has shrunk to its lowest level in two millennia
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These changes reflect warming temperatures and drier winters across the mountains. Scientists warn the shifts threaten fragile alpine ecosystems and a billion dollar tourism industry. Bureau of Meteorology records confirm the decline is accelerating across every measured site.[5]
Long-term records show a clear decline in snow depth across the Alps. At Spencers Creek, maximum snow depth has fallen by 44.8 centimetres since 1954, a drop of 24 per cent. CSIRO analysis of three long-running sites confirms a downward trend of about half a centimetre every year.[6]
The number of days snow persists on the ground has also fallen sharply. Winters with snow lasting more than 50 days dropped from 16 between 1935 and 1994 to just two since 1995. Researchers say this shift reflects a fundamental change in the character of Australian winters.[7]
Warming has also intensified across the alpine zone. Australia has warmed by 1.51 degrees Celsius since 1910, with most of that warming occurring since 1950. Bureau of Meteorology records confirm this warming has accelerated markedly since 1950.[8]
Researchers tracking temperature and elevation confirm this disparity is measurable and growing. Higher elevations are warming faster than surrounding lowlands, reducing the reflective snow cover that once slowed the trend. NSW Government projections indicate winter temperatures could rise by more than two degrees this century.[9]
Few Australian mammals depend on snow as heavily as the mountain pygmy-possum. This tiny marsupial hibernates inside boulder fields, using snow cover as insulation from freezing air. Fewer than 2000 individuals remain, and researchers link its decline directly to shrinking snowpack.[2]
Shorter snow seasons disrupt hibernation across several alpine species. Without a thick insulating layer, cold air penetrates rock crevices, waking possums before spring food supplies return. Premature waking burns fat reserves, and repeated disturbance can prove fatal within a single bad winter.[2]
Reduced snow cover also opens the door to invasive species at high altitude. Feral horses, deer and weeds can now access terrain once locked under snow for months each year. Land managers say this expansion adds pressure to ecosystems already weakened by warming.[9]
Alpine bogs and fens face similar strain from reduced snowmelt. These wetlands rely on gradual meltwater to stay saturated through the warmer months. Reduced inflows dry out these fragile systems, threatening habitat for frogs and other specialised wildlife.[9]
Shorter, less reliable winters are straining the finances of Australian ski resorts. The industry currently contributes an estimated 3.33 billion dollars to the national economy each year. Modelling shows ski seasons could shrink by more than 40 per cent by the 2050s.[3]
Resort operators are adapting through diversification rather than snow alone. Many are expanding summer offerings such as mountain biking, hiking and warm weather accommodation. Researchers describe this shift as essential for keeping alpine towns economically viable.[6]
Artificial snowmaking has become central to keeping resorts open. Expanding snowmaking capacity demands heavy investment in water storage, pumps and electricity infrastructure. One study estimated the main resorts would need over 700 additional snow guns and vast water volumes.[10]
The long-term economic outlook for snow-dependent towns remains uncertain. Thousands of regional jobs depend directly and indirectly on winter visitors each season. Analysts warn declining snow reliability could hollow out communities with few other income sources.[3]
Alpine snowpack plays a critical role in the Murray-Darling Basin's water cycle. About half of the Snowy Scheme's inflows arrive as snowmelt and rain during spring. A poor snow season can therefore reduce total water inflows for the entire year.[4]
Earlier snowmelt shifts the timing of water available for irrigation downstream. Farmers across the Murray and Murrumbidgee valleys depend on predictable seasonal releases for their crops. Changed melt timing complicates planning for an irrigation sector worth billions of dollars annually.[4]
The Snowy Mountains Hydro-electric Scheme also depends on reliable alpine precipitation. Its nine power stations generate about 4500 gigawatt hours of renewable electricity each year. Declining and more variable snowmelt threatens the predictability of this output over time.[4]
High-altitude catchments are already recording reduced inflows. Projections suggest surface water run-off could fall by more than 40 millimetres a year at higher elevations by the 2060s. That decline would compound pressure on every water user relying on the alpine catchment.[9]
Climate models paint a stark picture for natural snow beyond 2050. Under a high emissions scenario, maximum snow depths could fall by up to 90 per cent. Even under lower emissions, natural snow reliability is projected to weaken substantially by mid-century.[6]
Lower elevation sites are expected to lose reliable snow cover first. Locations below 1600 metres face the steepest projected declines in maximum snow depth. Higher resorts may retain patchy cover longer, but even these sites show clear warming trends.[6]
Compounding bushfire risk adds urgency to alpine conservation efforts. Land managers now prioritise fire management, weed control and habitat connectivity to help species adapt. These strategies aim to buy time for ecosystems facing simultaneous climate pressures.[6]
Strong policy settings remain central to slowing alpine decline. Emissions reduction, water planning and coordinated cross-jurisdictional management all shape the region's future. Without sustained action, scientists warn Australia's alpine landscape will keep changing rapidly.[9]
Australia's alpine snowpack is retreating at a pace unmatched in centuries. Spencers Creek's long record echoes signals seen across ecosystems, economies, and infrastructure. Warming temperatures, rather than natural variability, drive this accelerating decline.
Governments, resort operators and land managers each hold responsibility for the response. Robust water planning, emissions reduction and habitat protection all require sustained investment and oversight. Communities built around snow depend on decisions made well beyond the mountains.
The evidence points toward a shorter, less predictable snow season ahead. How Australia manages water, energy and conservation policy will determine what survives. The Alps now stand as a measurable test of national climate accountability.
References
1. Australian Snowpack Disappearing Under the Influence of Global Warming and Solar Activity. Peer-reviewed study documenting a 44.8 centimetre decline in maximum snow depth at Spencers Creek since 1954.
2. How the mountain pygmy-possum can be saved from climate change. UNSW research detailing how shrinking snow insulation threatens the survival of the critically endangered marsupial.
3. Australia's ski industry falls victim to declining snowfall. Analysis of the economic contribution of Australian ski resorts and projected season-length losses under warming scenarios.
4. Climate change impacts on snow. NSW Government assessment of how declining snowfall affects Snowy Scheme inflows and downstream water security.
5. Where is the snow. Bureau of Meteorology summary confirming declines in snow depth, cover and snow days since the late 1950s.
6. Climate concerns: Trends in Australian snow. CSIRO overview of long-term snow depth trends and projections for the Australian alpine region.
7. Climate change driven persistence changes in Australian snowpatches. Peer-reviewed research showing a sharp decline in winters with snow persisting beyond 50 days since the mid-1990s.
8. Australia's changing climate. Bureau of Meteorology data confirming Australia has warmed 1.51 degrees Celsius since 1910, with accelerating decade-on-decade trends.
9. Climate change impacts on our alpine areas. NSW Government projections covering alpine warming, invasive species, wetland impacts and water run-off declines.
10. Climate Response by the Ski Industry: The Shortcomings of Snowmaking for Australian Resorts. Peer-reviewed study quantifying the infrastructure and water demands of expanded snowmaking under climate change.





