California
suffers dry January, prolonging devastating drought
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[February 02, 2015]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - California has
experienced one of the driest Januarys on record, and the lack of rain
during a time of year when the weather is usually wet indicates the
state is likely headed for a fourth straight year of drought, officials
said.
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A prolonged drought could portend further economic and environmental
setbacks for the nation's most populous state, which has already
lost both crops and jobs to the dry weather.
The state's driest January on record was in 1984, when the 30-day
average precipitation in the state reached 0.33 of an inch (0.84
cm), under one method used to gauge rainfall statewide, said
National Weather Service meteorologist Jim Mathews.
With the official measurement of this January's rainfall coming
within a few days, it is shaping up to be the fourth driest January
on record in the state, Mathews said.
The low rainfall combined with warmer-than-average temperatures have
resulted in a meager snow pack, the California Department of Water
Resources said in a statement.
A survey conducted on Thursday at a site called Echo summit in the
Sierra Nevada mountain range, which normally constitutes the state's
largest store of fresh surface water, showed the snow pack at just
12 percent of normal, the statement said.
The survey findings make it "likely that California's drought will
run through a fourth consecutive year," it said.
Climatologists expressed cautious optimism in December when they
observed above-normal precipitation in the northern part of the
Sierra Nevada mountain range, but little rain has fallen there in
the past month.
Northern California's Lake Oroville, which is the State Water
Project's principal reservoir with a capacity of 3.5 million acre
feet (432,000 hectare meters), stands at about 60 percent of the
average for this date, officials said.
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Sacramento recorded only 0.01 of an inch (0.03 cm) of rain in
January, the lowest since record-keeping began in 1877, the
Sacramento office of the Weather Service said on Facebook. Stockton
and Modesto also set records for the month, it said.
California Governor Jerry Brown, a Democrat, declared a drought
state of emergency a year ago and state officials have encouraged
people to refrain from watering their lawns.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis, Editing by Frank McGurty; Editing by
Stephen Powell)
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