The Guardian (USA)

‘Life-threatenin­g’ storm system batters California, with flooding and high winds

- Gabrielle Canon

An enormous atmospheri­c river-fueled storm unleashed rain and furious winds across California on Sunday, leaving destructio­n and hazards in its wake.

Howling winds tore down power lines and trees, and scattered debris in communitie­s across the state, prompting officials to issue the first-ever hurricane-force wind warning along the coast. By late afternoon, streets in both northern and southern regions of California were left submerged, with far more rain on the way.

Roughly 36 million people were under flood watches on Sunday evening as large metro areas, including the city of Los Angeles – where the starstudde­d Grammy awards are being held – braced for impact.

The storm also pummeled mountain communitie­s with snow and whipped up steep waves along the coast. By 6pm, nearly 850,000 homes and businesses were without power, mostly concentrat­ed along the coast and in snow-inundated districts at the center of the state.

The National Weather Service warned continuous rainfall would hit over a 48-hour period in some already sodden areas across the state, including the central coast, the Los Angeles basin and in the mountain ranges.

“This is a DANGEROUS SYSTEM [sic] with major risks to life and property,” NWS Los Angeles warned in a Sunday afternoon forecast discussion, adding that roads and highways would become inaccessib­le, rockslides were likely through canyons, and rising waters would surge into homes and businesses in low-lying neighborho­ods.

Five rivers or creeks across the state had already exceeded flood stage on Sunday according to monitors with the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, with more than a dozen more on watch.

Even though the extreme weather wreaked havoc in the northern part of the state, southern California will likely be hit even harder. The storm is expected to stall out over Santa Barbara, Ventura and Los Angeles counties. The dangerous deluge could dump up to 15in of rain in the foothills and mountains, and up to 6in in coastal areas and valleys.

Governor Gavin Newsom proclaimed a state of emergency in eight southern California counties as the storm swirled in Sunday afternoon and state and local agencies pre-positioned essential resources, including millions of sandbags, water rescue teams and high-water vehicles before the onslaught.

Most Los Angeles public schools are planning to remain open Monday, unless conditions worsen, the superinten­dent Alberto Carvalho announced Sunday. Cal State Fullerton and Cal State LA, two local universiti­es, opted to hold classes virtually. Santa Barbara Unified school district announced its schools and offices would be closed Monday.

Wind gusts of up to 85mph were reported along the Big Sur coast Sunday morning, as the storm pulled down power lines and created other hazards along Highway 1.

Communitie­s tucked into mountain slopes, near surging rivers, or close to wildfire burn scars were put under mandatory evacuation­s or evacuation warnings, including in Ojai, Los Angeles and Santa Barbara. Water managers began releasing water from reservoirs that were nearing capacity in the central valley and Sacramento valley, Karla Nemeth, the director of the California department of water resources, said.

The deluge comes as communitie­s across the state are still reeling from last week’s storm, which unleashed torrents and thundersto­rms on Wednesday and Thursday and tested the capacity of infrastruc­ture.

With the grounds saturated from the first storm, the NWS warned that dangerous flash flooding would occur more quickly.

California could have several more wet weeks ahead, said climate scientist Daniel Swain during a discussion of the system posted on YouTube Friday. During strong El Niño years the wet season typically peaks between February and March, he noted. “There are at least 6-7 more weeks of potential [for storms] and I would not be surprised if there was another major storm cycle at some point in that window.”

El Niño, a climate pattern associated with increased ocean temperatur­es in the tropical Pacific, can supercharg­e atmospheri­c rivers like the ones now creating strong storms over California with vapor that evaporates off the warmer surface waters. While there can be variabilit­y, El Niño typically delivers hotter, wet winters in California and other parts of the US south-west.

Meanwhile, California reservoirs already stood at 115% of average going into this system, according to the California department of water resources, and water managers in the central valley opted to release waters ahead of the storm to ensure they wouldn’t spill over. With weeks left to go in California’s wet season, and exceedingl­y wet conditions still in the forecast, several regions across the state had already exceeded or were nearing average precipitat­ion levels.

Scientists have warned that this is a taste of what’s to come as the world warms, when wetter conditions with smaller snowpacks are expected to become the norm. “This tells us something about what California winters may look like increasing­ly in a warmer climate,” Swain said, noting that it’s both an El Niño story and a climate crisis story.

 ?? ?? Workers clear a tree that fell onto a home on 4 February 2024, in San Jose, California. Photograph: Noah Berger/AP
Workers clear a tree that fell onto a home on 4 February 2024, in San Jose, California. Photograph: Noah Berger/AP
 ?? ?? Search-and-rescue workers evacuate men from a homeless encampment that became surrounded by floodwater from the Guadalupe River, on 4 February 2024, in San Jose, California. Photograph: Noah Berger/ AP
Search-and-rescue workers evacuate men from a homeless encampment that became surrounded by floodwater from the Guadalupe River, on 4 February 2024, in San Jose, California. Photograph: Noah Berger/ AP

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