The updated 2023 calendar year runoff forecast for the Missouri River Basin above Sioux City, Iowa, continues to be below average.
The US Army Corps of Engineers says precipitation in January was below normal for most of the upper basin except for southern South Dakota, which saw above-normal precipitation. Because of warmer-than-normal temperatures in the upper basin resulting in some snowmelt runoff, the January 2023 runoff was 134% of average (1.1 million acre-feet).
Chief of the Corps’ Missouri River Basin Water Management Division John Remus says drought conditions currently exist across most of the basin. He says despite January’s runoff being above average the 2023 calendar year runoff forecast above Sioux City is 82% of average (21.1 MAF). The runoff forecast is based on current soil moisture conditions, plains snowpack, mountain snowpack and long-term precipitation and temperature outlooks.
The plains snowpack, which typically melts from mid-February into April, is currently above normal. Two to four inches of snow water equivalent (SWE) covers eastern Montana and much of the Dakotas. Some areas in the central and eastern Dakotas are showing up to five inches of SWE.
The six mainstem power plants generated 556 million kWh of electricity in January. Typical energy generation for January is 709 million kWh. Forecast generation for 2023 is 7.6 billion kWh compared to the long-term average of 9.4 billion kWh.
To view the detailed three-week release forecast for the mainstem dams, go to http://go.usa.gov/xVgWr.
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