US 2nd-largest Hydropower Reservoir approaching "dead pool" low water level

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Lake Powell reaching critically low elevation levels, nearing 'dead power pool,' experts say - ABC News

Lake Powell reaching critically low elevation levels, nearing 'dead power pool,' experts say<br>The reservoir is nearing the lowest point at which hydropower can be produced.

ByJulia Jacobo<br>July 13, 2026, 6:59 PM

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The downstream side of the Glen Canyon Dam. Lake Powell, the dam's reservoir, is only 27 percent full.<br>Jim West/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Lake Powell, the second-largest reservoir in the U.S., is nearing critically low water elevation levels, the latest data shows.<br>As of Monday, water levels at Lake Powell measured at 3,524.3 feet above sea level, according to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation tracker.<br>Minimum, or "dead," power pool -- in which the water is too low to spin the hydroelectric turbines and can no longer produce hydropower -- starts at 3,490 feet of elevation, Peter Soeth, public affairs lead at the Bureau of Reclamation, told ABC News. Elevation at Lake Powell is currently about 34 feet above the minimum power pool.

The downstream side of the Glen Canyon Dam. Lake Powell, the dam's reservoir, is only 27 percent full.<br>Jim West/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Since the early 1960s, when Lake Powell initially was created by the completion of Glen Canyon Dam, the reservoir has never been lower than 5.26 million acre feet in live storage -- or the water that can flow by gravity from the reservoir through the various tubes and tunnels that can be used for reservoir release, Jack Schmidt, director of the Center for Colorado River Studies at Utah State University, told ABC News.<br>Lake Powell currently has about 5.52 million acre-feet of large storage and has lost about 4,800 acre-feet of water per day since June 1, Schmidt said.

Reservoir operations can get "very complicated" once elevation drops below 3,500 feet and live storage drops below 4.3 million acre-feet, Schmidt said. At that point, the Bureau of Reclamation would "be seriously concerned," he added.

Related<br>Water supplies along Colorado River basin in peril, experts say

The reservoir could reach a "dead pool" when its elevation drops to 3,370 feet, at which point water can no longer flow past Glen Canyon Dam by gravity.<br>In a dead pool, about 240 feet of water would be trapped at the bottom of the canyon, unable to flow to millions of people who rely on it in Arizona, California and Nevada, the Lake Powell Chronicle reported.<br>Full pool elevation is at 3,700 feet, according to the Lake Powell Water Database.

Water levels remain low at Lake Powell in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area on April 30, 2026, near Big Water, Utah.<br>RJ Sangosti/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images

The Colorado River Basin is experiencing the impacts from the lowest snowpack on record, Soeth said.

Earlier this year, hydrology experts began warning that water levels in the Colorado River Basin would approach critically low levels due to the lack of snowpack over the winter months.

Related<br>Billions of gallons of water from Lake Powell are being dumped into the Grand Canyon

More than two-thirds of the West remains in drought, with much of the Colorado River Basin experiencing severe to extreme conditions, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.<br>There could be some short-term relief in the near future. Above-average precipitation is favored across much of the West, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Climate Prediction Center. Monsoon season and an intensifying El Niño are also underway and could bring more chances for rain to the region.<br>However, any additional precipitation will not offset the long-term factors driving water shortages like prolonged drought conditions and historically low seasonal snowpack, according to experts.

Water levels in Lake Powell are several hundred feet below full capacity at the Glen Canyon Dam on June 7, 2026 in Page, Arizona.<br>George Frey/Getty Images

Water supplies in Lake Powell are currently dwindling dangerously close -- about 4 feet -- to the previous record set in April 2023 at 3,520 feet, driven by a decades-long megadrought. The rate of decline has leveled off in recent weeks, running around 2 feet higher than previous projections, which suggests that mitigation efforts could be helping somewhat.

In May, the Colorado River Basin Forecast Center projected that Lake Powell could drop to a new record-low level by July, based on expected inflow rates between April and July.

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Experts predict that a new record-low could be reached at Lake Powell in August.<br>"If you do the simple math, it would suggest that Lake Powell will set a record for its lowest point in about a month and a...

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