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Opinion: Warm rains dictate new reservoirs


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By Dan Walters, Sacramento Bee

California’s winter storms come in two varieties – cold ones from the Gulf of Alaska and warm ones that pick up moisture from more tropical portions of the Pacific Ocean.

Dan Walters

Dan Walters

The cold ones dump lots of snow, while the warm ones bring rain, sometimes torrential rain.

Those who believe in inexorable climate change tell us that in the future, Californians will see less snow and more warm storms, such as those that whipped through Northern California over the weekend.

The storms dumped copious amounts of rain, providing respite, if not relief, from the state’s prolonged drought.

Operators of the big state and federal reservoirs – Shasta, Oroville and Folsom – lowered their discharges to a minimum in hopes of maximizing the capture of storm runoff and all remained in that operational mode Monday. As a result, all were seeing their water storage, which had dropped to ominously low levels, rise.

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Comments (4)
  1. legal beagle says - Posted: February 12, 2015

    Our great congressman, Tom McClintock said it very well.
    “Droughts are a result of nature, water shortages are a result of government.” To be absolutely correct the above quote may not be exact as I heard this quote many months ago when the Congressman was interviewed on KOH 780.

  2. dumbfounded says - Posted: February 12, 2015

    “If the misery of the poor be not caused by the laws of nature, but by our institutions, great is our sin”. – Charles Darwin

  3. rock4tahoe says - Posted: February 12, 2015

    Dan. California has a large storage system called “aquifers.” These are the best water storage systems because you do not have loss from evaporation.

    Clearly, if this drought last for decades, then California will need new fresh water supplies and better storage and transport systems.

  4. Old Long Skiis says - Posted: February 12, 2015

    I’m not so sure more resevoirs are the answer to California’s shortage of water. The ones we have now are WAY below capacity.
    I think the desalinization of ocean water may be our best bet at least for coastal community areas and agriculture inland.
    I saved what water I could in buckets of the rainwater running off the roof. They are all full!. Those buckets of water will be used to water the plants and fill the dog and cat water bowls.
    Capture what water you can my friends and please conserve H20 in any way possible. Be imaginative!
    Let us hope for more precipitation. Snow or rain!
    Be good and look to the sky, OLS