A smattering of snow can be found along California Highway 88 near Carson Pass on April 12, 2015, near South Lake Tahoe, California.

The hyped and hoped for strong El Nino barely made a dent in California's snowpack deficit, and that is not good news for the state's water supply.

Even if the state receives above-average amounts of rain and snow for the next few years, the snowpack will not replenish to its pre-drought levels until 2019, according to a new study. That could mean that the state has more years of tight water ahead of it — rain and snow from the from the Sierra Nevada mountains makes up about 60 percent of the developed water supply in the state.