Thunderstorms high in the Cascades recently stirred up a lot of dirt in a central Washington river, causing problems for people on its banks.
All the dirt in the Naches River was too much for the City of Yakima鈥檚 water treatment plant to handle. Cities and towns could see situations like this happen more often as the climate continues to change.
Climate change will cause more storm runoff, change when snowpack melts and lead to more severe wildfires and harmful algal blooms, said Amanda Hohner. She studies how post-wildfire runoff affects drinking water treatment plants.
鈥淎t least in the Western U.S., the effects of wildfire and also climate change are really starting to challenge drinking water treatment plants, resulting in different water quality than maybe those water treatment plants were designed for,鈥 Hohner said.
In the Northwest, climate change is expected to alter how precipitation falls. Changes in snowpack and streamflow could mean places like the Yakima Basin in Washington and the Willamette River Basin in Oregon have bigger chances for more frequent water shortages in the summer, according to the and the .
Climate change also could damage infrastructure and lead to service disruptions, according to the Climate Impacts Group.
Often, Hohner said, water treatment plants are used to dealing with fairly pristine water sources.
鈥淭here are new and different challenges than used to be faced because of these changes that are occurring over time,鈥 she said.
The challenge for the City of Yakima was that this situation happened in the summertime with temperatures spiking and more water in demand.
This sort of thing normally happens in the spring or winter, when the river ices over or spring runoff kicks off too much sediment, said Mike Shane, the city鈥檚 water and irrigation manager. When the plant shuts down the city can pull water from its four wells, he said.
With the heat, the city鈥檚 backup water wells might not have held enough water. So, the city asked residents to for a few days 鈥 by washing their clothes and dishes only when machines are full, taking shorter showers, and watering gardens in the early morning or late evening.
The City of Yakima gets its water from the Naches River. Normally, the water treatment plant cleans up about 15 million gallons of water daily at this time of year, Shane said. Too much dirt can cause problems, he said.
鈥淚t clogs filters, and we鈥檙e not able to produce potable water in the same way we can when it鈥檚 not as turbid,鈥 Shane said.
Water treatment plants are built to keep people safe and operators are used to dealing with seasonal changes 鈥 from drought in the summer to floods in the winter, said Dorothy Tibbetts, regional manager for the Washington State Department of Health鈥檚 Eastern Region Office of Drinking Water.
鈥淭urbidity in water hides pathogens,鈥 Tibbetts said. 鈥淚t gives pathogens (a place) to grow and food and shelter. Turbidity hides those pathogens that do cause a risk to public health.鈥
That鈥檚 why it鈥檚 unsafe to drink directly from surface water without treatment, she said.
鈥淭he treatment system removes the turbidity for the filtration and disinfection steps to do their work to remove the pathogens from the water served to the public,鈥 she said.
Climate change is a concern for the quality of drinking water sources, especially surface water sources, Tibbest said.
But, Hohner said, there are ways drinking water treatment plants can adapt 鈥 although some might be more expensive than others.
Water can be diverted to sedimentation basins before it gets to treatment plants. Or treatment plants can invest in better ways to manage the solid particles in the water. On the less expensive side of the scale, treatment plants can monitor more upstream to see what鈥檚 headed their way.
They also might have to rely more on backup water sources. In that area, she said, Yakima鈥檚 water users are lucky.
鈥淣ot every utility has multiple sources of water,鈥 she said.