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http://www.adn.com/article/20150722/unusual-weather-events-suggest-powerful-el-nino-southern-california
Unusual weather events suggest powerful El Nino for Southern California 
Rong-gong Lin Ii|Los Angeles Times|
July 22, 2015

DESERT CENTER, Calif. -- A swath of eastern California offered a dramatic
view in recent days of the powerful climate forces buffeting the state.

On Friday, an out-of-control brush fire -- fueled by four years of drought
-- destroyed 20 vehicles on Interstate 15 in the Cajon Pass. Hours later,
the area was pounded by historic rainstorms that eventually washed out
Interstate 10 here.

The heavy rain is the most concrete evidence yet of powerful El Nino
conditions that scientists are becoming increasingly convinced will lead to
a wet winter for Southern California.

This weekend's rains came from a former hurricane, Dolores. Experts say warm
ocean water, influenced by El Nino, allowed the remnants of the unusually
wet hurricane to go much farther north than such storms typically go.

They also see El Nino in other unusual weather events of recent months: A
dusting of snow blanketed parts of the southern Sierra Nevada in early July,
and the so-called Miracle May of rain and snow in the Rocky Mountains helped
forestall water reductions from reservoirs that feed California, Nevada and
Arizona.

These all appear to be preludes of what could come in winter -- for better
and worse.

"It's a sweet promising start," said Bill Patzert, climatologist for NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Canada Flintridge, Calif., but then added:
"Except for all the damage it does. ... Be careful for what you wish for.
Great droughts usually end in great floods."

El Nino is a warming of the ocean along the equator west of Peru, which
triggers changes in the atmosphere that can dramatically alter weather
patterns across the world.

Although there is still some debate about how strong an effect this year's
El Nino will have on California, flood control officials are beginning to
plan for the worst.

Officials say they'll have tens of thousands of catch basins cleaned out to
hold mud, rocks and other debris that might spill out from saturated
hillsides.

In California, the last time a very strong El Nino arrived, the heavens
opened up in an unrelenting series of storms in the winter of 1997-98. Those
storms left 17 dead and caused more than half a billion dollars in damage.
Rivers and flood-control channels flooded neighborhoods, homes slid off
soggy hillsides and winds blew off roofs.

"Look at all the damage a couple of inches of rain caused in Southern
California in the last couple of days. Can you imagine 30 inches?" Patzert
asked.

The flash flooding was severe enough Sunday to collapse an eastbound 10
bridge in the low desert into a roaring wash. The freeway, which connects
Palm Springs to Arizona, carries 27,000 vehicles per day.

The fast-moving water undercut the dirt bank supporting the bridge, leading
to its failure. The adjacent westbound bridge did not collapse but its
support columns were damaged when dirt underneath it was swept away,
officials said. Both directions remained closed Monday.

Motorists were being directed on lengthy detours through narrow desert
highways.

When the bridge collapsed Sunday afternoon, a pickup truck was swallowed up
and the driver, Bryon Castor, was stranded inside for 45 minutes while the
waters roiled below. Police and motorists tied rope to the truck to keep it
from washing away before he was rescued.

Riverside County Supervisor John Benoit called the chaotic flood a "500-year
event."

"This is the worst damage I've ever seen from rain," he said as he looked
over the twisted metal rebar from the collapsed bridge. "You build for the
100-year event. But sometimes nature tells you, 'Hey, we are still in
charge.'"

Bridges over two other washes had also been damaged, he said.

California Department of Transportation spokesman Philip Havin said the plan
is to run both directions of the freeway on the westbound bridge.


The severed link was already stranding motorists. One driver making the
journey from Arizona to Redondo Beach, Calif., in an electric car became
marooned after exhausting the 270 miles of charge on his Tesla. He was
unaware of the freeway closure and lengthy detour.

"It's my fault, not Tesla's fault," said the driver, Neil Pyne, as he waited
Monday afternoon for a Tesla technician to bring him a new battery.


Many have been hoping for an El Nino winter, seeing it as a potential
drought buster. But experts said even huge downpours may not significantly
ease the water shortage.

Some forecasts say El Nino will mostly affect Southern California, where
much of the rain flows into storm drains and the ocean.

California gets much of its water from the north, through winter rain runoff
and snow slowly melting through the spring and summer, which is collected in
reservoirs and then distributed across the state.

Based on current observations, Patzert said he believes El Nino is only
strong enough to affect Southern California. But Daniel Swain, a climate
scientist at Stanford University, said he believes heavier precipitation
will also hit Northern California, like it did in 1998.

Swain said current computer models forecast ocean temperatures in the
Pacific to be actually hotter than they were in the 1997-98 El Nino.

"The warming that is currently suggested by the models would be
unprecedented in the observed record," Swain said. "It's certainly a
situation that we haven't seen before."

One concern is how warm the winter storms will be, if they materialize. If
too-warm storms dump mostly rain instead of snow, California will be forced
to flush out some of that precipitation to the ocean to ensure dams don't
overflow.

The California Department of Water Resources is far less bullish on the El
Nino forecast.

"We can't gain too much confidence," Jeanine Jones, the department's deputy
drought manager, said. "We always need to be prepared for a possibility of a
flood response. But particularly since we're in a fourth year of drought, we
need to be prepared for the possibility of a fifth year of drought."

One thing is clear: A lot is riding on the skies in the coming months.

"What happens this winter is definitely going to be interesting," Swain
said. "And it's not entirely clear whether California wins or loses."

(Panzar reported from Desert Center; Lin and Serna from Los Angeles.)
[© 2015 Alaska Dispatch]




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