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Dry summer helps push Lake Michigan water levels to near-record lows

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Periodic winds out of the south, which have pushed water north, have worsened the situation for sailboats that require greater water levels than other boats to accommodate keels that can reach 10 feet deep, Clark said.

"Sailboats would be some of the first victims of low water because they have the deepest drafts," Clark said. "So we are kind of the canaries in the coal mine as they say."

This year, however, large lakers also have been missing the extra inches of water, according to Glen Nekvasil, vice president of the Lake Carriers' Association. To make it into shallow harbors, the huge cargo-carrying ships have had to reduce their loads, which ultimately means they must make more trips, Nekvasil said.

"The biggest ships a year ago were loading in the area of 66,000 tons," Nekvasil said. "Now, a good cargo is about 64,000 to 65,000, so we are losing about 1,500 tons."

Fluctuating highs and lows are generally seen as good for the Greats Lakes ecosystem, and experts said there is no way to tell for sure what will happen in the coming years, pointing to the fact that all-time highs followed the all-time low of 1964.

"It all depends on conditions," Kompoltowicz said. "We have seen times in the past decade of below-average water levels where we had significant spring rises."

A study released in March by the International Joint Commission, a U.S.-Canadian group focused on the Great Lakes, underscored that unpredictability.

"Perhaps most striking from the perspective of effective lake regulation is how little the lake dynamics on inter-annual and decadal timescales are understood," the authors wrote. "Despite best efforts, the lake levels remain almost entirely unpredictable more than a month ahead."

Still, the report advised local and national governments to be prepared for water level declines in the long term, noting that "lake evaporation is increasing and likely will increase for the foreseeable future, likely due to the lack of ice cover, increasing surface water temperatures and wind speeds."

The commission has also pointed to human actions that have contributed to declining lake levels, including heavy dredging over the last century of the St. Clair River, the main outflow of Lakes Michigan and Huron.

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