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Home / Environment / California Fire Risk: Water Levels Mislead?

California Fire Risk: Water Levels Mislead?

10 Feb

•

Summary

  • Reservoir levels do not indicate California wildfire risk.
  • Low precipitation and low snowpack increase fire danger.
  • Wildfire risk remains near normal for February-May outlook.
California Fire Risk: Water Levels Mislead?

California's abundant reservoir levels, currently at or above historical averages, do not correlate with wildfire risk, according to state water officials. The true indicators of fire danger are precipitation levels and snowpack, both of which have been concerningly low, with January being abnormally dry and statewide snowpack at only 59 percent of average.

Despite these dry conditions, the official four-month outlook from February through May projects near-normal wildfire risk across California. This assessment considers factors like adequate moisture from expected storms and robust green-up in lowland areas. However, officials caution that May could see increasing spread potential as lowland vegetation cures and dead fuels become more flammable.

While Northern California anticipates more storms in March, Southern California faces a forecast of below-normal precipitation and above-normal temperatures. Nevertheless, fire threat is expected to remain near normal through April due to increased live fuel moisture from late 2025 precipitation. Climate change continues to blur traditional wildfire season boundaries, necessitating year-round preparedness statewide.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
No, California's reservoir levels do not have an impact on wildfire risk; low precipitation levels are the main concern.
The four-month outlook from February through May projects significant fire potential to remain near normal across the entire state.
Low precipitation levels leading to dry grasses and vegetation, and critically low snowpack levels are the primary factors influencing wildfire risk.

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