its modern level ~8 ka, vast sandy lakebeds were exposed to strong westerly/northwesterly winds (Wikipedia – Athabasca Sand Dunes Provincial Park; YouTube – Why These Giant Sand Dunes Exist in Northern Canada).

2. Early-Holocene aeolian activation (≈11 ka)

Once vegetation cover was thin and the climate warmed after deglaciation, prevailing westerly winds mobilized the exposed deltaic and outwash sands into dunes. Optical dating in the Saskatchewan boreal-transition zone records a first pulse of dune activity around 11 ka, during a brief grassland/parkland phase before boreal forest expanded.

3. Mid-Holocene Hypsithermal drought (≈7,500–4,700 years ago)

The single most important reactivation event on the prairies. During the mid-Holocene Hypsithermal/Altithermal, increased aridity and reduced vegetation cover drove widespread dune activity across the parkland-grassland zone of central and southern Saskatchewan. Most of the morphology and stratigraphy visible in Saskatchewan dune fields today was shaped during this interval — earlier deposits were largely reworked then.

4. Late-Holocene drought reactivations (last ~4,500 years)

Episodic droughts repeatedly reactivated dunes that had stabilized under grass cover. Optical and radiocarbon ages from prairie dune fields cluster around 4,500–2,900, 2,000–1,600, 1,000–800, and 500–200 cal. BP, each corresponding to dry intervals; intervening moist periods allowed soils and vegetation to re-establish.

5. Late-1700s "Little Ice Age" drought (≈AD 1800)

The most recent regional reactivation, and the reason parts of the Great Sand Hills are still active today. Dendroclimatic records from the Cypress Hills and Rocky Mountain foothills show the 1700s were the driest century on the prairies in the last 500 years, culminating in a severe late-18th-century drought. Parabolic dunes across the Great Sand Hills were activated around AD 1800 and stayed active for ~80 years; they have been progressively restabilizing through the 20th century.


Projected Timelines for Saskatchewan Dune Reactivation

The honest framing first: paleoclimate evidence shows prairie dunes reactivate when growing-season precipitation deficits exceed ~25% for decades and vegetation cover drops below ~30%. Climate projections don't predict dune activation directly — they project the moisture stress that crosses those thresholds. Here is what the regional and global models suggest:

Near-term: 2020s–2030s (now → ~2040)

  • Annual temperatures across Saskatchewan grassland sites already up ≥1 °C vs. the 1961–1990 baseline; Yorkton trending toward +3 °C.

  • Precipitation–PET deficit in southern Saskatchewan already widening at 1–4 mm/yr.

  • Dune behaviour to expect: continued localized blowout and crest activity in the Great Sand Hills (already partially active from the 1800 reactivation), Seward, and Burstall fields; little change in stabilized fields like Elbow/Douglas. A multi-year drought analogous to 1988 or 2001–2003 would be enough to trigger visible reactivation in the Great Sand Hills within a single summer.

Mid-century: 2040s–2060s

This is the inflection window in every regional dataset I found.

  • Ecoregion shift (HadCM3 B21, 2050s): southwestern Saskatchewan transitions from Canadian mixed prairie toward a shortgrass-prairie analogue similar to Colorado; aspen parkland retreats north and is replaced by mixed prairie. Shortgrass cover sits much closer to the ~30% threshold for aeolian instability.

  • Hydrology: +24% spring runoff but progressively drier summers; South Saskatchewan River Basin annual flow average −8.5% (range +8% to −22%).

  • CMIP6 global aridity (2030–2059): under SSP2-4.5, North America shows a slight aridity-index decrease; under SSP5-8.5 the continental average is roughly stable — but the paper notes a wet bias in CMIP6 over western North America, so projected drying is "likely to be stronger" than headline numbers.

  • Dune behaviour to expect: first plausible window for widespread reactivation across the southern Saskatchewan dune fields (Great Sand Hills, Seward, Burstall, Bigstick, Cramersburg) if a multi-year drought of late-1700s severity coincides with the warmer, more evaporative baseline. The Duchess (Alberta) record shows reactivation can occur in a single dry decade (Wolfe & Hugenholtz).

Late-century: 2070s–2090s

This is where the regional and global signals converge most strongly.

  • Saskatchewan AMI (2080s): "more arid conditions overall and potential for higher moisture stress"; increased evapotranspiration overwhelms increased precipitation.

  • Spring runoff: −37% by the 2080s as winter snowcover becomes discontinuous — a major change for prairie streams and shallow groundwater that pin dune-edge vegetation.

  • Island-forest tree growth declines up to 30%; semi-arid to sub-humid climate expands beyond southwestern Saskatchewan, raising desertification risk over a "larger area".

  • Global CMIP6 (2070–2099): under SSP3-7.0, North America shifts to ~−15% aridity index (drier); under SSP5-8.5, drying continues with continental warming of ~+7.5 °C.

  • Dune behaviour to expect: under SSP3-7.0 or SSP5-8.5, conditions plausibly cross the Holocene reactivation threshold across most southern Saskatchewan dune fields, with episodic activity reaching into the Aspen Parkland dune fields of central Saskatchewan that have been stable since the mid-Holocene Hypsithermal. The Athabasca Sand Dunes in the north would be largely insulated from drought-driven reactivation but could see fire-driven activity increases.

Important caveats specific to dunes (not just climate)

Dune reactivation is climate-sensitive but not climate-deterministic. Three modern factors strongly suppress activation relative to Holocene analogues:

  1. Fire suppression — kept prairie root systems intact.

  2. No bison herds — far less mechanical disturbance to crests and blowouts.

  3. Irrigation and crop cover — buffers vegetation against drought.

Conversely, factors that could accelerate reactivation ahead of the climate-only timeline:

  • Agricultural abandonment in marginal southwestern lands once irrigation becomes infeasible (a function of South Saskatchewan River Basin flow declines).

  • Major prairie wildfires removing cover ahead of a drought year.

  • Cattle-grazing intensification on Crown grazing leases overlapping the Great Sand Hills.


For your watershed work, the most actionable inflection point is the
2040s–2060s shift in summer evapotranspiration relative to precipitation — that's where the South Saskatchewan and Red Deer / Clearwater basins start losing the late-summer baseflow that currently keeps dune-margin vegetation and pothole wetlands intact. Once that buffer goes, dune reactivation becomes a question of which drought year rather than if.