Thursday, April 30, 2026

The NWS Is Hiring

What is probably the biggest hiring action in modern National Weather Service history is now underway.  If you are looking for positions with that agency, government boilerplate with links are below.  

The DHA announcements for the Standing Register Meteorologist, GS-1340-05/07/09 positions have been posted. The announcements are set to open May 1, 2026 - September 30, 2026.


PR-424133 ("Harder to Fill" Locations):

Job Announcement # (DHA): NWS-26-12947704-DHA


PR-424134 ("East" Locations):

Job Announcement # (DHA): NWS-26-12947756-DHA


PR-424136 ("West" Locations):

Job Announcement # (DHA): NWS-26-12947773-DHA

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Tyrol in Spring

Much like Utah, the Alps offer up a tremendous diversity of recreational opportunities in the spring months due to the large elevation differences and diverse microclimates. 

The Inn Valley and the south-facing slopes of the Nordkette ridge immediately north of Innsbruck are green with just a few patches of snow hanging in the high elevations.  One can get off work and go for a hike to one of several mountain huts or alms on the lower- and mid-elevation slopes of the Nordkette.  Directly above our apartment we can climb about 550 vertical meters to Umbruggler Alm for lunch, dinner, or strudel.  

Similar to the Salt Lake Valley, the views right now are of green valleys and snow capped mountains.  One difference is that things will probably stay green in the low elevations through the summer because it actually rains here.  


The next day I skied at Ischgl, which reaches to about 2800 meters elevation, and is fully interconnected with Samnaun in Switzerland.  Below shows the valley route from the top of the ridge that divides the two resorts down to the village of Samnaun.  


Once the snow softened a bit, we did a good deal of off-piste skiing on the Ischgl side.  This is below the Piz Val Gronda cable car.  I jokingly called this run "Little Snowbird." 


One reason for that is my friend Samu calls this one "Little Alta."


A highlight for the day was skiing down a very long and completely untracked gully that skied like butter.  Spring snow can be wonderful like that.  The bottom though got a little thin.  We slalomed through the rocks and then had to do a mixture of hiking and skiing to get out.  


Ischgl is a hard partying resort with a skiing problem.  At 2300 meters they have a concert stage setup for their Top of the Mountain concerts. 


If you miss Frank at Alta, this might be a good fall back.  I grabbed that photo off the web.  My multi-resort pass is not good on Ischgl concert days, not that I care.   

Source: https://www.top.tirol/news-tourismus/konzertreihe-bringt-ischgl-millionen

Finally, when the knees are cranky, a great thing to do from Innsbruck is take a 40 minute train ride to Seefeld.  The train climbs up the steeply sloped north wall of the Inn Valley and offers up great views.  


You'll find many older Tyroleans on the train as there's a lot of low angle walking in the Seefeld area.  You can walk for many miles if you like or just a few.  There's plenty of views to be had from the open areas around Seefeld.  One of the more famous views is of the Seekirche Catholic Church right on the edge of town.  



Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Secrets of the Greatest Snow on Earth at the University of Innsbruck

I'm approaching the half-way point of our stay in Tyrol.  One of my responsibilities as a Guest Professor is to present a "public lecture" as a way to introduce myself to the Department of Atmospheric and Cryospheric Sciences as well as the wider University community.  I decided to adapt my "Secrets of the Greatest Snow on Earth" talk to a Tyrolean audience.  

Although the talk had some similarities to the versions I've given in Utah, significant modifications were needed.   The Greatest Snow on Earth slogan is well known in North America, but most people in Innsbruck have never heard of it.  I had to introduce the slogan, and how it is put on everything from web sites to license plates, providing an opportunity for a little humor by imagining what might have happened if Tyrol had come up with it first.   

To introduce everyone to Utah skiing I decided to compare the history of skiing in Austria with Utah. There are some great parallels here.  Austria has a very long and rich history with Alpine skiing, with St. Anton and the Arlberg region known (and marketed) as the "cradle" or birthplace of Alpine skiing.  One reason for this is that Hannes Schneider, who was born in the village of Stuben in the Arlberg, was a pioneering Alpine skier who developed the Arlberg technique there, a system for teaching skiers how to progress from wedge to parallel skiing that revolutionized ski instruction in the early 20th century.  

For comparison, Utah has a very long and rich history with deep-powder skiing, especially at Alta where many people, including the Alf Engen, Dick Durrance, and Junior Bounous were developing the techniques to ski the steep and deep.  Here are a couple of slides discussing these two rich regional ski histories.  



The turnout was great with probably about 100 people attending.  And they really know how to celebrate and make a visitor feel welcome.  After answering questions for about 15 minutes the regional wines and local beer were rolled in and we had a great social hour. 

Much thanks to the Department of Atmospheric and Cryospheric Sciences and the Mountain Regions Research Area for hosting the event.    

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Declining Snow and Ice Part II: Future Projections

In the previous post we examined recent trends in snow and ice including glaciers and seasonal snowpack.  Here we look at future projections.  

I use the word projection rather than forecasts because projections explore "what-if" scenarios whereas forecasts try to predict a future outcome.  For climate projections, the primary what if scenarios are often based on future greenhouse gas emissions scenarios or pathways and in some cases socioeconomic pathways.  These include, for example, moderate emissions pathways in which greenhouse gas emissions peak during the mid-21st century, so-called "business as usual" scenarios in which emissions increase through the 21st century, and others.  

These scenarios produce increases in globally average temperature over pre-industrial values.  For instance, the moderate-emissions scenario produces an increase of about 2°C and the high-emissions scenario produces an increase of about 4°C.  These are sometimes referred to as global warming levels (GWL) and I'll be using those for this post.  For a given global warming level, the amount of warming for a region may differ from the global average and in the case of Austria (and Utah) the amount of warming is greater.  

We will start with glaciers in the European Alps based on work presented by Zekollari et al. (2019).  If interested, I have a deeper dive on this topic (see The Fate of Alpine Glaciers).  The graph below presents the recent (prior to 2017) and projected future volume of glacier ice in the Alps, the latter under four scenarios.  One is the committed loss, which is an estimate of the future loss of glacier volume if the climate stabilized around what occurred from 1988-2017.  The others are with an additional levels of global warming.  

Source: Zekollari et al. (2019), with annotations added

Because the Alpine glaciers are currently out of equilibrium with the rapid warming that has occurred in recent decades, they will continue to shrink even if the climate remains unchanged relative to 1988–2017.  Under such a scenario, the volume fraction of glacier ice would decline about 40% from 2017 levels.  Increasing amounts of glacier loss occur for higher global warming levels.  Under high global warming levels, nearly all of the glacier ice in the Alps is gone by 2100 (see red line) with the only glacier remnants remaining in the high terrain region from Mt. Blanc to Zermatt and the Swiss Jungfrau.  

Moving to snowfall, below are estimated changes (from 1981–2010 to 2070–2099) in the water-equivalent of snowfall for the Alpine region (September to May) as a function of elevation under a global warming level of ~2°C and a global warming level of ~4°C.  Similar to recent trends, declines are very much elevation dependent and largest in the lower elevations and smallest in the upper elevations.  For the 1000-1250 m elevation band, the various models call for declines of 15-40% for 2°C of global warming and 40–60% for 4°C of global warming.  Declines are larger at lower elevations and smaller at upper elevations.    

Source: Frei et al. 2018, with annotations added.

Another perspective is provided by trends in the number of days with at least 30 cm of snow on the ground.  The graph below is now for the Austrian Alps, which are a bit colder at a given elevation than the western Alps and the Italian Alps.  Again, the percentage changes are elevation and scenario dependent.  For the 1500-2000 m elevation range, snow cover of at least 30 cm persisted for about 175 days a year.  For 1991-2000, this has declined to about 130.  For a global warming level of 2°C, that drops to about 110 days with additional declines for larger global warming levels.  At upper elevations, the percentage declines are smaller, but there are still declines.  

Source: Formeyer et al. (2025, https://aar2.ccca.ac.at/chapters/1) with annotations added.

Finally, groups have estimated changes in ski resort snow reliability based on projections like those above but also considering changes in snowmaking conditions and projected advances in snowmaking capacity.  In the case of Austria, the regions that see the largest declines in snow reliability, especially under a high-emissions scenario (right figure below), are in eastern Austria (the Austrian States of Lower Austria, Upper Austria, and Styria) and the northern Alpine Rim in western Austria near the German border.  These are areas where ski resorts are at low-to-moderate elevations.  

Source: Steger et al. (2021, https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213078020300542) with annotations added.

The highest snow reliability persists in the inner Alps in western Austria near the Italian border where the terrain is high (green ellipse), and in the Arlberg region in western Austria near the border between the Austrian states of Voralberg and Tyrol (red ellipse). In the case of the former, there are several resorts with substantial terrain above 2000 meters (Kaunertal, Pitztal, Sölden, Obergurgl, Ischgl), whereas the latter is currently Austria's snowiest region and will likely maintain some level of snow reliability even as a greater fraction of wintertime precipitation falls as rain instead of snow.  This does not mean those regions will not see declines in natural snow reliability and hours with favorable snowmaking conditions, but that they are more resilient to warming given their elevation or more abundant natural snowfall.  Everywhere will experience the pain of global warming, but the "competitive advantages" of these regions will increase with time as other regions suffer more.

We will see similar effects in Utah as the high-elevation, snow-abundant terrain around Little Cottonwood Canyon suffers less than lower elevation regions in the Wasatch.  High elevation (and north facing) resorts like Alta and Snowbird will see an increasing competitive advantage in the future, as was evident this past season.  

What I takeaway from this and other research is that there still will be snow and snowstorms in the future, although we can expect downward trends in snowfall and snow-cover duration in most regions. The size of the decline, however, is strongly dependent on the amount of warming, which is tied to future greenhouse gas emissions.  Thus, the fate of snow and skiing are ultimately in our hands.  

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Declining Snow and Ice Part I: Recent Trends

One of the things I'm doing while on sabbatical in Austria is revisiting our current knowledge of recent changes and projected future changes to Earth's cryosphere (the frozen water part of the Earth system including ice sheets, glaciers, and snow) and integratig this information into course materials and public talks.  Austria is a good place to do this because there is a great awareness and convern about changes to glaciers and snow here and winter tourism is a significant portion of their economy (as much as 6% of their GDP based on some estimates).  As a result, there's a great deal of useful information concerning changes to snow and its impacts on winter sports and tourism.  

But before taking a close look at Austria, let's take a step back and look at the big picture.  Globally averaged temperatures have increased about 1.4°C/2.5°F above pre-industrial levels and the past three calendar years (2023–2025) were the warmest on record.  In response, the "great melt" has begun, with declines in the mass of the Greenland Ice Sheet, Antarctic Ice Sheet, and glaciers.   

Since the late 1970s, the Greenland Ice Sheet has been losing mass, corresponding to about 18 mm (0.7") of sea-level rise.  

Source: https://climate.copernicus.eu/climate-indicators/ice-sheets 


Similarly, the Antarctic Ice Sheet has been losing mass, amounting in total to about 14 mm (0.55") of sea level rise. The graph below includes mass changes for three regions of the Antarctic Ice Sheet (East Antarctica, West Antarctica, and the Antarctic Penninsula, as well as the cumulative total for the entire continent.  

Source: https://climate.copernicus.eu/climate-indicators/ice-sheets 

Finally, glaciers have lost 9000 Gigatonnes of mass, the equivalent of another 27 mm (1 inch) of sea leel rise.  

Source: https://climate.copernicus.eu/climate-indicators/glaciers

These recent changes cannot be explained by a "rebound" from the Little Ice Age, a period of regional cooling, especially in the North Atlantic region.  Since the 1990s, the loss of land ice has been driven by human-caused global warming.  Additionally, although the contributions to sea level rise may seem small so far, they are an ominous harbinger of things to come. 

Zooming into Austria, temperatures are increasing faster than the global average and have increased 3.1°C/5.6°F since the pre-industrial period.  

Source: https://aar2.ccca.ac.at/technical-summary


The impacts on snow and ice here are very apparent, with the recently released Second Austrian Assessment Report on Climate Change (AAR2) concluding that "all glaciers in Austria have been losing mass and shrinking at an accelerating rate in recent years."  That's somewhat cautious wording.  Instead of shrinkage, the word disintegration is being used increasingly to describe the fracturing and collapsing of some glaciers.  

Austria has an extensive network of snow observations.  They reveal elevation-dependent trends in snow cover with the larget percentage declines in the lower elevations and smallest at higher elevations.  Below are the trends at Austrian stations from 1961–2021 showing statistically significant declines at most stations that increase with decreasing elevation below about 1750 meters.  

Source: Steenburgh (2023, based on data provided by Marc Olefs, Geosphere)

Most Austrian ski resorts have base elevations below 1750 meters and the vast majority below 1500 meters.  

In a coming post, we will look at projections for the future and expected impacts on snow and skiing.  

Monday, April 20, 2026

Austria's "Highest" Ski Resort

Sometime in early April after a day of skiing I discovered that both of my ski boots had developed cracks more than 1 cm in length in their upper cuff.  Not good.  It's the end of the season and I went around town looking for replacement boots, to no avail.  Then I walked into Sport Wolf, a little outside of the main core of Innsbruck. 


The owner, Hansjörg, took great interest in my situation.  He contacted Salomon, who provided me a 40% discount on a new pair (my old boots were at least 6 seasons old and well outside of warranty).  A couple days later they arrived and after an initial fitting at Sport Wolf I'm back in business.  Much thanks to Hansjörg for outstanding service.  

I decided that I should get a couple of hours of skiing in the boots and decided to go to Kuhtai for a few laps on Friday.  It was the closest resort to Innsbruck that is still open and can be reached by bus in about an hour.  

Kuhtai markets itself as Austria's highest ski resort at 2,020 meters elevation.  


There are, however, three caveats to that claim.  First, their highest lift elevation is 2,520 meters, and there are many Austrian ski areas that exceed that.  Second, they actually have lifts that go below 2,020 meters, including one, the Kaiserbahn, which starts at 1,938 meters.  Finally, there are Austrian resorts with base elevations above 2,020 meters (Pitztal Glacier, Kaunertal Glacier, and Mölltal Glacier).  I guess the distinction is that the village of Kühtai sits at 2,020 meters and perhaps that is what is meant by resort.  

Kühtai sits in an east-west oriented mountain pass between the Sellrain Valley to the east and the Neder Valley to the west.  Given it's altitude, it is essentially treeless.  It has south facing terrain on the north side of the pass and north facing terrain on the south side.  

Coverage on Friday was good on for the north-facing terrain, but the south-facing terrain was nearly snow free below about 2200 meters except along trails with snowmaking.  

Looking north to the south-facing side of Kühtai

Looking south to the north-facing side of Kütai

I was told Eileen Gu was was skiing here a couple of weeks ago, but on this day, there were only a few diehards and one Utahn who was testing his ski boots, which fit well.  Hopefully I have a few more days of skiing before this season is over.