Santa Fe New Mexican

Calif. wildfire threat greater after dry winter

- By Olga R. Rodriguez

SAN FRANCISCO — A dry beginning of the year has left most of California abnormally parched, as officials brace for the possibilit­y of an early and more intense wildfire season amid record-breaking temperatur­es.

Drought has expanded from just under 10 percent of the state last week to nearly a quarter, mainly in central California, the heart of the state’s agricultur­al sector, according to a U.S. Drought Monitor map made public Thursday. The map released weekly shows another 43 percent of the state is now abnormally dry.

This month is shaping up to be the driest February on record for much of the state. Chances of light showers are on the horizon Saturday night but not again until March 10.

Sierra Littlefiel­d, a National Weather Service meteorolog­ist in Sacramento, said there is a strong chance the state’s capital will see a completely dry February — something that has not happened in recorded history.

Downtown San Francisco had its first rain-free February since 1864, according to the weather service.

The lack of rain this year comes after a wet 2019 that capped mountains with snow, delivering water to reservoirs and helping to boost lush vegetation that can quickly turn into fuel for wildfires during dry, windy conditions. About 75 percent of California’s annual precipitat­ion typically occurs from December through February, mostly from what’s known as atmospheri­c rivers — long plumes of moisture originatin­g far out in the Pacific Ocean.

But a high-pressure system parked in the Pacific has blocked storms from reaching California and instead steered them to the Pacific Northwest.

“California and parts of the Southwest dried out while the Northwest observed surplus precipitat­ion,” wrote NOAA meteorolog­ist David Miskus, who issued this week’s Drought Monitor report.

A similar high-pressure system led to a statewide drought from 2011 to 2017 that prompted then-Gov. Jerry

Brown to order California’s nearly 40 million people to cut water use by 25 percent — the first mandate of its kind in the state.

California­ns heeded the call, taking shorter showers and ripping out their lawns during the five-year drought.

State water officials said Thursday that it’s too early to consider conservati­on measures and pointed out reservoirs statewide are either at or above their historical averages for this time of year.

“A few dry months really doesn’t make a drought,” said Chris Orrock, a spokesman for the Department of Water Resources.

“If we have to go through two dry years, then we start looking at what additional conservati­on measures we need.”

In another sign of California’s dry conditions, state officials on Thursday conducted a survey of the Sierra Nevada snowpack and found it was 47 percent of the March average at the Sierra’s Phillips Station.

The first reading Jan. 2 found the snowpack was 97 percent of the January average. But dry conditions since then have hurt snowfall, which supplies about 30 percent of California’s water.

“February rain and snow were quite disappoint­ing,” said Sean de Guzman, chief of the department’s snow surveys and water supply forecastin­g section.

“We’ll most likely end this water year below average. We just don’t know how far below.”

Also Thursday, U.S. Forest Service crews were battling a fire in brush and timber at Mendocino National Forest in Northern California. In Southern California, firefighte­rs quickly knocked down several brush fires on Wednesday.

State firefighte­rs have responded to 280 small wildfires since the beginning of the year. In the same period last year, there were just 85 reported fires, said Scott McLean, a spokesman with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

Earlier this month, the Forest Service battled a blaze at the 4,000-foot level, where there should be snow at this time of year, McLean said.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sean de Guzman, chief of snow surveys for the California Department of Water Resources, accompanie­d by DWR’s Chris Orrock, goes over the final numbers after conducting a survey at Phillips Station near Echo Summit.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I ASSOCIATED PRESS Sean de Guzman, chief of snow surveys for the California Department of Water Resources, accompanie­d by DWR’s Chris Orrock, goes over the final numbers after conducting a survey at Phillips Station near Echo Summit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States