10:13 a.m. ET, February 4, 2024
Experts warn that weather in Southern California could be life-threatening
By CNN's Elissa Rava, Allison Chinchar and Sarah Tonks
The Weather Prediction Center warned that dangerous, potentially life-threatening flooding is expected in parts of central and southern California today.
The center issued a rare Level 4 of 4 risk for heavy rainfall for Los Angeles, Santa Barbara and Oxnard on Sunday. A more widespread Level 3 threat exists in most coastal areas of California, including San Francisco, where the National Weather Service also issued the first-ever warning of hurricane-force winds for the region.
In Central and Southern California, rainfall totals are expected to range widely from 3 to 6 inches — the equivalent of more than a month's rain for most people. Los Angeles averages just 2.99 inches of rainfall in February, the wettest month of the year on average. In the mountains and foothills of Southern California, the weather service expects up to a foot of rain.
The National Weather Service in Los Angeles warned that several days of rain could be dangerous and life-threatening. It could cause widespread road flooding and large amounts of debris to flow over areas previously burned in wildfires, potentially causing mudslides in higher terrain. Tables and tables will rise.
The event is part of an atmospheric river: a plume of moisture pumping off the Pacific Ocean, fed by warmer-than-average waters.
Dr. Daniel Swain, a climate scientist known for his work on extreme western events, points out that heavy rain events like the one unfolding are becoming 10% more intense thanks to more fuel from a warmer climate.