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NOAA: Drought Eases in Northern California but Still Severe Down South

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Big Pine, in the Owens Valley south of Bishop. The Sierra Nevada snowpack in a typical year provides almost a third of California's water supply. (Anirudh Rao via FLICKR CREATIVE)

It comes as no surprise to anyone living in Southern California that the drought is still going strong in the region, and forecasters with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said that will likely continue through the spring and summer.

NOAA's annual spring outlook predicts above-average precipitation in parts of California, like the Central Valley, but not in the south. Overall, temperatures are expected to be warmer than average as El Niño's effects wane.

Still, the wet winter in parts of the state has helped ease drought conditions to the north and left water resources more "favorable" than they have been since 2011, said Rob Hartman, the hydrologist in charge of NOAA's California Nevada River Forecast Center.

"The last two weeks have really gone a long ways towards brightening that picture with some significant winter storms that have arrived," he said of recent rains in Northern California.

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Large reservoirs like Lakes Shasta and Oroville are currently above their historical average for this time of year. That's in stark contrast to Southern California, where reservoirs are still quite low.

Read the full story via KPCC.

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