The future of the Great Salt Lake has become one of the most urgent environmental questions in the American West. For thousands of years the lake expanded and shrank naturally, responding to long-term climate cycles. But over the past century — and especially in recent decades — the decline has accelerated beyond historical patterns. Shorelines have retreated miles from former marinas, salinity has increased to dangerous levels for wildlife, and exposed lakebed has begun releasing dust into surrounding communities.
Saving the Great Salt Lake does not mean returning it to some fixed historical level. Terminal lakes naturally fluctuate. The real goal is stabilizing it at a healthy range where ecosystems, air quality, and local climate remain functional. Achieving that requires something more complicated than a single engineering project or emergency intervention. It requires rethinking water use across an entire region.
The lake is not drying because of one cause. It is shrinking because every drop of water in its watershed is now contested between farms, cities, industry, and nature. The only way to save it is to change how that water is managed.
Table of Contents
Quick Reference: How to Save the Great Salt Lake
| Solution | What Needs to Be Done | How It Helps the Lake | Long-Term Benefit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Restore River Inflows | Allow more upstream water to reach the lake | Raises water level | Stabilizes ecosystem |
| Agricultural Efficiency | Improve irrigation technology and crop choices | Reduces water diversion | Largest water savings potential |
| Urban Water Conservation | Limit lawn watering and improve reuse systems | Less municipal withdrawal | Sustainable city growth |
| Water Rights Reform | Update legal allocation priorities | Ensures environmental water share | Permanent protection |
| Wetland Restoration | Rebuild marshes around shoreline | Natural filtration and storage | Supports wildlife recovery |
| Climate Adaptation Policies | Prepare for hotter and drier conditions | Reduces evaporation pressure | Improves resilience |
| Industrial Regulation | Manage mineral extraction ponds | Limits artificial evaporation | Maintains lake volume |
| Public Awareness | Encourage conservation behavior | Reduces consumption demand | Social and political support |
| Seasonal Water Banking | Store water during wet years | Releases water in drought years | Stabilizes fluctuations |
| Dust Mitigation Projects | Keep exposed lakebed moist | Protects air quality | Prevents health crises |
| State & Federal Cooperation | Coordinated basin-wide planning | Integrated watershed management | Long-term restoration success |
| Scientific Monitoring | Continuous data tracking | Early warning and adaptive management | Prevents future collapse |
Returning Water to the Lake Through Agricultural Reform
Agriculture consumes the majority of water that would otherwise reach the lake. In many years, farms account for roughly 65–80 percent of upstream water use, making agricultural reform the single most important solution.
This does not necessarily mean eliminating farming. Instead, the goal is changing how irrigation works. One promising method is split-season leasing, in which farmers voluntarily stop irrigating during the hottest months when crops naturally struggle to grow. The saved water is then transferred to the lake. Pilot programs are being considered because they can protect farmer income while restoring lake levels.
Another major change involves crop choice. Some crops grown in the watershed require extremely high water inputs relative to economic value. Transitioning to lower-water crops or seasonal dryland farming dramatically reduces consumption without eliminating agriculture entirely. Modern irrigation methods like drip systems and surge irrigation can also reduce waste, though they must ensure conserved water actually flows to the lake rather than expanding farm production.
Ultimately, saving the lake requires treating environmental water as a legitimate water user alongside cities and farms.
Reforming Water Rights and Water Markets
Western water law historically prioritized diversion and consumption rather than ecosystem survival. Because of this, conserved water often gets reused rather than returned to nature. A major solution involves creating market-based conservation systems where water rights holders are compensated for sending water to the lake.
Utah lawmakers have proposed expanding the authority of the Great Salt Lake commissioner to secure water through voluntary leases and trading programs. These programs allow water users to profit by conserving instead of consuming, aligning economics with conservation.
Water donation programs are also emerging. Governments, businesses, and institutions can legally transfer water rights directly to the lake, creating a permanent inflow source. These mechanisms represent a major philosophical shift: water can have ecological value even without human consumption.
Urban Water Conservation and Landscape Changes
Cities in the watershed use less water than agriculture but still consume vast quantities because of population growth and landscaping habits. Traditional lawns require heavy irrigation in a semi-arid climate. Reducing this demand offers one of the fastest ways to increase lake inflow.
Policies under consideration include shortening municipal irrigation seasons, limiting outdoor watering, and replacing lawns with drought-tolerant landscaping.
Metering previously unmeasured secondary irrigation water is also crucial. When residents know how much water they use, consumption drops significantly. Adjusting water pricing to reflect scarcity further encourages conservation.
Urban conservation works quickly because water saved in cities flows downstream almost immediately.
Restoring Wetlands and Natural Hydrology
Wetlands surrounding the lake act as natural filters, buffers, and storage reservoirs. Over decades, development and diversion have degraded these systems. Restoration projects can improve the lake’s resilience while also improving wildlife habitat.
Funding has been proposed to enhance wetlands and suppress dust from exposed lakebed areas.
Healthy wetlands slow evaporation, capture sediment, and help regulate salinity levels. They also provide nesting habitat for millions of migratory birds. By restoring natural hydrology, less water is lost before reaching the lake itself.
Removing Invasive Water-Consuming Plants
Invasive vegetation such as phragmites consumes large volumes of water without benefiting the ecosystem. Removing these plants frees water that can flow into the lake while improving habitat quality.
Legislative funding proposals include dedicated programs for invasive species removal because it represents an unusually efficient conservation strategy: water savings without economic sacrifice.
This type of solution is particularly valuable because it delivers ecological improvement and water recovery simultaneously.
Increasing Snowpack and Water Supply
While conservation is essential, increasing supply also helps. One method being explored is cloud seeding in surrounding mountains to enhance snowfall. Increased snowpack leads to greater spring runoff into tributary rivers.
Programs in the Bear River Basin aim to increase precipitation to replenish the lake and regional water systems.
However, experts emphasize that supply-side solutions alone cannot save the lake. Without reducing consumption, additional precipitation would still be diverted before reaching the basin.
Basin-Wide Water Planning and Measurement
A major obstacle to saving the lake has been fragmented management. Rivers feeding the lake are governed by multiple agencies, jurisdictions, and water rights systems. A unified basin-wide planning framework is essential.
The Great Salt Lake Basin Integrated Plan aims to coordinate water management across the watershed, analyze supply and demand, and evaluate tradeoffs between competing uses.
Better measurement infrastructure is also being installed to track flows and diversions, ensuring conserved water actually arrives at the lake rather than disappearing upstream.
Data-driven management transforms conservation from theory into measurable recovery.
Economic Incentives and Funding Programs
Saving the lake requires large financial investment. Governments and private partners have committed funding to restoration efforts, including a long-term charter targeting healthier lake levels by 2034.
Financial incentives are critical because water users must have alternatives to consumption-based profit. Programs include conservation payments, water leases, infrastructure upgrades, and ecosystem restoration grants.
The principle is simple: protecting the lake must become economically competitive with depleting it.
Reducing Industrial and Mineral Extraction Impacts
Industries around the lake depend on brine minerals and evaporation ponds. While economically important, operations must adapt to lower lake levels and ecological protection.
Solutions include efficiency improvements, water recycling, and negotiated water contributions to the lake. Industrial participation is essential because environmental collapse would ultimately threaten the industries themselves.
A balanced approach maintains economic activity while preventing irreversible ecological damage.
Public Health Protection and Dust Mitigation
As lake levels fall, exposed lakebed releases toxic dust into nearby communities. Monitoring and mitigation programs track airborne particles and plan interventions such as wetland restoration and soil stabilization.
Dust monitoring initiatives and environmental health research are being funded to understand risks and prioritize emergency actions.
Protecting public health creates urgency for rapid lake recovery, turning conservation into a societal necessity rather than an optional environmental goal.
Cultural, Behavioral, and Lifestyle Changes
Long-term success requires changes in public behavior. Water use patterns developed during wetter historical periods are incompatible with modern climate realities. Education campaigns encourage conservation in homes, landscaping, and consumption habits.
Even dietary shifts can reduce agricultural water demand because livestock feed crops require large irrigation volumes.
These behavioral changes multiply the effectiveness of policy solutions and create a conservation culture.
Why All Solutions Must Work Together
No single action can save the lake. Agricultural reform alone is insufficient without urban conservation. Water markets fail without measurement. Increased snowfall does nothing if diversions remain unchecked.
Scientists estimate recovery requires large reductions in water consumption across the basin combined with restored inflows. The lake responds directly to hydrology: more water in equals recovery, less water equals collapse.
Saving the lake is therefore a systems challenge rather than a single-policy problem.
The Path Forward
The future of the Great Salt Lake depends on speed. The ecosystem still has resilience, but tipping points are approaching. If inflows rise soon, wetlands can recover, salinity can stabilize, and dust emissions can decline. If action is delayed, restoration becomes exponentially more difficult.
The encouraging reality is that solutions exist and many are already underway. Governments, scientists, industries, and communities now recognize the stakes. The challenge is scaling efforts quickly enough to match the urgency of the crisis.
Saving the lake ultimately requires a new philosophy of water in arid regions: water must be shared not only among people, but also with nature itself.

