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Document Date
September 17, 2014
Document Description

A presentation by Dr. Dennis Todey that was presented at the Extreme Events and Drought Resiliency workshop that took place in Rapid City, South Dakota September 17-18, 2014. Provides a good deal of data on the climate of the region and the United States as a whole. 

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Document Date
April 9, 2013
Document Description

Report on a workshop that took place April 8-9, 2010 in Flagstaff, Arizona between officials from the Hualapai, Zuni, Hopi, Navajo, Tohono O’odham and Southern Ute Tribes, together with NIDIS, NOAA, Climate Assessment for the Southwest (CLIMAS), Northern Arizona University, University of Arizona, Western Water Assessment, Desert Research Institute, Indigenous Waters Network, Flagstaff Science Center, USGS, National Drought Mitigation Center, Bureau of Reclamation and the Western Regional Climate Center.

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Document Date
April 1, 2014
Document Description

NIDIS news story about helping communities develop drought impacts reporting methods. The article spends time talking about issues faced on tribal lands, specifically on Hopi lands.

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Story about issues on tribal lands, specifically Hopi lands, on how communities can develop drought impacts reporting methods. Existing resource management and technical staff can use local observations to plan for mitigation tailored to a region’s specific needs. 

From Dry Times, the NIDIS newsletter.

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Document Date
April 1, 2014
Document Description

NIDIS Newsletter about the climate change concerns occuring in the Four Corners region of the southwest. Uses weather data from the region to support the claims of a changing climate in the region.

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Document Date
October 1, 2015
Document Description

The current El Niño event is very strong, and is expected to affect weather around the globe, and in Colorado, through next spring. The impacts of El Niño are more complex over Colorado than other parts of the West. Strong El Niño conditions improve the odds for wetter-than-normal conditions in most parts of Colorado, especially in fall and spring. However, strong El Niño conditions also tend to bring dry mid-winters to our North-Central mountains.

Shows past El Niño conditions, effects on snowpack and runoff.

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Document Date
September 18, 2012
Document Description

Overview of the Colorado Water Conservation Board (CWCB) and National Integrated Drought Information System (NIDIS) held on September 18, 2012. Includes description of the event, feedback, and recommendations for the future.

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Document Date
January 5, 2015
Document Description

From Too Much to Too Little provides an assessment of the 2012 central U.S. drought.

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Document Date
May 15, 2014
Document Description

Presented at the California Drought Forum May 15-16, 2014 in Sacramento, CA.

Colorado

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Resources Background Image
Red rocks in Garden of the Gods park in Colorado.
Web Resources Label
Colorado Drought Resources
Resources Section

Stay Informed: Local Drought Updates

Drought Alert Emails
Get email updates when U.S. Drought Monitor conditions change for your location or a new drought outlook is released.

Intermountain West Drought Status Updates
NIDIS & its partners issue regional updates covering drought conditions, outlooks/forecasts, and local impacts.

Intermountain West Drought Email List
Get regional drought status updates right to your inbox, as well as drought news, webinars, and other events for the Intermountain West.

Intermountain West Drought & Climate Outlook Webinars
These webinars provide the region with timely information on current and developing climate conditions such as drought, floods, and tropical storms, as well as climatic events like El Niño and La Niña.

Get Involved: Submit Local Drought Impacts

Drought in your area? Tell us how drought is impacting your community by submitting a condition monitoring report. Your submissions help us better understand how drought is affecting local conditions.

D3 Graph

U.S. Drought Monitor

The U.S. Drought Monitor (2000–present) depicts the location and intensity of drought across the country. Every Thursday, authors from NOAA, USDA, and the National Drought Mitigation Center produce a new map based on their assessments of the best available data and input from local observers. The map uses five categories: Abnormally Dry (D0), showing areas that may be going into or are coming out of drought, and four levels of drought (D1–D4). Learn more.

 

State Bridge
Statistics
4.3 Million

Colorado residents in areas of drought, according to the Drought Monitor

Increase of
3.7%
since last week
33rd

driest February on record (since 1895)

0.82 in.
total precipitation
Decrease of
0.27 in.
from normal
22nd

driest January—February on record (since 1895)

1.51 in.
total precipitation
Decrease of
0.64 in.
from normal
Current Conditions

Colorado Current Conditions

A number of physical indicators are important for monitoring drought, such as precipitation & temperature, water supply (e.g., streamflow, reservoirs), and soil moisture. Learn more about monitoring drought.

Colorado Precipitation Conditions

Inches of Precipitation
Precipitation Shown as a Percentage of Normal Conditions
100%
Precipitation Shown as a Percentage of Normal Conditions
100%

Colorado Temperature Conditions

Maximum Temperature (°F)
60
Departure from Normal Max Temperature (°F)
0
Departure from Normal Max Temperature (°F)
0

Colorado Streamflow Conditions

Streamflow Conditions

Colorado Soil Moisture Conditions

0–100 cm Soil Moisture Percentile
70
100
Soil Moisture Anomaly
0%

Future Conditions

Outlooks & Forecasts for Colorado

Predicting drought in Colorado depends on the ability to forecast precipitation and temperature within the context of complex climate interactions. View more outlooks & forecasts.

Future Precipitation & Temperature Conditions

Predicted Inches of Precipitation
1.75
Probability of Below-Normal Precipitation
100%
Probability of Above-Normal Precipitation
100%
Probability of Below-Normal Temperatures
100%
Probability of Above-Normal Temperatures
100%

Drought Outlooks for Colorado

Drought Is Predicted To...
Drought Is Predicted To...

Main Maps
Current Colorado Drought Maps

Drought & Dryness Categories
% of CO
4.5
28.7
20.3
24.9
21.6
95.5
Drought Change Since Last Week
Dry Conditions
Wet Conditions
Dry Conditions
Wet Conditions

Experimental
Experimental
Planning & Response
Drought in the Intermountain West

Drought and its impacts vary from region to region—due to differences in climate. In Colorado and across the Intermountain West region (Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, Arizona, and western New Mexico), drought onset may occur quickly and last a season, or begin gradually and last decades. The Rocky Mountain regions rely on winter snowpack to sustain cities, towns, agriculture and recreation. In the Southwest, the summer monsoons help people, and livestock, get through the hot summer months. 

The Colorado River is the largest perennial stream in the Intermountain West, feeding the two largest reservoirs in the United States. Winter snowpack in the Colorado Rockies usually sets the tone for drought conditions from year to year.

To help foster interstate coordination to cope with current and future droughts and growing water demands, NOAA’s National Integrated Drought Information System (NIDIS) launched the Intermountain West Drought Early Warning System (DEWS). The Intermountain West DEWS is a network of regional and national partners that share information and coordinate actions to help communities in the region cope with current and future droughts. 

Reach out to Meredith Muth, the Acting Regional Drought Coordinator for this region, for more information, or sign up for the Intermountain West DEWS newsletter.

Drought Resources
Graphs Header

Historical Drought Conditions in Colorado

Drought is a normal climate pattern that has occurred in varying degrees of length, severity, and size throughout history. Below, you can look back at past drought conditions for Colorado according to 3 historical drought indices. The U.S. Drought Monitor is a weekly map that shows the location and intensity of drought across the country since 2000. The Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI) is a monthly depiction of drought based on precipitation (with data going back to 1895). And the paleoclimate data uses tree-ring reconstructions to estimate drought conditions before we had widespread instrumental records, going back to the year 0 for some parts of the U.S. View more historical conditions.

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