Published: April 7, 2026. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online — Monitoring the frontlines of the global climate shift.
A historic and “virtually impossible” March heatwave has decimated the Western United States’ snowpack, leaving water managers and agricultural sectors facing a critical “snow drought” as spring begins. New data from the California Department of Water Resources and the National Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) confirms that a persistent “heat dome” in mid-March—which saw temperatures soar 15°C to 20°C above average—has triggered a premature and rapid melt, effectively “skipping spring” and dropping the region straight into summer conditions.
In California, the official April 1 snow survey at Phillips Station near Lake Tahoe found no measurable snow on the ground, a stark contrast to the 89% of average reported just three months ago. Statewide, the California snowpack now sits at a mere 18% of its historical average, marking the second-lowest level on record for this date. The situation is even more dire in the Southwest; Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah have reported snow water equivalents (SWE) at record lows, with the Rio Grande basin languishing at just 8% of its median.
The collapse of the snowpack is being attributed to a record-shattering streak of heat that began around March 15. In Sacramento, temperatures tied all-time March highs of 31°C (88°F) on multiple days, while North Shore, California, hit a blistering 42°C (108°F), tying the record for the hottest March temperature ever recorded in the United States. According to the World Weather Attribution group, this level of extreme early-season heat would have been “virtually impossible” without the influence of human-induced climate change, estimating the event as a 1-in-500-year occurrence.
“What should be a gradual, months-long release of water into our reservoirs happened suddenly over the course of three weeks,” said Karla Nemeth, Director of the California Department of Water Resources. “We are seeing shorter wet seasons and warmer storms that are fundamentally changing how we must manage our water supply.”
The rapid loss of the “frozen reservoir” in the mountains has immediate implications for the West’s water security. The snowpack typically supplies about 30% of California’s water needs and is vital for filling major reservoirs like Lake Powell. Government projections now suggest that the Glen Canyon Dam could become inoperable by December 2026 if water levels continue to fall toward the “minimum power pool,” potentially cutting off electricity for five million people across six states.
While some large reservoirs remain relatively healthy due to carryover from previous wet years, the National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center is forecasting a rapid expansion of drought conditions across the Great Basin and the Colorado River throughout the spring. The lack of moisture is also raising alarms for the 2026 wildfire season; with the snow gone and soils drying out months ahead of schedule, the “fuel load” in high-altitude forests is becoming dangerously volatile.
As the U.S. West enters a period of high-stakes water rationing and fire preparation, the record-low snowpack of 2026 serves as a grim milestone. For the millions who depend on the Sierra Nevada and the Rockies for their taps and their crops, the music of the mountains has been silenced far too early this year, replaced by the dry heat of an accelerating summer.



























































































