Reservoirs, groundwater low, yet still no official drought

With the urban water supply at 73 percent of usable capacity, its lowest level since 2002, you would think Charlottesville would at least be under a drought watch, as it has been the previous two years. But the “state-of-the-art hydrologic computer modeling” of the Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority (RWSA) predicts only a 12 percent chance of drought.

With the urban water supply at 73 percent of usable capacity—its lowest level since 2002—you would think Charlottesville would at least be under a drought watch, as it has been the previous two years. But the “state-of-the-art hydrologic computer modeling” of the Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority (RWSA) predicts only a 12 percent chance of drought.

“[The computer model] currently sees fall just around the horizon, with cooler temperatures and vegetation soon going dormant for winter—suggesting a high probability that relief will come before reservoir levels get critically low,” says Tom Frederick, RWSA executive director, in a press release today.

Specifically, the model predicts that in 12 weeks the usable reservoir storage will be 80 percent full. The benchmark for a drought watch is a 20 percent chance that it won’t be 80 percent full in 12 weeks. Over the course of August, the probability has increased to 12 percent from 7 percent.

The real problem may be for well water users, who make up 50 percent of Albemarle County residents. The county sent out a press release today warning that groundwater levels are “critically low” and asked citizens for voluntary conservation efforts.

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