California

California's Winter Snowpack Below Average After Dry January

AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli Sean de Guzman, chief of snow surveys for the California Department of Water Resources, center, prepares to plunge the snow survey tube into the snowpack during the second snow survey of the season at Phillips Station near Echo Summit, Calif., Thursday, Jan. 30, 2020. The survey found the snowpack at 40.5 inches deep with a water content of 14.5 inches.

California’s weather turned largely dry in January and left the water content of the Sierra Nevada snowpack below average for this time of year, state officials said after measurements Thursday.

The retrograde movement of the winter precipitation outlook followed a stormy December that gave the mountain range a promising start to the snowpack, which supplies about 30% of the state’s water.

Statewide, the amount of water contained in the snowpack amounted to 72% of the Jan. 30 average, the Department of Water Resources said.

On Jan. 2, the statewide snow water content was 90% of the average, for the date.

“In comparison ... to where we were just a month ago, snow and precipitation statewide were well below average but we still need to wait and see what the next few months will bring us,” said Sean de Guzman, chief of the department’s snow surveys and water supply forecasting section.

“Luckily, our reservoirs statewide are either at or above their historical averages for this time of year thanks in part to just how wet of a water year 2019 was as well as optimized reservoir operations,” he said.

Water managers measure the snowpack manually and electronically at more than 260 locations, including Phillips Station, south of Lake Tahoe, where news media can watch the process.

The manual measurement there showed a snow depth of 40.5 inches (1.03 meters) and 14.5 inches (36.8 centimeters) of water content, de Guzman said.

That amounts to 79% of the February average and 58% of the April 1 average at Phillips Station.

Water managers point to the April 1 numbers because that is when the snowpack is typically at its peak, de Guzman said.

The turnabout from December to January was reflected in an abrupt increase in the scale of “abnormally dry” conditions in a weekly assessment by the U.S. Drought Monitor, a project of federal agencies and the National Drought Mitigation Center at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

Thursday’s data showed more than 34% of California as abnormally dry, up from less than 4% a week earlier.

“Northern California received 2 or more inches of precipitation this week, but amounts dropped off rapidly to the south, with little to no precipitation falling in Southern California to southern Nevada,” the monitor wrote.

That led the monitor to apply the abnormally dry designation to the Central Valley and from the San Francisco Bay Area to the Sierra Nevada, stretching into the Reno area of Nevada. The status previously was limited to a small area along the California-Oregon border.

Long-range forecasts didn’t offer prospects for an immediate return to wet weather.

“In the next couple weeks, it looks to be on the drier side all the way through the beginning of February. But after that, it’s a little harder to predict,” De Guzman said.

About 75% of California’s annual precipitation occurs from December through February, mostly from atmospheric rivers that are long plumes of moisture originating far out in the Pacific Ocean.

Annual precipitation is tallied during a “water year” that runs from Oct. 1 through Sept. 30. The current water year got off to a slow start with a dry October and early November before December came in about average.

Copyright The Associated Press
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