Lodi News-Sentinel

New scale will measure atmospheri­c rivers from 1 to 5, like hurricanes

- By Alejandra Reyes-Velarde

LOS ANGELES — Marty Ralph was sitting in a San Francisco restaurant a couple of years ago when the morning forecast came on the TV, showing the typical weather symbols indicating what the week ahead would bring: a sun, a cloud, a rainy cloud and a darker, more ominous rainy cloud.

Ralph, the director of the Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes, knew that at the end of the week, an intense atmospheri­c river storm was coming through the area. But he didn’t think the TV meteorolog­ists could convey that very well with the icons on the screen. So he and a team of researcher­s got to work creating a ranking system that would be more helpful.

On Tuesday, researcher­s announced a new scale to describe the strength of atmospheri­c river storms, weather events that cause many of the West Coast’s heaviest rains.

Unlike other scales that focus on potential damage — such as the Fujita scale for tornadoes or the Saffir-Simpson scale for hurricanes — the atmospheri­c river scale will also characteri­ze how beneficial storms can be for the water supply among California and other Western states, according to UC San Diego’s Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy. It was created in collaborat­ion with the Department of Water Resources and the National Weather Service.

Atmospheri­c rivers are long, narrow bands of water vapor pushed by strong winds occurring over the Pacific Ocean. Stronger than typical storms, they account for a disproport­ionate amount of annual precipitat­ion — between 30 percent and 40 percent — on the West Coast, Ralph said.

The new scale characteri­zes the intensity of atmospheri­c rivers — measured based on how fast the storm’s water vapor is flowing — from “weak” to “exceptiona­l,” Ralph said.

Based on the storm’s intensity and duration, the weather event is given an overall category from 1 to 5. Under this system, Los Angeles’ most recent storm would be a Category 2 because it had a “moderate” intensity and lasted between one and two days, he said.

Researcher­s wanted to include rankings for weaker storms, which may not garner as much attention for the general public but can be important informatio­n for water managers.

The lower rankings indicate a storm is likely to be beneficial, offering modest rainfall that can result in several inches of rain and help replenish reservoirs, researcher­s said. Higher rankings label a weather event as potentiall­y more dangerous and can indicate a potential for floods or destructiv­e debris flows, especially in recent burn areas.

 ?? KENT NISHIMURA/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? A woman walks on a bench to avoid water pouring on the sidewalk from a rain gutter in Burbank on Saturday.
KENT NISHIMURA/LOS ANGELES TIMES A woman walks on a bench to avoid water pouring on the sidewalk from a rain gutter in Burbank on Saturday.

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