Dry ground at freeze-up is reducing the chance of any above normal spring runoff in Saskatchewan.
In its annual assessment of conditions going into the winter, the Saskatchewan Water Security Agency on Wednesday said dryness across the provincial grain belt means the capacity of soils and storage capacity within wetland areas will be higher, “reducing the risk of above normal runoff come spring.”
In fact, even an above normal snowpack is unlikely to result in an above normal snowmelt runoff, given current moisture conditions, the agency said, noting current long-range forecasts suggest near normal to above normal precipitation and below normal temperatures over the winter months for much of the province.
Freeze-up conditions - in combination with the winter snowpack - form the initial base for the province’s spring snowmelt runoff forecast, the first of which is typically issued in February.