Climate.gov news article: The drought-busting benefits of atmospheric rivers
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Transcript of Climate.gov news article: The drought-busting benefits of atmospheric rivers
Climate.gov news article:
The drought-busting benefits of atmospheric rivers
Atmospheric rivers are the source of 30-50% of precipitation along the US west coast. Read more at:
http://www.climate.gov/news-features/featured-images/drought-busting-benefits-atmospheric-rivers
UC Drought Summit25 April 2014
Sacramento, CA
The summit will bring together a wide range of experts in water sciences, water management and policymaking for thoughtful discussion on how best to manage current and
long-term water shortages.
More information: https://watershed.ucdavis.edu/project/uc-drought-summit
Exceptional Drought: Intensification of droughtThe 15 April drought monitor continues D4 (exceptional) drought conditions over portions of west central California. A considerable portion of the state
remains under D3 (extreme) drought conditions.
California and Nevada Drought is extreme to exceptional
The percent of normal precipitation since mid-October 2013 shows most of the west below normal with areas of California and Nevada less than 50% of
normal.
The percent of precipitation over the last TWO years shows much of California and Nevada at less than 70% of normal.
Randall Osterhuber at the Central Sierra Snow Laboratory (CSSL) recently updated the above plot showing the snow depth in cm during five of the
DRIEST years on record. Note the current dry year (red; 2014) is on par with the previous 5 driest years. CSSL records go back over 110 years.
The Northern Sierra Precipitation 8-station index remains below the amount at this time last year (2012-13). Note last year
ended below normal.
Las Vegas 365-day precipitation deficit: 71% of normal
San Francisco 365-day precipitation deficit: 44% of normal
From CNAP researcher David Pierce:
Observed water year-to-date precipitation
percentile
Note swath of unusually low precipitation along the entire
west coast.
This “dot” plot shows station precipitation percentile. Each dot shows
a station that has reported data in the last 30 days (data from the GHCN). The
values reflect the amount of precipitation that has fallen since
October 1, 2013. A value of 50% is normal (a light green dot). Dark brown
with a heavy black outline shows unusually low precipitation.
http://cirrus.ucsd.edu/~pierce/stainfo/
California reservoirs are well below
normal in the central to northern regions
of the state.
Blue numbers show percent of capacity. Red numbers show percent of historical average.
High pressure has dominated the eastern
Pacific since October 2013
October through December 2013
October 2013 through March 2014
Northern areas of California/Nevada forecast to get some precipitation from April 21st to 25th
How do the recent northern rainfalls look from a hydrologic point of view? Folsom Lake is a reservoir east of Sacramento
Reservoir storage since March of 2009; before recent storms at 170,000 AF (acre-feet) and now at 284,000 AF – a 14% bump up from the storms
compared to the desired near-peak storage of 930,000 AF.
How much water is flowing into Folsom Lake?During the storms
the inflow reached a
maximum near 25,000 CFS (cubic feet per second).
The current inflow rate is about
1,800 CFS; before the storms the inflow rate was about 300 CFS.
How long would it take to fill Folsom Lake to a desired 930,000 AF level?Inflow rate (CFS) Time to fill (days)
1,800 172300 1,032
Can we recover from the drought? Chances are slim …To get an idea of the likelihood of recovery from drought status CNAP researcher Mike Dettinger starts with the precipitation deficit from last year (water year 2012-2013). The black squares show what has been observed (added to the deficit) since October (2013; O on the x-axis). The total precipitation is
shown on the y-axis and green lines indicate the values as percent of normal.
CA climate division 5:
Just one year makes it
above 75% of normal
Can we recover from the drought? Chances are slim …
The above histograms summarize the chances of drought recovery for the 7 California climate divisions. Starting with the water deficit from 2012-13 the percent of years that reach normal
are tabulated above. The red inverted triangle indicates the historical even odds of where water year 2013-14 may end.
Division % of normal by Oct 2014
1 -67
2 -72
3 -48
4 -81
5 -85
6 -92
7 -79
CNAP researcher Mike Dettinger provides us with a look at our ability to reach a normal amount of precipitation this water year. The above map shows the number of years when
there was enough rain from January through September to compensate for the lack of rain in the fall. Note western US sites recovered in the fewest number of years.
CNAP researcher Mike Dettinger also provides us with a longer-range look at our ability to reach a normal amount of precipitation considering last water year was also dry. The above map shows the
number of years when there was enough rain from January through September to compensate for the lack of rain from the previous fall. Note western US sites, especially in California, rarely recovered.