Most of SoCal, including burn areas, now in severe drought
Most of Southern California -- including the areas ravaged by fires -- in severe drought, according to the latest map from the U.S. Drought Monitor.
Here is the latest map:
MORE: Climate change amplified dryness, but LA fires still extreme without it: UCLA analysis
When you compare the current conditions compared to January 2024, you can see that yellow, tan, orange and even some red, is back in Southern California.
"We are no strangers to drought in Southern California and we find ourselves once again in that situation," said Edith de Guzman, a cooperative extension specialist at UCLA. "We haven't had any measurable precipitation since about April of last year. That is a real contrast from what we saw in the winters of 2023 and 24, when we had extraordinarily wet conditions."
Most of L.A. County is covered in orange, which is considered severe drought.
With the two major fires in the county, recent UCLA analysis found climate change amplified the dryness, but the fires would have still been extreme without the moisture deficit.
"A big portion of these destructive fires is due to natural variability. So without climate change, you'd still have a destructive fire, but climate change basically adds more fuel due to increased warming," said Chad Thackeray, a UCLA climate researcher.
A significant storm seems like a distant memory. In the years from 2022 to 2024, downtown L.A. received more than 50 inches of rain combined. That's a number the city hasn't seen since the late 1800s.
"If we just remember like until 11 months ago, UCLA recorded 12 inches of rain in a 24-hour period. So that's just off the charts for us. There are entire years on record when UCLA does not record that much rain in an entire 12-month period," said de Guzman.
You can see just three months ago, we were not considered to be in a drought. But as winter continues, we're off to one of the driest starts on record.