Chattanooga Times Free Press

Persistent Western drought looms large in winter outlook

Dry La Niña conditions may expand to South

- BY PAUL DUGINSKI

LOS ANGELES — The forecast looks warm and continued dry this winter in California and the Southwest, which raises the disturbing prospect of a perpetual fire season.

More than 45% of the continenta­l U.S. is experienci­ng drought right now, especially in the West. With a La Nina climate pattern well- establishe­d and expected to persist, the drought may expand and intensify in the southern part of the country during the winter ahead, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion predicted.

The official outlook from NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center, released Thursday, favors warmer, drier conditions across the Southern tier of the U.S. and cooler, wetter conditions in the north, consistent with an ongoing La Nina.

A La Nina occurs when the sea surface temperatur­es in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific are below average. Easterly winds over that region strengthen, and rainfall usually decreases over the central and eastern tropical Pacific and increases over the western Pacific, Indonesia and the Philippine­s. Forecaster­s now are expecting a strong La Nina with about an 85% chance of it persisting through the winter.

If this scenario unfolds, it would exacerbate drought conditions in Arizona, Colorado, Utah, New Mexico and California,

and worsen the wildfire outlook for the remainder of 2020 and into 2021.

California is already experienci­ng its worst fire season on record. After a disappoint­ing rainfall season, much of Northern California is classified as being in severe or extreme drought, according to the U. S. Drought Monitor released Thursday. Much of the rest of the state is in moderate drought or is abnormally dry.

To the east, big portions of Nevada, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado and Texas are in extreme or exceptiona­l drought.

The Southwest has been parched because of a disappoint­ing monsoon season last year and a monsoon that was essentiall­y a no-show this year.

Mike Halpert, deputy director of NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center, told reporters in a briefing Thursday morning that forecaster­s don’t know exactly why the 2020 Southweste­rn monsoon failed so spectacula­rly.

Arizona and California experience­d their warmest April-to-September period in 126 years, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. New Mexico and Nevada

had their second-warmest such period. Utah and Arizona recorded their driest period ever during that same six- month stretch. New Mexico had its seconddrie­st and Colorado had its third- driest. Arizona’s newly establishe­d statewide precipitat­ion record came in more than 2 inches drier that the previous record.

But since it was one of the driest summers on record, it’s not surprising that it was so hot, David Miskus, meteorolog­ist and drought expert with NOAA points out. There was a lack of moisture and rain to suppress the temperatur­es during what is normally the warmest time of the year.

People in Southern California count on water from the Colorado River, so drought in the Four Corners region hits home on the West Coast.

Miskus was asked if a dry winter, possibly extending into the Great Basin, will mean a likelihood of more Santa Ana winds through the winter in Southern California.

“Since we are forecastin­g subnormal precipitat­ion and above- normal temperatur­es in the Southwest

and Great Basin, if high pressure sets up over the Great Basin this fall and early winter — which is possible if the main storm track is across the Northwest — I could see a possibilit­y for more and longer Santa Anas in California,” Miskus said. “But it will matter where that high pressure center sets up, how strong, and if it persists.”

If it’s dry, Santa Anas blowing across dry fuels in the Southland will elevate the fire danger. And cold wintertime Santa Anas are often the most powerful.

Most areas of the West continued to have warmerthan- normal temperatur­es over the last week, with many areas 3 to 9 degrees above normal, according to the U. S. Drought Monitor.

Extreme northwest California, western Washington and Oregon received some precipitat­ion, but the southern portion of the West saw no relief. Severe and extreme drought increased in southwest Oregon, and extreme drought increased in west-central Nevada.

The Southwest is one of the regions where NOAA predicts the greatest chances for drier- than- average conditions this winter.

“La Nina tends to starve Southern California of its rainfall, but Northern California still has the potential for normal precipitat­ion. So La Nina isn’t necessaril­y a total bust,” climatolog­ist Bill Patzert said.

“Sea surface temperatur­es at the equator are starting to drop rapidly, and this emerging footprint of La Nina should have a large impact throughout the United States as well as across the Pacific,” Patzert said.

 ?? ALLEN J. SCHABEN/ LOS ANGELES TIMES/ TNS ?? A tiny plant struggles to emerge from a cracked, dry lake bed in California.
ALLEN J. SCHABEN/ LOS ANGELES TIMES/ TNS A tiny plant struggles to emerge from a cracked, dry lake bed in California.

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