Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumAs the Great Salt Lake dries up, Utah faces 'an environmental nuclear bomb'
https://greeleytribune.net/as-the-great-salt-lake-dries-up-utah-faces-an-environmental-nuclear-bomb/As the Great Salt Lake dries up, Utah faces an environmental nuclear bomb
June 8, 2022 by Amelia
The most dangerous part is that the air around Salt Lake City sometimes turned toxic. The lake floor contains high levels of arsenic and as more of it is exposed, thunderstorms carry that arsenic into the lungs of nearby residents, who make up three-quarters of Utahs population.
Since climate change is causing record-breaking droughts, there is no easy solution. Saving the Great Salt Lake would require melting more ice from the mountains to the lake, which means less water for residents and farmers. This would threaten the regions dangerous population growth and high-value agriculture something state leaders seem reluctant to do.
Utahs dilemma raises a key question as the country heats up: How quickly are Americans willing to adapt to the effects of climate change, even if those effects become immediate, obvious, and potentially catastrophic?
Now two changes are unbalancing that system. There is an explosive population growth, which removes more water from those rivers before reaching the lake.
According to Utah State University professor and Utah state climatologist Robert Gillies, the second shift is climate change. Higher temperatures cause more snowpack to turn into water vapor, which then escapes into the atmosphere instead of turning into liquid and flowing into rivers. More heat also means more water demand for lawns or crops, further reducing the amount that reaches the lake.
And a shrinking lake means less ice. As storms pass over the Great Salt Lake, they absorb some of its moisture, which then falls into the mountains as snow. A fading lake threatens that pattern.
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This story was originally published on nytimes.com. Read it here.
blue sky at night
(3,242 posts)wish they would go back to nature thanks for your post but now its another issue that bums us out, no easy solution.
cbabe
(3,549 posts)Start or join a gardens not lawns group.
Pressure HOAs/landlords to change lawn/watering rules.
Great way to meet neighbors. Grow healthy food. Attract bees and butterflies.
Beauty is the antidote to worry.
mn9driver
(4,428 posts)I get a good look at the lake at least several times every month as I fly out to the west coast and back.
At least half of what used to be water is now just mud flat. It looks like the shrinkage is accelerating. I would guess that all that mud is only a few more summers away from becoming dust.
At that point, it wont be healthy to live there and there wont be much snow in Park City to drive the ski resorts. Its a beautiful area, but the signs of its demise are pretty clear at this point