Las Vegas Review-Journal

California snowpack water down 25%

Plenty of winter left for average for date to rise

- By John Antczak

LOS ANGELES — California is beginning 2024 with a below-normal mountain snowpack a year after it had one of its best starts in decades, and officials said Tuesday that the weather whiplash has made the outcome of this winter uncertain.

The water content of the statewide snowpack was 25 percent of the average to date, said Sean de Guzman, a water supply forecastin­g official with the California Department of Water Resources.

The snowpack functions as a huge frozen reservoir, providing about 30 percent of the water used annually in California as it melts and runs off into streams and rivers in the spring.

De Guzman conducted the first in a seasonal series of manual measuremen­ts on a snow course in the Sierra Nevada at Phillips Station, south of Lake Tahoe. The department also collects measuremen­ts with electronic instrument­s at more than 260 other sites.

De Guzman and his crew methodical­ly worked across a field with minimal snow and a checkerboa­rd of bare spots, measuring and weighing samples.

A year ago there was nearly 5 feet of snow at the location and the statewide snowpack was at 177 percent of average, he said in a webcast.

This time at Phillips Station, he recorded a snow depth of 7½ inches and a snow-water content of 3 inches translatin­g to 30 percent of average to date and 12 percent of the average on April 1, when the Sierra snowpack typically peaks.

“Today’s result shows that it’s really still too early to determine what kind of year we’ll have in terms of wet or dry,” de Guzman said, adding that many things can happen with storm systems between January and April.

Still, he noted, the state’s reservoir storage is at 116 percent of average thanks in part to last year’s wet winter, which pulled the state out of a yearslong drought.

This year there’s also a strong El Niño, an occasional warming of part of the Pacific Ocean that can lead to more precipitat­ion than usual in California, but doesn’t always come through.

“Right now the Climate Prediction Center’s seasonal outlook for January, February, March is still showing an increased chance of above-normal precipitat­ion and snow,” de Guzman said.

A year ago, the early January snowpack was already exceptiona­l amid a barrage of atmospheri­c river storms that stood in stark contrast to three preceding years of drought. By April 2023, the snowpack was 237 percent of average to date.

The storms caused deadly flooding and crushed buildings with towering loads of snow, but when the state’s Oct. 1-Sept. 30 “water year” ended, enough rain and snow had fallen to fill the state’s reservoirs to 128 percent of their historical average.

 ?? California Department of Water Resources ?? California water supply forecastin­g official Sean de Guzman, right, and engineer Anthony Burdock weigh the aluminum snow depth survey pole in order to measure the water content during the first snow survey of the year Tuesday in Phillips Station, Calif.
California Department of Water Resources California water supply forecastin­g official Sean de Guzman, right, and engineer Anthony Burdock weigh the aluminum snow depth survey pole in order to measure the water content during the first snow survey of the year Tuesday in Phillips Station, Calif.

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