Since this was written a drought has, of course, been officially declared.
California
Has Driest Year Ever -- And It May Get Worse
15
Janaury, 2014
SAN
FRANCISCO -- The shore of California’s Lake Oroville hasn’t
looked this way in modern history. Cracked dry mud shatters the
canyon floor, and buoys rest 10 feet up the side of a shale hill. The
remains of two vehicles -- crashed long ago -- rise from the mud like
shipwrecks at low tide. The
lake is only 36 percent full.
To
the north, Lake Shasta also
is only 36 percent full.
Farther south in the heart of Central Valley, San Luis Reservoir is
at a
dismal 30 percent capacity.
The story is the same at Bass
Lake, Lake
Tahoe and
Folsom Lake, where Muslims
recently held a prayer service for rain.
For
California, 2013 was the driest
year since the state started measuring rainfall in
1849, before it was a state, according to the University Corporation
for Atmospheric Research, or UCAR, a consortium of 75 schools. Low
rainfall has shattered records in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Shasta
and on up to Eugene, Ore.
And
if rain doesn't fall soon, the worst may be yet to come.
"As
impressive as the 2013 rainfall records are, those who watch
California weather will be even more focused on what happens over the
next several months," UCAR
wrote this week in an analysis.
"[And] the 2013–14 water year is off to a rotten start."
The
Sierra snow pack, where the state gets about a third of its
water, was
84 percent below average as
of Jan. 10.
Meteorologists
say the reason behind the low precipitation is a
massive zone of high pressure nearly
four miles high and 2,000 miles long that has been blocking storms
for more than a year. Meteorologist Daniel Swain has dubbed it "The
Ridiculously Resilient Ridge."
"It's
like the Sierra -- a mountain range just sitting off the West Coast
-- only bigger," Bob Benjamin, a forecaster with the National
Weather Service, told the San Jose Mercury News. "This ridge is
sort of a mountain in the atmosphere. In most years, it comes and
goes. This
year it came and didn't go."
The
consequences may be grave.
"Each
day that passes without meaningful precipitation is another day when
our long-term deficits grow measurably larger," wrote
Swain.
Though lawmakers
have been pushing,
California Gov. Jerry Brown has not yetofficially
declared a drought.
At a press conference on Monday, Brown indicated he would soon.
"It's
coming within the next few days," said Brown at
the press conference.
"But don't think that a letter from the governor's office is
going to affect the rain."
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