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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
National
Hayley Smith

Yet more rain is expected to hit California in March. But warmer storms could melt snow

LOS ANGELES — Soggy, snow-capped California faces the likelihood of yet another month of wet weather, but what remains uncertain is whether this late winter precipitation will augment weeks of record-setting snowpack, or cause it to vanish should warmer rains arrive.

Last week, a frigid storm transformed portions of the state into a white landscape while toppling trees, prompting power outages, spurring water rescues and leaving some residents trapped by heavy snow.

Now, with forecasts calling for more rain and snow in March — including the potential for at least one more atmospheric river system — California is girding for what comes next.

"If we were to get heavy rain with a warm system and a lot of tropical moisture feeding into it, that would melt all of the snow that just fell in the mountains," said David Sweet, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Oxnard.

Typically, California's snowpack provides about one-third of the state's water supply and has long been relied upon for its steady, slow melting during the hot, dry months of summer. A deluge of warm rain, however, could cause melting snow to fill rivers too quickly and trigger widespread flooding.

"We need to stick that in the back of our mind and think, 'Boy, I sure hope that doesn't happen,'" Sweet said.

Forecasters say it's still too early to say precisely how the rest of winter will play out, but the latest 30-day outlook from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Climate Prediction Center, issued Tuesday, shows above-normal chances of precipitation in all of California through March, as well as a higher likelihood of cold temperatures. That could bode well for the state's ample snowpack.

"We have considerable confidence that wet weather is likely for the next two weeks and an active pattern [of wet weather] could very well remain for the rest of the month," Jon Gottschalck, chief of the climate center's operational prediction branch, said in an email.

In the coming days, the western United States is expected to be "dominated by upper-level low pressure," Gottschalck said, which will probably deliver more low temperatures and low-elevation snow to California. That means "much of the precipitation, at least in the next week, will add to the snowpack."

But the arrival of more precipitation in the weeks that follow could be some cause for concern.

UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain said about 20% of forecast models are currently depicting a very strong and warm atmospheric river storm in California around mid-March. A series of nine atmospheric river storms hammered California in early January, breaching levees and contributing to nearly two dozen deaths.

Should such an event occur in the wake of extensive snow, "that could indeed pose [a] significant flood threat," Swain said on Twitter. However, he said that is "speculation at this early juncture" because the present odds of such a warm storm are about 1 in 5.

The recent winter storm already dropped heaps of cold rain and snow in parts of California. Many Southland peaks received more than 50 inches of fresh powder, with the Mountain High ski resort in Wrightwood recording 93 inches, according to the National Weather Service. Daily rainfall records were set at Los Angeles International Airport and in Burbank, downtown Los Angeles and several other parts of the region.

If similar conditions continue, the season has the chance to become one of California's snowiest on record, Swain said.

Across the state, snowpack remains incredibly healthy — 186% of normal for the date as of Tuesday, according to state data. In the southern Sierra, it's 224% of normal. Reservoirs are notably healthier too, with Lake Shasta nearly doubling its volume from two months ago.

The immediate forecast in the Sierra is continued icy conditions, including "a very cold pattern with multiple feet of snow this weekend," said Wendell Hohmann, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Reno.

"The amospheric river signals are pretty far out there, so predictability is pretty low and confidence is therefore pretty low on that," Hohmann said, "but it does kind of open the door for us to keep an eye on it at this point, see how it evolves."

In addition to flooding, a warm rain-on-snow event could pose challenges from a water supply perspective. Earlier-than-usual snowmelt, especially in the Sierra, can make it harder for the state's water managers to plan ahead, and can have negative effects on hydropower and ecology, experts say.

Sweet, of the weather service, said he primarily focuses on short-term forecasts but has also been keeping an eye on the longer-range models, which are "starting to hint" at the possibility of such a system.

As it stands, the forecast for more precipitation of any kind comes amid a winter that has already defied expectations in California. In October, seasonal outlooks pointed to a drier-than-normal season driven by a rare third appearance of La Niña. The fact that conditions ended up so wet speaks to the challenges of long-term forecasting, Sweet said.

"We still don't have an absolute razor-sharp focus, or way of looking at the extended forecast, and being really sure of it," he said.

Despite its hazards, the wet weather has had many upsides in California.

Improved snowpack and reservoir levels have allowed the state's water managers to tentatively increase State Water Project allocations to 35%. In December, they said they would be able to give only about 5% to 29 agencies, which together serve about 27 million Californians.

The U.S. Drought Monitor also moved nearly all of California out of its worst two categories — exceptional and extreme drought — this year for the first time since 2020.

As of this week, about 33% of the state remains in severe drought, the third-worst category, according to the Drought Monitor. About 52% of the state is categorized in moderate drought and 15% as "abnormally dry."

One small county — Del Norte, in the state's far northwest corner — has moved out of drought completely.

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