A blog reporting on water issues and Alameda County Flood Control and Water Conservation District, Zone 7.
Zone 7 is responsible for providing flood control and water resources to the Livermore-Amador Valley. The district was created by the California Legislature in 1947 and Zone 7 was formed by a vote of local residents in 1957. Of Alameda County's 10 active zones, only Zone 7 has its own elected seven-member board of directors. Zone 7 sells treated water primarily to four retail water agencies - the California Water Service Company, the cities of Livermore and Pleasanton, and the Dublin San Ramon Services District. It also sells untreated water directly to agricultural and other customers.
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
Wednesday, July 9, 2014
90% Chance of the El Niño Global Weather Phenomenon Striking this Year
“It is very much odds-on for an event,” said Tim Stockdale,
principal scientist at European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts, who said 90% of their scenarios now
deliver an El Niño. "The amount of warm water in the Pacific is now
significant, perhaps the biggest since the 1997-98 event.” That El Niño
was the biggest in a century, producing the hottest year on record at
the time and major global impacts, including a mass die-off of corals.
“But what is very much unknowable at this stage is whether this year’s El Niño will be a small event, a moderate event – that’s most likely – or a really major event,” said Stockdale, adding the picture will become clearer in the next month or two. “It is which way the winds blow that determines what happens next and there is always a random element to the winds.”
“But what is very much unknowable at this stage is whether this year’s El Niño will be a small event, a moderate event – that’s most likely – or a really major event,” said Stockdale, adding the picture will become clearer in the next month or two. “It is which way the winds blow that determines what happens next and there is always a random element to the winds.”
What is El Niño?
El Niño is a climate phenomenon
that occurs when a vast pool of water in the western tropical Pacific
Ocean becomes abnormally warm. Under normal conditions, the warm water
and the rains it drives are in the western Pacific.
El Niño occurs every few years. Its most direct impacts are
droughts in normally damp places in the western Pacific, such as parts
of Indonesia and Australia, while normally drier places like the west
coast of South America suffer floods. But the changes affect the global
atmospheric circulation and can weaken the Indian monsoon and bring
rains to the western US.
It is not certain what tips the unstable Pacific Ocean-atmosphere system into El Niño, but a weakening of the normal trade winds that blow westwards is a key symptom. In 2014, the trigger may have been a big cluster of very strong thunderstorms over Indonesia in the early part of the year, according to Dr Nick Klingaman from the University of Reading in the UK.
It is not certain what tips the unstable Pacific Ocean-atmosphere system into El Niño, but a weakening of the normal trade winds that blow westwards is a key symptom. In 2014, the trigger may have been a big cluster of very strong thunderstorms over Indonesia in the early part of the year, according to Dr Nick Klingaman from the University of Reading in the UK.
An
El Niño is officially declared if the temperature of the western
tropical Pacific rises 0.5C above the long-term average. The extreme El
Niño year of 1997-98 saw a rise of more than 3C.
El Niño is one extreme in a natural cycle, with the opposite
extreme called La Niña. The effect of climate change on the cycle is not
yet understood, though some scientists think El Niño will become more
common.
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