Sean de Guzman, chief of snow surveys for the California Department of Water Resources, checks the depth of the snow pack during the first snow survey of the season at Phillips Station near Echo Summit on Dec. 30, 2021. (AP Photo/Randall Benton)
By Kathleen Ronayne Associated Press
Friday, December 31, 2021
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California's mountain snow holds 160% of the water it normally does this time of year, state water officials announced Thursday, marking a strong start to the drought-stricken state's traditionally wet winter season.
Still, it's too early to determine whether California will see enough rain and snow in the months to come to put a dent in the drought.
The state is "definitely not out of the woods quite yet," said Sean de Guzman, manager of the snow surveys and water supply forecasting for the California Department of Water Resources.
De Guzman spoke at Phillips Station, one of hundreds of locations where state officials make manual or electronic snowpack measurements multiple times per year.
About a third of California's water supply comes from snow as it melts and flows down from the Sierra Nevada and the Shasta-Trinity mountain range in Northern California.
California just finished its second-driest year on record and many of the state's reservoirs that supply water for tens of millions of people are at historic lows. But several powerful storms swept through the state in December, dumping snow and causing some road closures and major disruptions.
The storms made for a far more positive snow reading than last December, when water levels in the snowpack were at just 52% of the historical average.
Feet of snow don't translate directly into feet of water, so state officials report both the height of the snow and the amount of water runoff it would generate. At Phillips Station, where the Thursday measurement was taken, de Guzman reported 78.5 inches of snow. That contains 20 inches of water, he said.
That's 202% of the historical average for that location and 82% of what's typically there on April 1, when the snowpack hits its peak. De Guzman said the state needs strong precipitation in the next three months to get to or above the typical April average, leaving plenty of water to run down the mountains and into California's streams and reservoirs.
Meanwhile, state Department of Water Resources Director Karla Nemeth said the strong December numbers don't change the state's plea for Californians to conserve water. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom called for a voluntarily 15% reduction in water use back in July, but the state is far from meeting that goal. State officials have warned mandatory water restrictions could be coming if conditions don't improve.
"We need more storms and average temperatures this winter and spring, and we can't be sure it's coming," Nemeth said in a statement. "So, it's important that we continue to do our part to keep conserving – we will need that water this summer."
In 2013, California saw a wet December followed by an extremely dry January and February during the last drought, state officials noted in a news release.
California is in its second acute drought in the last decade. Scientists say much of the U.S. West is enveloped in a megadrought made worse by climate change.
Most of California is in a severe to extreme drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. Only a small part of Northern California along the Oregon border is in what's considered an "exceptional drought," the worst condition. That's down significantly from September, when 45% of the state was gripped by exceptional drought.