ENSO it Begins? The 2016 Drought – so far – January 3

By Jay Lund

“One afternoon they take me … to witness a great religious ceremony. It is the invocation to the gods for rain.” John Wesley Powell (1895, p. 338)

2016 starts with slightly above average precipitation and snowpack and promising climatic conditions, but a long way to go…

Summary of conditions

California remains in a drought. Precipitation and snowpack are now near or a bit above average for this time of the water year (the 2016 Water Year began October 1, 2015). But precipitation is less than last year at this time in the northern Sierras (December 2014 was unusually wet here, followed by more than unusually dry).  Are the wet promises of ENSO coming true? Year 2016 drought conditions are likely to remain unclear until March – no matter how eager we are to know right now.

The California Department of Water Resources’ California Data Exchange Center (CDEC) does a great job assembling data that give insights on water conditions. They update these every day at http://cdec.water.ca.gov. There is too much to digest, but please gorge on and explore the data anyway – it is good for you.  I’ve included links below for your indulgence.

Here are some highlights.

Reservoir and Groundwater Storage Conditions

Most major reservoirs in California have less storage than at this time last year.  Groundwater is mostly at record low levels. But some refilling is occurring with the onset of the wet season. Folsom Lake is recovering a bit from its lowest water levels ever.

Overall, California has about 2 maf less water in surface storage than last year’s generally low levels at this time, and, reflecting four years of drought, we are now about 8 maf less than average for this time of year.

Groundwater statewide is down about 6.5 maf from last year’s levels at this time, and about 14 maf or more from pre-drought conditions.

The drought so far has depleted total storage in California by about 22 maf cumulatively, or nearly a year’s worth of water use in agriculture. Soil moisture conditions were also unusually dry from 2015. DWR does not yet publish statewide estimates on groundwater or soil moisture storage conditions.

ResStorage2016Jan1

Precipitation and Snowpack

The December storms helped, with precipitation and snowpack mostly near or a bit above average for this time of year.  Precipitation is less than last year’s unusually rainy December for the Northern Sierras, but far more than last year in the San Joaquin and Tulare basins. Snowpack in California is slightly above average for this time of year and much better than last year. The drought is not over. But there is some hope for a ski season.

A nice feature of the CDEC precipitation plots is that for more recent years the data are daily so you can see each storm coming in, and how much it contributed to annual water supply. The difference between a drought and a wet year is just a few storms, the size of a few storms, and where those storms drop moisture.

Is it El Nino yet?   Despite extraordinarily strong El Nino conditions in the ocean, the Great Wet Hope has not yet arrived in a big way for most of California. But we still have time to hope and the early January forecast and conditions look promising.

Snowpack30Dec2015

Snowpack:

SacramentoPLOT_ESI

Precipitation:

Concluding thoughts

It is too early to tell. Keep an umbrella handy, but the drought isn’t over.

As John Wesley Powell observed, we always hope for rain (and snow) in this dry land in ways that comfort us, even irrationally.

Ending with a cheery thought from NOAA:

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CXriD9-UwAAjbdl.png

Further Reading

Swain, D., “Parade of East Pacific storms to affect all of California as subtropical jet strengthens”, California Weather Blog, January 1, 2016, http://www.weatherwest.com/archives/3754

http://www.scpr.org/news/2015/12/23/56452/true-to-its-name-el-nino-s-influence-comes-just-in/ (A nice article on El Nino.)

http://californiawaterblog.com/2014/06/15/will-californias-drought-extend-into-2015/ (Some historical statistics on how likely it is to be wet following a critically dry year.)

Comparing to last year at this time, January 2015: http://californiawaterblog.com/2015/01/05/the-2015-drought-so-far/ (It is sobering so see my over-optimism for 2015 as of January 4, 2015.)

Unimpaired flow for water year 2015:   http://cdec.water.ca.gov/cgi-progs/stages/FNFSUM

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2 Responses to ENSO it Begins? The 2016 Drought – so far – January 3

  1. Pingback: Blog round-up: Proposed changes to urban conservation regs; Record low numbers of Delta fish species, Sierra Nevada-Colorado Basin linkage, Law & Water: Jimmy Kimmel-style, and more … | MAVEN'S NOTEBOOK

  2. gymnosperm says:

    A question might be, ENSO we just return to normal? A good friend and Davis roommate commented to me much later in life, “You know, back in school when we were debating heredity vs environment, it was before we had kids.”

    So it is with weather and climate. I love the energy and creativity of the new generation of climate scientists, but they seem determined to morph a second (and possibly third) string nino into the judgement day.

    Nothing so far or in the pipeline has impressed me in the least. The CET predicted this episode well, but also predicted a reversion to the “outside slider” pattern that has dominated the season.

    You just have to remain willing to be impressed…

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