Author Topic: More low precipitation records being revealed  (Read 6355 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Wrightwood

  • Administrator
  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: Plenty of Posts!
  • Wildlife Gateway
More low precipitation records being revealed
« on: Mar 29, 07, 07:17:45 AM »
With only 3 1/3" inches of season precipitation the Swarthout Valley isn't alone in the record low numbers.

Water content of snowpack at low level
By Samantha Young, The Associated Press
Inland Valley Daily Bulletin
03/29/2007

SACRAMENTO - The water content in the Sierra snowpack is at its lowest level in nearly two decades, leading to concern that California may not be able to fulfill its water obligations to cities and farms if dry conditions persist for another year.

The latest measurements were taken Wednesday near South Lake Tahoe during the fourth snow survey of the season by the state Department of Water Resources. This survey is considered the most important because state hydrologists use it to predict water supplies and deliveries for the summer months.

The water content in the snowpack along the 400-mile-long range averaged 46 percent of normal. That's the lowest level since 1990, when it was 40 percent of normal.

"If you start putting dry winters together, you deplete the reservoirs," department spokesman Don Strickland said. "We're hoping we don't run into that."

State hydrologists had hoped for a wetter March to boost the snowpack. March storms typically add about 10 percent to 15 percent more snow in the Sierra.

Frank Gehrke, the department's snow survey section chief, said the storm that passed over the Sierra on Monday boosted the snowpack by about two inches but wasn't enough to recover from a dry month.

"Instead of seeing an increase of five or six inches in March, we lost eight or nine inches," Gehrke said "That's a pretty bleak month."

Sierra snowmelt provides more than a third of the state's drinking and irrigation water and is the lifeblood of the State Water Project, which provides water to more than 23 million people and 775,000 acres of farmland.

In addition, about a quarter of the state's power comes from hydroelectric plants that rely on heavy mountain runoff during the spring and summer months.

In the Los Angeles area, which is experiencing its lowest rainfall year on record, water managers said the region has enough in storage and from other sources to offset any potential cutbacks in state water deliveries this year.

"It's always worrisome in a year like this, but you're not going to see any rationing in Los Angeles," said Jeffrey Kightlinger, executive director of The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California. "We expect it to be cyclical."

The Southern California water agency imports 2.1 million acre feet of water - of which 16 percent comes from the state. It has more than 2.5 million acre feet in storage, Kightlinger said.
Wrightwood Forum is the first & most dependable local social media outlet