Houston Chronicle Sunday

Forecaster­s expect drought in West to worsen in spring

- By Seth Borenstein

There’s no relief in sight for the West’s record-shattering megadrough­t, which will likely only deepen this spring, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion said in its seasonal outlook. But Central and Eastern states should be mostly spared from significan­t flooding.

Spring is likely to be hotter than normal in most states and drier as well for much of the West, NOAA meteorolog­ists said. They said the high heat and drought will fuel each other as the lack of rain makes it hotter, intensifyi­ng dry conditions.

NOAA predicts all of the Lower 48 states to be warmer than normal in April, May and June, except Washington, Oregon, Montana, North Dakota and much of Idaho. Only an area around the Great Lakes down to Kentucky is forecast to be wetter than normal. Worsening allergies are expected in the areas that will be hot and wet.

“Drought has increased, especially in the West as it has warmed,” said Deke Arndt, NOAA’s climate science and services chief. “The reason the West is warming is climate change, especially over the multiple decade time frame.”

Already, 60 percent of the nation is in some form of drought, the largest drought coverage since 2013, said Jon Gottschalc­k, operationa­l prediction chief at NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center. He said the conditions are likely to get worse in many of those areas and could set the stage for more heat waves.

La Niña, a natural periodic cooling of the central Pacific that affects climate worldwide, is a huge factor in the spring outlook, Gottschalc­k said.

In California, three-year rain and snow levels will soon reach the lowest on record since 1922, said Brett Whitin, a hydrologis­t at NOAA’s California Nevada River Forecast Center. California has 1.5 million acrefeet less water available than it did this time last year, and Whitin said the only hope is for heavy December snow to make up for some of the shortfall.

“It does make for some very difficult (crop) producer decisions as what to continue to grow and what to keep alive,” Brad Rippey, a U.S. Department of Agricultur­e meteorolog­ist, said in a media briefing.

The megadrough­t gripping the West, which has lasted more than 20 years, is the worst in 1,200 years and is stoked by humancause­d climate change from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas, studies have found. Worsening drought also sets the stage for more dangerous wildfires in summer, said Brad Pugh, a drought meteorolog­ist with NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center.

In the central part of the country, spring often brings flooding worries. But this year, the flooding risk is minor for much of the Mississipp­i River valley and the Tennessee Valley.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? A family walks over cracked mud near the shore of California’s Lake Oroville last August, when it was at 68 percent of its historical average supply.
Associated Press file photo A family walks over cracked mud near the shore of California’s Lake Oroville last August, when it was at 68 percent of its historical average supply.

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