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fleur-de-lisa

(14,624 posts)
Fri Dec 11, 2015, 04:41 PM Dec 2015

Shit Is About to Get Real in California, El Niņo Report Predicts [View all]

After four years of drought, Californians are bracing for another potentially destructive weather event: El Niño. Earlier this week, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, released a disaster plan including what to expect from the upcoming rainy season. Here are the key takeaways:

This may be the strongest El Niño on record. Weather reports indicate that this year will be warm and wet—perhaps even more so than the winter of 1997-1998, which is currently the strongest recorded El Niño. That year, California evacuated 100,000 people.

The dry conditions mean more flooding. The lack of soil moisture has made the soil "harden and act like cement," making it, paradoxically, less likely to soak up the rain. The chance of flooding is far higher than usual, especially in the productive farm country of the Central Valley and the surrounding area—including the state's capital. "The primary risk areas are in populated areas mostly notably in Sacramento," the report reads—and because of that, "a major flood situation would have significant impact on the economic, cultural, and political life of California." Additionally, a catastrophic levee failure in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta would jeopardize a major source of water for 60 percent of California homes and for a portion of the state's agricultural industry." One in five Californians lives in a flood zone.

Wildfires in the summer mean more landslides in the winter. The wildfire season this year was devastating in California, scorching more than 300,000 acres. Mudslides are common in these scorched areas, called "burn scars," because water quickly runs off and there aren't trees to keep the soil, rocks, and other debris in place. Southern Californians got a little taste of what this might look like when rain led to severe landslides in October.

King Tides, El Niño, and the Blob mean higher sea levels and more potential damage. Sea levels typically rise a few inches during El Niño, but this winter, scientists predict that the giant swath of warm water off the West Coast—dubbed the Blob—will lead to a rise of between 8 and 11 inches. State officials are particularly concerned about the potential damage caused by storms toward the end of both December and January, when the highest tides of the winter, called King Tides, are expected.

The rains may ease the drought but won't solve it. All this water will certainly ease the drought and raise levels in the state's depleted reservoirs. But because the state is so behind on precipitation, it's very unlikely that it will make up for the state's now four-year water deficit.

http://www.motherjones.com/blue-marble/2015/12/fema-preparing-el-nino-heres-what-californians-can-expect

54 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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The Blob eats you alive!! longship Dec 2015 #1
Past years our weather experts have basically been off the mark. Iliyah Dec 2015 #2
I don't know if it affects the weather in Ohio but we are haveing April doc03 Dec 2015 #3
Weird weather in New Orleans this fall also . . . fleur-de-lisa Dec 2015 #6
It is currently 63 here in Seaman, Ohio. SamKnause Dec 2015 #9
Near the great metropolis of St. Clairsville. doc03 Dec 2015 #14
Wow...that is warm for Ohio in December Hepburn Dec 2015 #18
They are predicting 68 tomarrow and 70 Sunday doc03 Dec 2015 #25
OMG... Hepburn Dec 2015 #44
Shout out with a Hi to a Long Beach person! truegrit44 Dec 2015 #34
I was in Long Beach yesterday doing some work in an attorney's office Hepburn Dec 2015 #43
Wow, that is very warm. TM99 Dec 2015 #26
Same in IL. People on our small lake are fishing. MeNMyVolt Dec 2015 #16
Unseasonably warm here, too MissDeeds Dec 2015 #21
I noticed some forsythia buds, here in Michigan Siwsan Dec 2015 #31
45F here in Minneapolis! NickB79 Dec 2015 #40
Additionally Texas and the Greater Southwest is expected to have a wetter and colder winter LanternWaste Dec 2015 #4
I sure hope we do. TM99 Dec 2015 #27
Thank goodness. Some of the bugs were mutating to multi-engine... Eleanors38 Dec 2015 #47
Rained today, but still waiting for Shit to get real. Agnosticsherbet Dec 2015 #5
I debated whether or not to use that title . . . fleur-de-lisa Dec 2015 #8
Father of teenage boys and grils. Shit does not offend me. Agnosticsherbet Dec 2015 #10
LOL! I wasn't so worried about the use of 'shit' fleur-de-lisa Dec 2015 #49
No, that did ot offend me at all. Agnosticsherbet Dec 2015 #50
Yeah, I hear you fleur-de-lisa Dec 2015 #52
Nah, appreciate the information Iliyah Dec 2015 #11
I think it's an apt descriptor! MADem Dec 2015 #13
Bring it. Throd Dec 2015 #7
No kidding. It just rained for a few minutes here. Nailzberg Dec 2015 #12
Oh, hubby and his side of the family are from Hammond and New Orleans Iliyah Dec 2015 #15
Meanwhile, in Buffalo...... hedgehog Dec 2015 #17
It's coming. El Nino typically causes warm Decembers. B2G Dec 2015 #20
Doomed! El Supremo Dec 2015 #19
I hope it's not shit, dpatbrown Dec 2015 #22
Wait-Obama caused the 4 yr drought? He is so powerful! I wonder what other plagues he has up Person 2713 Dec 2015 #37
Frogs, flies, boils... Hekate Dec 2015 #41
Area golfers hit the links in mid-December...... a kennedy Dec 2015 #23
Planning on playing tomorrow in Iowa! bullwinkle428 Dec 2015 #38
Nuts ain't it?? a kennedy Dec 2015 #45
It's too warm in KC, too. leftyladyfrommo Dec 2015 #24
Snowed like mad for a few hours in the San Bernardino Mountains this morning/afternoon. cherokeeprogressive Dec 2015 #28
Good. I, for one, am tired of the fake shit jberryhill Dec 2015 #29
It has been in the mid 50's here in Boston and is supposed to hit smirkymonkey Dec 2015 #30
El nino=El greenio! ghostsinthemachine Dec 2015 #32
" One in five Californians lives in a flood zone." That's thinking ahead! L. Coyote Dec 2015 #33
The levee system around the Sacramento area has been truedelphi Dec 2015 #36
Upgrades are nearly continuous, so it really depends on which system you mean? LeftyMom Dec 2015 #51
All the major rivers of the Midwest are a gigantic flood zone, and my tax dollars have helped... Hekate Dec 2015 #42
Yep, we should up and leave the most fertile farmland on earth. Good thinking. LeftyMom Dec 2015 #48
We had 2.69" the other day. MissB Dec 2015 #35
We're getting early rains ahead of the El Nino, which will help with item 2 Gormy Cuss Dec 2015 #39
My brother-in-law is a team leader for L.A. Emergency Response LastLiberal in PalmSprings Dec 2015 #46
I agree with your B-I-L. fleur-de-lisa Dec 2015 #54
Yes, but fossil fuel barons are getting richer and richer! Yay!!! That's all that matters valerief Dec 2015 #53
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