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Record Warmth, Little Snowfall: A 吃瓜大本营 Paleoclimatologist Explains This Year鈥檚 Winter in Colorado

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吃瓜大本营

The 吃瓜大本营 Newsroom asked Professor Michael Kerwin to help us understand what鈥檚 causing this strange season and what we can expect in the future.

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picture of a road in the mountains on a sunny clear day

Anyone who has recently driven on Interstate 70 through the Rocky Mountains knows that the view looks strikingly different this winter. The typically snowcapped mountains have little to no snow. And the snow levels at Colorado鈥檚 many winter resorts are far below normal, with many trails still closed鈥攍eaving people who love to ski or snowboard out of luck. As of early February, the state鈥檚 snowpack is about 52% of the median, and it would take an estimated 5 to 8 feet of snow in the mountains to break even. This has left many residents with a series of lingering questions about the weather. Let鈥檚 take them one by one.听

What is snowpack?

Snowpack is an accumulation of snow in the mountains. It acts as a natural reservoir to store water. As it melts, it fills the Colorado River and other major rivers鈥攁nd then that water is captured in reservoirs such as Lake Dillion. Snowpack is crucial to our water system, climate regulation, and ecosystem. Right now, Colorado鈥檚 snowpack is the worst on record. While snowpack data goes back only to 1987, what we鈥檙e experiencing is still alarming and unusual.

Why is it so warm this winter?

In Colorado, December 2025 was the warmest December on record. For reference, it was 8.9 degrees F warmer than the 30-year average from 1991 to 2020. Climate change is certainly causing rising temperatures, but it alone doesn鈥檛 explain this outlier. Michael Kerwin, director of the 吃瓜大本营鈥檚 Environmental Science Program and an associate professor in the College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, says a mix of things are causing the state鈥檚 lack of snow and warm temperatures: atmospheric rivers, persistent high pressure blocking storms, and a weak La Ni帽a pattern.

鈥淐alifornia has had some vigorous atmospheric rivers recently, which bring heavy precipitation and above-average temperatures,鈥 Kerwin says. 鈥淢ost of the impact of these narrow bands of subtropical water vapor are restricted to California. But some of that energy can leak into Colorado, providing a little added winter warmth.鈥澨

This season, a weak La Ni帽a pattern is creating a persistent ridge of high pressure that has been farther east than normal, keeping storms out of Colorado. Normally, a La Ni帽a ridge brings northern mountain snow. Because we aren鈥檛 seeing as much snow, the ground temperature is warmer than usual.

鈥淭he lack of snowpack can also impact winter temperatures. If there鈥檚 snow on the ground, as you鈥檇 normally expect, then some incoming solar radiation will either reflect back to space or be utilized to melt some of the snow. This year, without much snow, a higher percentage of incoming solar radiation is absorbed at the surface and re-emitted as long wave radiation, which we feel as heat,鈥 Kerwin says.听

How will low snowpack affect us in the spring and summer?

Snowpack is crucial to our water system. For example, Denver Water depends on mountain snowpack for 90% of its water supply. The water utility serves more than 1.5 million people in the Denver metro area.听

鈥淐olorado is potentially in a dire situation,鈥 Kerwin says. 鈥淚f this continues, we鈥檙e going to be looking at mandatory, strict water restrictions this summer in Denver, similar to what we had in 2002.鈥

While it鈥檚 unlikely that we鈥檒l 鈥渕ake up鈥 for lost snowpack and return to normal levels, there鈥檚 still a chance for more snow. Colorado typically gets 18% of its snow in February and 16% in March.听

鈥淧eople were talking about a great deal of hope with the current La Ni帽a breaking down. And it is breaking down,鈥 Kerwin says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 shifting toward neutral conditions as we speak. And it seems to be building into an El Ni帽o by April, May, or June.鈥

If we are left with an all-time low snowpack, Kerwin says the situation should serve as a wake-up call for how the West manages its increasingly strained water supply.听

鈥淲e need to find ways to not use water the way we鈥檝e been using water,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he United States, especially the Western states, use more water than anyone else on earth. We need to do better. Water is a finite resource.鈥澨

Is this the new normal?

Kerwin doesn't see this winter as the new normal鈥攂ut it may be an indication of more volatility to come.

鈥淚 believe this is a type of new normal. Certainly, moving forward, we could have these warm and dry winters, but we could just as easily have cold, wet winters, too. It will depend on the position of the jet stream and the intensity of El Nino Southern Oscillation variability, both of which will be impacted by continued and future ocean heating,鈥 Kerwin says.听

For him, the bigger concern is complacency.听

鈥淚t鈥檇 be wonderful if our community, leaders, and politicians thought about solutions during times of plenty,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut that鈥檚 not what our research on drought shows us. People forget about a crisis when it鈥檚 in the past.鈥

Even so, he hopes people don鈥檛 lose heart. The challenge, he says, is to remain engaged, continuing to plan and conserve even when wetter winters return and the urgency fades.听

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