California’s Recurring Nightmare: Nearly Half the State is Back in Drought

After an all-too-brief reprieve, the Golden State is once again starting to brown up — at least on government drought maps.
The U.S. Drought Monitor now has nearly 48 percent of the state categorized as being in at least “moderate drought.” More than 91 percent of the state is listed as at least “abnormally dry,” the precursor stage to drought.
The term “drought,” is of course, highly subjective and has different meanings to different people.
The stage is certainly being set for some sort of drought.
This week as the State Water Resources Control Board considered permanent statewide restrictions on a list of wasteful water uses, members were told that, measured by a key collection of gauges in the northern Sierra Nevada, the December-through-February period has been California’s third driest on record (exceeded only by 1977 and 1991, when a “March Miracle” saved the wet season).
Those three months typically provide the state with half of its total annual precipitation.
At the same time, forecasters at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration project dry conditions to “develop or persist” in California over the next three months.
And while some have argued that they are given too much weight, John Leahigh, head of operations for California’s State Water Project, told the water board that an “ugly picture” is beginning to form of the state’s current water year.
With the notable exception of Lake Oroville, which engineers have kept at cautiously low levels after last year’s near spillway disaster, major reservoirs remain flush from last year’s precipitation.
But Leahigh told regulators that expectations are “dramatically decreasing” for runoff from the state’s key watersheds to replenish water supplies this year.

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