Danger!
Heavy Rain & Mudslides for California & a Thanksgiving week
Forecast
Models have California getting over 10 inches of rain in the next 16 days. We've got some pretty big storms on the board for Colorado, Texas, Florida, the Ohio Valley and the East Coast. AND! The weirdest rain bands I've ever seen. Happy Thanksgiving! Drive Safe & Stay Cool. God bless everyone.
Models have California getting over 10 inches of rain in the next 16 days. We've got some pretty big storms on the board for Colorado, Texas, Florida, the Ohio Valley and the East Coast. AND! The weirdest rain bands I've ever seen. Happy Thanksgiving! Drive Safe & Stay Cool. God bless everyone.
More trouble in Paradise:
Camp Fire region braces for floods and mudslides
Northern
California faces a new threat in the aftermath of the disastrous Camp
Fire: Weather forecasters are growing more confident that downpours,
which could bring flash floods and mudslides, are headed for the
fragile, scorched terrain.
On
Monday night, the National Weather Service issued flash-flood watches
for recent burn areas, in preparation for a series of heavy rainfall
events arriving between Wednesday and Friday.
The
forecast prompted an escalation of ongoing search and recovery
efforts in Paradise, with fears that the rains could wash away the
remains of fire victims, reducing the chances of families of the
hundreds of residents still listed as missing finding closure.
Kory
Honea, the sheriff of Butte County, told the Associated Press that
the looming rains means that it’s within the “realm of
possibility” that officials might never be able to determine the
fire’s exact death toll.
As
of Tuesday afternoon, at least 79 people are known to have died, 699
are still unaccounted for, and more than 40,000 displaced. The Camp
Fire is already one of the deadliest U.S. disasters of any kind in
the 21st century. It is the deadliest U.S. fire in 100 years, and the
sixth-deadliest worldwide in that same timespan, according to numbers
compiled by meteorologist Jeff Masters. The 17,148 buildings
destroyed in and around the town of Paradise are nearly equal to all
those lost in each of the other top-10 most destructive fires in
California history, combined.
Current
forecasts call for as much as six inches of rain near Paradise —
about as much as the region gets in an average November — arriving
in the span of just a few days. That kind of a deluge would not only
frustrate recovery efforts, but it could also spawn mudslides and
flash floods by turning the newly barren soil into a roiling,
debris-filled torrent. That the still-burning fire that started this
whole mess could be extinguished in the process is almost an
afterthought.
Survivors’
stories are still emerging two weeks after a wall of flames burned
through Paradise in mere hours. While the cause of the fire is yet to
be officially determined, it’s nearly certain that climate change
played a crucial role in how quickly it grew and spread.
It’s
worth noting that climate change is likely playing a role in
intensifying heavy rainfall in California, too. More rain can fall in
a shorter period of time in a warmer atmosphere that’s becoming
more efficient at evaporation. In California, most heavy rainstorms,
including those in the forecast this week, come via such atmospheric
rivers — tropical conveyor belts of moisture streaming directly
ashore — and these are growing wider and more intense as the planet
heats up.
The
fact that two of the extremes of climate change — drier and hotter
droughts, and wetter and wider floods — are manifesting as part of
the same disaster is a sign of the urgency of the crisis. The Camp
Fire is the latest example of the compound, complex tragedy of
climate change.
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