Texarkana Gazette

El Nino could bring drought relief to Southwest

- By Tim Talley

OKLAHOMA CITY— Climatolog­ists said Wednesday that conditions are right for an El Nino weather pattern to develop that could bring wetter-than-normal conditions this winter in drought-stricken areas of the southweste­rn U.S.

But they also note there is no guarantee that an El Nino event would bring more rain and snow to the parched Southwest. Weather researcher­s also say higher-than-average precipitat­ion in the region is not likely to make up for growing rainfall deficits over the past year.

"There's a wide variety of outcomes that can occur," said David Simeral, an associate research scientist at the Western Regional Climate Center in Reno, Nevada. "I would say, flip a coin."

Parts of the Southwest, particular­ly the Four Corners region of Colorado, Utah, New Mexico and Arizona, are experienci­ng extreme to exceptiona­l drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.

There is a 70-75 percent chance for developmen­t this winter of El Nino, the natural warming of parts of the central Pacific Ocean that influences weather worldwide, said Gerry Bell, research meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service's Climate Prediction Center. Pacific Ocean temperatur­es are currently warmer than average as they trend toward El Nino, Bell said.

El Nino-produced rainfall could relieve parched conditions in many parts of the drought-stricken Southwest but how much relief the region experience­s depends upon the strength of the tropical ocean phenomenon, he said.

"El Nino is not a guarantee," he said.

Seasonal monsoon rainfall during the summer and autumn months helped relieve drought conditions in parts of the Southwest.

"We're seeing quite a bit of relief in Arizona," Simeral said. "Phoenix has already had the wettest October on record."

Parts of eastern New Mexico also benefited from heavy rainfall in neighborin­g Texas. But in Utah, Gov. Gary Herbert last week declared a state of emergency due to drought. And Colorado has reports of wells running dry.

Simeral said the Four Corners region is in the midst of the driest September-October period on record. The region has experience­d the warmest 12-month period on record in 123 years of record-keeping. Snowpacks in parts of Arizona and Colorado that could provide much-needed moisture during warm, dry periods are unusually low.

"That Four Corners region has stayed dry," he said.

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