Connect with us

Utah News Dispatch

Great Salt Lake may hit historic lows this year, despite long-awaited snowfall

Published

on

By: – February 22, 20266:01 am

Patterns left behind by draining water are shown in mud flats surrounding the Great Salt Lake near Magna on Tuesday, Aug. 5, 2025. (Photo by Spenser Heaps for Utah News Dispatch)

Despite this week’s heavy snowfall, conservationists warn Utah’s snowpack — which hit a record low earlier this month — is likely not enough to keep the Great Salt Lake’s water levels from hitting new record lows later this year. 

This article is published through the Great Salt Lake Collaborative, a solutions journalism initiative that partners news, education and media organizations to help inform people about the plight of the Great Salt Lake — and what can be done to make a difference before it is too late.

“Utah is still facing major snowpack deficits, this doesn’t reverse months of snow drought. What we really need is sustained snowpack that lasts long into spring, so it can contribute to spring runoff,” said Samantha Hawkins, spokesperson for Grow the Flow — a conservation nonprofit dedicated to Great Salt Lake water conservation.

Hawkins told Utah News Dispatch water levels are on track to “see a record low by this coming fall,” as snowpack is vital to replenishing Utah’s waterways through dry seasons. 

The current snowpack is still hovering near minimum levels, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service. The agency’s Feb. 1 report — which revealed record low snowpack — gives Utah just a 10% chance to reach normal snowpack levels this year, and a 30% chance to end with record low snowpack levels. 

“The Great Salt Lake relies on late season runoff, and this (recent snowstorm) comes after months where lots of Utah’s precipitation fell as rain instead of snow,” Watkins said. “We’re playing catch up.”

Great Salt Lake health tracker

One year after Grow the Flow launched a website to track the Great Salt Lake’s health, water levels sit at critically low levels. 

The tracker shows Great Salt Lake is less than 36% full, with more than half of the lakebed — more than 1,100 square miles — currently exposed. The dry lakebed contains toxic dust and heavy metals that, when blown into the air, can worsen air quality and lead to severe health detriments. 

A map depicting dust exposure from the Great Salt Lake. (Dr. Albert Garcia)

“That’s really scary to people, they don’t want Great Salt Lake dust in their lungs,” Hawkins said. “It feels like people really care right now about the lake and the state it’s at.” 

Long-term exposure to Utah’s dirty air can take years off one’s life, increasing risk of heart attack, asthma, congestive heart failure, pneumonia, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

That’s according to a November 2020 Brigham Young University study that found “air pollution in Utah causes between 2,500 and 8,000 premature deaths each year, decreasing Utahn’s median life expectancy by 1.1 to 3.6 years.”

“We really need to make the most out of this legislative session because the lake is on track to exceed its historic lows,” Hawkins said. “The 2026 Legislative Session is one of those most consequential opportunities in years to remove barriers for sending water to the lake, and the consequences couldn’t be bigger right now to restore the lake by 2034.”

SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Read Article at Utah News Dispatch

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Advertisement
Exit mobile version