How California Is Winning the Drought 390
An anonymous reader writes: California is in its fifth year of drought; the past four years have been the driest four-year period in recorded history, and the hottest as well. There have been consistent worries about how it will affect California's residents and its economy — but somehow, the state still seems to be doing fine. "In 2014, the state's economy grew 27 percent faster than the country's economy as a whole — the state has grown faster than the nation every year of the drought. ... The drought has inspired no Dust Bowl-style exodus. California's population has grown faster even as the drought has deepened."
The article makes the case that California is pioneering the water preservation and governance techniques that will be helpful elsewhere in the country if the global climate continues to warm. "The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California now supplies roughly 19 million people in six counties, and it uses slightly less water than it did 25 years ago, when it supplied 15 million people. That savings — more than one billion gallons each day — is enough to supply all of New York City." The article notes, however, that this resilience won't last forever — if the drought continues for several more years, California will be in trouble despite their water-saving tactics.
The article makes the case that California is pioneering the water preservation and governance techniques that will be helpful elsewhere in the country if the global climate continues to warm. "The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California now supplies roughly 19 million people in six counties, and it uses slightly less water than it did 25 years ago, when it supplied 15 million people. That savings — more than one billion gallons each day — is enough to supply all of New York City." The article notes, however, that this resilience won't last forever — if the drought continues for several more years, California will be in trouble despite their water-saving tactics.
There is no reason for any drought to continue (Score:3, Insightful)
Desalination is cheaper than not having water at all. Whether it is cheaper than litigation over rights and usage, or outright war, I don't know.
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The biggest problem is the state government. The state government manages water like it manages money: when a good year comes, they find some project to use it on, ignoring that there will not alwa
Re:There is no reason for any drought to continue (Score:5, Interesting)
Farmers have responded by pumping water from the aquifers at an unsustainable rate. The farmers with more money have been able to drill deeper wells to get more water leaving poorer farms behind. Yes, they have invested in water saving technologies but they are still using too much.
Re:There is no reason for any drought to continue (Score:4, Insightful)
The farmers with more money have been able to drill deeper wells to get more water leaving poorer farms behind.
It's not about 'richer' farms or 'poorer' farms, anyone can afford to dig a deeper well. The main problem is finding someone to do it......some drillers have waiting lists 8 months long. If you can't wait that long, you're in trouble.
Yes, they have invested in water saving technologies but they are still using too much.
There is plenty of water for farmers and city folk........once again, you ignored my point that it's a management problem, not a "greedy city slicker" or "greedy farmer" problem. Both farmers and city dwellers are responding fairly well.
Groundwater depletion is a big problem (Score:2)
California's been burning through groundwater supplies faster than rainfall replenishes them even in the average-rainfall years. It's unsustainable in good times, much less in crisis droughts like the current one.
It's not like that's not a problem other places around the US or the world; look at how the MidWest and Texas are doing.
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The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, to whom the summary gives credit, was actually created by "state government".
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"You are welcome on my lawn."
I hope your lawn is green.
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It is, because I live in a place where there's plenty of fresh water that falls, unbidden, from the sky.
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Angry? No. Cynical? Yes.
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There's no rage there. I'm not quite sure how you read it that way.
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Re:There is no reason for any drought to continue (Score:4, Insightful)
The idiots are the ones who actually believe that the drought is the root cause of our water shortage. It isn't. It just made the real problem harder to ignore. The real problem is that California's population has grown by about 30% in the past 20 years, and the water system hasn't kept up. That's a staggering rate of growth. Keeping people out isn't realistic, which means the water system absolutely must be expanded in every respect—more water storage (whether dams or otherwise), more desalination plants, etc. to meet the growing needs of that growing population. We haven't been doing that adequately; we've been cutting corners to save money, allowing the safety margins to get smaller and smaller, and now we're paying the piper. We need to not make that mistake again going forward.
The problem with conservation is that people mistakenly try to treat it as the final solution to problems. It isn't; it can't be. When it comes to a limited resource, conservation can only be effective as a stop-gap workaround until either an alternate source for a scarce resource can be found or an alternative to that resource can be found. Otherwise, population growth alone will eventually exceed the limits of conservation, at which point you are totally and completely screwed. And when you're in your fourth consecutive year of drought and some people are still saying, "We don't need to build desalination plants because the drought has to end eventually, and the next one might be far away", you have to start wondering about their sanity, because yes, the next one might be in thirty years, or it might be in three.
The mind-boggling thing is that the people who support anthropogenic global warming tend to be the very same folks who are saying that we don't need desalination plants because we're going to get back to normal levels of wetness soon. We might, but there's at least as good a chance that this is the new normal. If we aren't prepared for that, we're signing our own death sentences.
So yes, conservation might get us through the drought. Then again, if the folks predicting the weather are right, the drought might end this winter anyway, making any further reductions in usage largely moot. And if the AGW folks are right, we might go right back into a drought in a couple of years. No matter which of those possible scenarios pans out, the true underlying problem—a water system whose capacity has not kept up with the population growth—will still be there.
My biggest concern when it comes to our water system is that a year from now, people will say, "The drought is over. There's no need to build this expensive infrastructure. That money can better be spent on [insert more short-term need here]." And then just as before, nothing will get done, and we'll end up in the same boat a decade or two down the line, only at that point, everybody will be conserving as much as they can without causing serious problems, so the conservation efforts will become more and more draconian.
Folks need to take a serious look at the projected population growth, assume that we're rapidly approaching peak conservancy already, and do the math. Then, the infrastructure needs to get out ahead of the curve instead of being behind it. Anything less than that is just asking for a disaster down the road. After all, you don't build a computer system to handle your capacity needs right now, because you'll be screwed in a year. You build a computer system to handle your projected capacity needs over the next several years. Our water system is fundamentally no different.
And just to be clear, I was being facetious about wasting as much water as you can. Doing it for a week might be an interesting way to protest and cause the water board folks to wet their pants, panic, and get more insistent about building the additional infrastructure we need, but doing it long-term would obviously be catastrophic, because we'd run out of water before the winter. The point of that bit of satire
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It's amazing how much the politicians push the common people to "do their part", which amounts to saving a minuscule fraction of the water when the real problem is agriculture/environmental usages of the water. So you have a large percentage of the population wasting their time killing their lawn, spending $10k on drought resistant landscaping, etc. People feel good they have a dead front lawn but in the end, they are not really contributing anything meaningful to the solution, but the politicians did a goo
Re:There is no reason for any drought to continue (Score:5, Insightful)
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No, senior water rights are quite different from property in many ways. So, just because you think the takings clause applies doesn't mean this is legally settled territory. I'm sure people will make a claim like you are attempting to do, but I don't think it has much chance of prevailing in court.
Alternatively, if you want to think of senior water rights as property, then they are property whose value and utility c
Re:There is no reason for any drought to continue (Score:5, Interesting)
Desalination requires equipment and sometimes energy, neither of which falls out of the sky.
I'm pretty sure energy does fall out of the sky. Some of these desalination plants use solar power.
http://www.sfgate.com/science/article/California-drought-Solar-desalination-plant-5326024.php [sfgate.com]
Re:There is no reason for any drought to continue (Score:4, Interesting)
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In most parts of the California coast the Ocean depth drops off to 300-500m+ after a few km. Running a few km of pipeline to the ocean floor would be one of the most trivial expenses of the project. Doesn't even have to be done well or monitored that closely. Unlike oil or gas pipelines, a few leaks makes no difference.
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Re:There is no reason for any drought to continue (Score:5, Insightful)
Just let the water evaporate out of it and bulldoze it into a big pile. Then package it and sell it as fancy sea salt.
If the pile gets too big, start re-filling the salt mines.
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"there could be issues with brine rejection"
Not even. That brine can be turned into so many things it's stupid to even bother putting it back into the ocean. Molten salt power storage. Sea salt micro-nutrient fertilizer (look up SEA-90.) Seasoning. Sodium bases and Chlorine bases for medicine. Baking powder and baking soda. Sea Salt crystals and figurines for the hippies. Sodium Silicate for hydroponics. The uses are many and varied.
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Heh.
You may have won the internet today.
Re:There is no reason for any drought to continue (Score:5, Informative)
sometimes energy, neither of which falls out of the sky.
The overwhelming amount of energy on the planet (well over 99.99999%) does in fact fall out of the sky.
Expensive Desalination vs. Cheap Subsidized water (Score:2)
Of course we should require cities to pay to build highly expensive desalination plants and burn greenhouse gasses to power them so that we can continue to provide agribusiness with cheap water using socialist-built water projects so they can continue to make a profit growing water-intensive crops in semi-desert areas. After all, how else are cotton farmers going to get subsidized for growing something other than cotton and happy cows in China going to get alfalfa grown in California, not even counting the
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Typically of the anti-rich, your hatred obliterates any semblance of reason. Why would you waste good fertilizer and pollute a river by throwing a dead body in it?
Burlap isn't free. Why ruin a perfectly good burlap bag?
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Income certainly doesn't reflect a person's worth.
ObVIOUSLY, depending on the definition of "worth", it does. Especially the financial definition when discussing paying for a desalinization plant.
Then again, one person worth several billion dollars could pay for a plant, provide permanent water for 100,000 people, and then still have several billion minus one dollars left. (In fact, that's pretty much how Saudi Arabia gets its water. And all those people had to sacrifice was most of their basic freedoms...)
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I repeat: the real shortage in California is knowledge.
You can't learn money either. Money creation just devalues money that is already in use in exchange for concentrating wealth in the hands of some of the most notably incompetent and corrupt organizations of our day. I'm not just not feeling it.
It depends on how long it lasts. (Score:5, Insightful)
California often has drought, but this one is different. California has numerous large reservoirs that are nearly drained after three plus years of drought. Groundwater is being rapidly depleted. The state started out with lots of water, but the persistent drought has nearly exhausted the reserves. If the situation doesn't change this winter, the problems we see now will seem trivial. Resilience works up to a point, and then it snaps when certain limits are exceeded. California's water supplies are stretched to the limit right now.
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The far north of California (where it rains 60 inches a year) has more than enough fresh water to supply the rest of the state if you build the infrastructure to move it and get the courts to agree to the environmental impact somehow.
Re:It depends on how long it lasts. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:It depends on how long it lasts. (Score:4, Insightful)
You are mis-informed. Redding has an annual rainfall of 35 inches. Some coastal areas have more rain, and some areas have less, but 60 inches of rain isn't even close as an average for Northern California.
Second, if you assume this water is just surplus, you would be wrong again. The water is already allocated, and the courts that you refer to are there to protect those water rights, not to help Southern California steal them.
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California survives currently by draining the ground water table - something that has dropped for the last century. And draining ground water means that salt water intrusion may occur, which happens in some places. Ground water loss have been the norm since at least 1964. http://voices.nationalgeograph... [nationalgeographic.com]
So right now California is draining every available resource just to stay afloat, but in the trend is bad since when even the ground water is depleted there's no reserves.
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So right now California is draining every available resource just to stay afloat
Actually I'd say they're more likely to be running aground.
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Turning sea water into drinkable water is an easily solved problem, but doing that costs way more than insisting that other states give up their water so that California doesn't have to bother with water conservation.
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Good to know you can drink salt water with fish pee and poo and God knows what else in it.
I can't drink salt water even without those things. To make matters worse, our local drinking water comes from a lake with fish in it.
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Does vodka have fish pee and poo in it?
Asking for a friend.
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Desalination plants. (Score:4, Interesting)
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The upcoming Carlsberg plant is a nice start. But, it will only produce 50 million gallons per day.
FTFY.
People isn't the issue, farming is (Score:5, Insightful)
California cities and towns only get 10% of the water. Farmland gets 80% (or somewhat less depending on how you account for it), yet only produces 2% of the state's GDP. The problem is that they are STILL growing the size of the agriculture sector, planting more almond trees for example, even while the existing almond trees are dying from salt poisoning. The reason the overall GDP hasn't been hurt yet is due to the fact that so much of the water is used for so little of the state's income. When the groundwater is all gone due to lack of planning, things may actually change.
Re:People isn't the issue, farming is (Score:5, Informative)
Farmland gets 80%
I don't know where you're getting that number, it's no more than 60% in a good year [scpr.org]. In bad years, it's less.....farmers only got ~20% of their normal allocation this year, and have been restricted for the past several years.
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So according to that article you posted almost 50% goes to "environmental" uses. Some of that could be recovered better engineering projects to capture the water before it's just dumped into the ocean.
Re:People isn't the issue, farming is (Score:4, Informative)
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Next time a recruiter contacts you, tell him you're looking for $200k (push up all our salaries).
What if I land the job? I don't want a pay cut.
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Next time a recruiter contacts you, tell him you're looking for $200k (push up all our salaries).
What if I land the job? I don't want a pay cut.
Ask for $500k at the outset.
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It's a failure of a specific ideology.
Which ideology?
Re:People isn't the issue, farming is (Score:5, Insightful)
The fact that rivers run to the sea isn't really a management problem. There is actually only one river in California without a dam at present, all of the others have controlled levels, hydroelectric generation, and take-outs of much of their water volume for various purposes.
We've already destroyed much of the fisheries and are having trouble recovering them. We might have about 5% of the birds the state once had. The Central Valley, which was swampland only a century ago, has been made a desert. Giant lakes have disappeared.
No surprise if this has changed the weather. A huge heat sink was removed from the environment and there is a perpetual windstorm as cool air is sucked into that valley.
Proper management is not to suck down the remaining 5%, interrupting the flow of rivers to the sea permanently. Proper management is to attach the real economic cost to water delivered to agriculture, rather than to vastly subsidize it.
Yes, this means that farming, and farming jobs, would change. Sorry, you asked more of the land than it could provide forever, your resources have run out, game over.
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But not the one I see signs about whenever I drive on I-5. The latest rash of billboards is "Why are we spending on high-speed rail when that money should be used to build additional water storage right now!".
Farmers, build your own water storage if you want it, I'm finished subsidizing your every expense and I'm taking the train.
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The article you linked opens by saying that farms do get 80% of human water usage so you answered yourself. It then goes on to explain that everybody wants to account for water usage in different ways to make them look good or someone else look bad.
As that article explains, it's not feasible to tap into every water source, especially all the little streams and rivers in nor-cal, but I haven't seen anyone clearly explain what water can actually be moved around and what use it is going towards when it is move
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Phantom, you consistently post the dumbest stuff on /.
Thanks man, I appreciate you showing you care.
Re:People isn't the issue, farming is (Score:4, Interesting)
People are always the issue. But I take your meaning.
Indeed in the 1930s the dust bowl exodus was by people who were farmers, or from towns and cities who's existence was 100% dependent on agriculture, for food and employment. At most this exodus was numbered in the thousands, not millions or anything. The 1930s dust bowl crisis (including the weather and horrible storms) was caused in large part by soil erosion, not from the drought itself per se. There was no irrigation. The drought triggered it no doubt, but it was the farming practices of the time that brought it on. Once this was realized and tillage techniques were altered, things settled down and droughts, though bringing crop failures, no longer bring the dusty conditions that were common in Oklahoma in the 1930s. If you've ever seen pictures of the dust storms back then, it really was truly apocalyptic-looking, and very frightening.
Things are very different in CA today. For one, the issue is not about soil erosion causing weather patterns and dust storms. For two, if and when CA does run out of water for agriculture, there really will be an exodus, but only from farms and agricultural areas, probably numbered in thousands, not unlike the dust bowl exodus in the 30s. Modern western living brings in foods from all over the world, so people living in a city in CA are, except for state-imposed water rationing, completely oblivious to the devastating effects of drought.
So all's good, right? After the final crisis, farmers will all leave and all that water will become available. And at only a 2% loss of the state's GDP. Win win. Very sad, but when it comes down to the bottom line, this is probably what will happen. Only the total loss to the GDP will be somewhat higher than 2% because there's an entire sector of the economy around agriculture that also generates its own part of the economy, including laborers.
The problem is that across the world, vast amounts of water are required for growing food, and this is not going to change anytime soon. Human survival depends on this. As a farmer myself, I get very discouraged at how out of touch people are with the food they eat. They have not idea where food comes from. Grocery stores stay stocked regardless of local, regional, or even national conditions. Rich people can continue to buy organic, as one person put it, "because [they] care," though they aren't sure what it is they are caring about. Food prices are lower than they've been in decades compared to incomes, but that's contributing to things like growing almonds when more traditional food staples could be grown.
California used to grow grains and other commodities before irrigation was developed. Probably farmers will return this way, but the amount of acres required to make a go of this is quite a bit higher than with vegetables or almonds, so we'll probably see far fewer farms survive, and they will have to be much larger.
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At most this exodus was numbered in the thousands, not millions or anything.
According to Wikipedia, it was over a million people moving to California alone from the US Midwest. Overall emigration from Oklahoma and neighboring states to regions outside the area, mostly to the western US, was around four million people.
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Re:People isn't the issue, farming is (Score:4, Interesting)
California used to grow grains and other commodities before irrigation was developed.
California grew winter crops before irrigation, because that's when the rains come. You can still see winter oats across the central valley when the canals are empty. When irrigation came, it allowed people to start growing melons.
The reason farmers have switched so much to almonds is because other crops (like peaches) are high-labor, and with recent improvements in shipping technology along with free-trade agreements, means American farmers are competing against the labor costs of peach farmers in Chile. You can harvest 20 acres of almonds with two people, but 20 acres of peaches can require dozens.
That said, California is still extremely important to the US as an agricultural region. [slate.com]
California produces a sizable majority of many American fruits, vegetables, and nuts: 99 percent of artichokes, 99 percent of walnuts, 97 percent of kiwis, 97 percent of plums, 95 percent of celery, 95 percent of garlic, 89 percent of cauliflower, 71 percent of spinach, and 69 percent of carrots (and the list goes on and on). Some of this is due to climate and soil
I don't know why Chile can compete on peaches but not on plums.
Still surprised Cali put plastic in their water (Score:3, Interesting)
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That plastic is poylethelene http://www.latimes.com/local/l... [latimes.com]. Same thing used in drinking bottles and the PEX lines in newer homes.
Re:Still surprised Cali put plastic in their water (Score:5, Informative)
They are different plastic. The balls are probably made from ABS. The issue with water bottles is the BPA which softens the plastic. There is no BPA in the shade balls. There are some plastic water bottles that are accepted because they are BPA free [promo-wholesale.com].
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Black balls. (Score:2)
Winning! (Score:2)
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Not quite [mullerranch.com].
One example is Joe Muller & Sons farm in Yolo County, which grows tomatoes, peppers and sunflowers. The farm runs a buried drip irrigation system on 650 acres in the Woodland area. Tom Muller, a partner in the business, said the farm has documented water savings as great as 40 percent. This cuts costs because it means the farm has to buy less water or pump less groundwater from its own wells.
Woodland is in the Central Valley.
Re:Winning! (Score:4, Interesting)
btw, drip irrigation is only a good thing during droughts. During times when there is enough water, flood irrigation is better for the environment, because it helps replenish the ground supply (and in the case of rice fields, it provides important wetlands for wildlife).
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btw, drip irrigation is only a good thing during droughts. During times when there is enough water, flood irrigation is better for the environment, because it helps replenish the ground supply (and in the case of rice fields, it provides important wetlands for wildlife).
It also helps wash out the salt that accumulates at the boundary where the drip-supplied water finishes spreading out and dries up.
Trucking around reclaimed water (Score:2)
Is one way we are NOT winning the drought. I tried doing the math on this and it doesn't make sense to me, yet I see big F250 pickup trucks with 275 gallon tanks everywhere around here. How is driving 20 miles round trip to pick up 275 gallons of reclaimed water worth your time, wear/tear on vehicle, tank and pump, and fuel? According to my water bill that 275 gallons costs maybe $1.28. Even at higher tiers I don't see how it would add up. You'd have to make a trip to the water plant almost every day to eve
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How do you know those trucks are hauling water and not fuel for farm equipment? Maybe it is liquid fertilizer. My father had a tank in the back of his truck to re-fuel his D-7 Caterpillar [onlytruecars.com].
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Because I live in the sub-burbs and see them everywhere around town. No farmers here. The tanks clearly say "reclaimed water". I see people pumping the water onto their lawns. They were not common last year.
Agriculture uses way more water than residents (Score:3)
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
From this [see "uses of water" section]:
- Agriculture uses 39% of the water vs. 11% for residential use
- A typical household uses 170 gallons/day
- It takes 4.9 gallons to grow one walnut, almost as much as a head of broccoli at 5.4 [but with much less food value]
- It takes 1.1 gallons to make an almond, so a small jar of them uses more water than a household does per day.
Most of the regulations [and hoopla] so far are about getting residents to use less water, but their usage is a drop in the proverbial ocean. Where are the regulations to get farms to plant water efficient crops that have high food value instead of water thirsty crops that, effectively, waste water?
Producing crops that have good nutrition, use less water, and provide lower prices to consumers would seem to be the responsible thing to do during a prolonged drought. If farmers can't see the logic of this, then, if regulation comes, they would only have themselves to blame.
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The best solution is to let the farmers sell the water to the residents instead of growing the crops. It's just a comparison of the profit from growing an almond vs. selling to residents at retail rates. Win-win right?
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As the actor Ricardo Montalban once said in an interview: "If you're [currently] not acting [in some play/movie], you're not an actor".
So, if a farmer isn't growing crops, he's not a farmer. So, he'd probably lose whatever special pricing on water he has [as well as any raising of the limit on how much water he gets], so he wouldn't be able to make a profit because he'd be buying the water at the same price he could sell it for. And, such profiteering would probably be prohibited.
From the wiki, Californi
No surprise... (Score:2)
Even disregarding the discussion about climate change: if you use 217 US gallons of water per capita per day, and you live in a state with water issues, and that's disregarding the water use of growing crops that is (a) not measured and (b) really hurting the ground water reserves that people depend on to live, you know you are heading for deep trouble.
I'm not surprised that Schwarzenegger ordered water meters installed in every house - I *am* surprised it's only mandatory by 2025 and not for farmers either
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Where I live (California) the base cost is about $2.50 USD per 100 cubic feet (748 gallons). There are then additional "tiers" that increase the cost over your baseline quantity. If you live in an apartment and don't have a lawn/yard/garden I can understand only 31 gallons/day, but I have a few fruit trees and such that I like to keep watered. One thing I'll admit is that if they want people to conserve, they need to raise water rates (and then use that money to acquire more water resources).
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My (California) water bill is broken up into tiers. The lowest level - essential - is what's estimated a regular family of 4 should use (55 gal/day per capita) without landscaping. So tha
Import Beaver (Score:2)
"Recorded history" (Score:2)
"If you go back thousands of years, you see that droughts can go on for years if not decades, and there were some dry periods that lasted over a century, like during the Medieval period and the middle Holocene [the current geological epoch, which began about 11,000 years ago]. The 20th century was unusually mild here, in the sense that the droughts weren’t as severe as in the past. It was a wetter century, and a lot of our development has been based on that.
If you look at the archaeological record, yo
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They expected it; they just all hoped that the other party would be in office when it happened, so they could blame them for not building the infrastructure to prevent it from turning into a disaster.
Re:"Recorded history" (Score:4, Interesting)
It reminds me of the joke about the CEO who was talking with his departing predecessor. The predecessor handed him three envelopes, with instructions to open them whenever things got bad enough that his job was on the line. One day, things got bad, so he opened the first envelope. The note inside read, "Blame your predecessor." He did, and things were okay for a while. Then, things got bad again, so he opened the second envelope. The note inside read, "Restructure the company." He did, and again, the crisis was averted. Finally, things went badly wrong a third time, so he opened the final envelope. Inside it, the note read, "Prepare three envelopes."
Apples and Oranges (Score:2)
Well, we have a lot of tech here, that's exported all around the world, so until we are spitting dust, people here will be making money, for now.
People here in Silicon Valley have done their part and let their lawns die, and yet, we don't hear anything about export farms making any sacrifice.
If the powers that be were serious about water conservation, they would tax it, but how would that tax be distributed for residence, agriculture, and industry?
Nonsense (Score:3, Informative)
Everything is fine until it isn't.
The Greeks were fine with their debt until the Germans came to collect.
The American colonies were fine until they rebelled.
The situation with the housing market and banks was fine until it wasn't.
So saying "Cali hasn't imploded yet" is not the same thing as saying they're fine.
As to the economic arguments... the bullshit on the economic statistics is well understood at this point and basically everyone knows they're full of shit besides the willfully ignorant. So we'll just skip over that.
On the issue of the drought, the issue is that they have not linked GROWTH with infrastructure. This is why we get brown outs, over crowded schools, over worked police departments, water shortages, and hellacious traffic.
Anyone ever play sim city back in the day? It was a game of balancing things that increased your resources with things that were needed to supply the things that produced your resources. It was about managing land, tax revenue, water, power, schools, police.
Okay... so what happens if you just build lots of houses and don't build power plants, don't build water aqueducts/reservoirs/treatment plants/desalinization plants, schools, hospitals, police stations, or transport?
That's basically what happened in california. They okayed development project after development project... EVERYWHERE... and in no sense linked that to infrastructure.
So radically increasing the population did not correspond to an increase in water resources.
What is the solution? Link the two.
Say "zoning for new housing/business/etc must not exceed literal construction and activation of relevant resources required to sustain that development."
So if you want to build housing for another million people, then I want to see somewhere in there that you've expanded water and power resources for an additional million people. And if it isn't on line... NOW... then I'm not zoning land for use by another million people.
Now here someone is going to say something profoundly stupid like "well where are they going to go!?"... well... anywhere. Arizona, Texas, Montana... it doesn't really matter. There are plenty of places for people to go. And if you want those new developments THAT badly... then build the fucking power plants and reservoirs and aqueducts and schools and highways and police stations... Or go fuck yourself. Saying "we don't have the money to do X or Y or Z right now"... fine... then when you do we can build the infrastructure and then you can have your development. But if you don't have it, then you can't built the infrastructure and you can't have the development.
Suggesting otherwise is somewhere between short term exploitative thinking where someone does things that are against the long term interests of the state for short term profit... and childishness/ignorance.
The developers and politicians are mostly liars or too self interested to care what happens. And the public mostly is just too stupid to know what is going on.
There is no "drought" in California (Score:3)
Private agriculture uses 80% of the water. If you stopped growing rice, alfalfa, and all other crops you should not be growing in a desert, California's city populations could increase FIVE TIMES with no shortage of water.
How do you "win" a drought? (Score:3)
How California Is Winning the Drought
Who came up with that headline? You don't "win" a drought. You might beat a drought, or win against a drought.
California's population has grown faster even as the drought has deepened.
Or, to put it another way, the drought has deepend as the population has grown faster.
I seem to remember Germany doing quite well in WWII, as well, until they weren't.
Not Winning At All (Score:2)
A billion gallons isn't much. (Score:4, Insightful)
A billion gallons isn't much.
The Sacramento Valley rice paddys flood to a depth of 5 inches. This utilizes 80B gallons of water, in order to irrigate the 600,000 acres under cultivation in rice. On top of this, it requires another 4B gallons of water a day to deal with the evaporation losses.
So color me unimpressed that conservation by reduced human consumption results in 1/4 of that amount being saved. It's not a big deal, or a big amount, in the grand scheme of things, particularly compared to agricultural usage on products which are mostly exported from the U.S..
Time to get serious about desalination, if California wants to keep its agricultural export industry. Or it could let e.g. China invest in growing their own rice, instead of in building "ghost cities".
P.S. While you are at it, stop drinking "almond milk" please; a quart of that runs about 345 gallons of water.
And yet, they are NOT winning (Score:3)
Right now, what has been keeping LA and SD going has been the Colorado River. However, lake mead is dropping FAST, since the drought is also spread all the way to vegas.
But, they start building desalination plants now, then if the drought persists, they can solve SD and LA, while saving water for Vegas.
BTW, this is where CONgress is so wrong. We desperately need to start building new nuke plants that will use the nuke waste. With these, they can provide electricity AND desalination.
Global Warming brings more water overall (Score:3)
A warmer climate means more, not less, water across the planet as a whole, even if some individual areas may have worse droughts (though California's drought to date is not nearly as bad as the worst historical droughts, so to claim it is from warming is to ignore the difference between climate and local periodic weather patterns like droughts)
Common sense dictates this is so, because most of the surface of the planet is water, therefore a warmer climate means more water vapor entering the atmosphere. Anyone who has spent time in South America knows it can be hotter than hell but still humid.
What really needs to happen (for California and elsewhere) is cheap nuclear power generation and large-scale desalinization - no reason California could not be pumping lots of water all over the dry West, instead of ravenously consuming the aquifers they have now.
what a joke (Score:3)
The biggest destinations in California are the Bay Area and LA, and people migrate there not for the quality of life (which sucks) or for gardening, but because a bunch of important companies have their headquarters there.
Furthermore, demographically, California isn't doing so well either:
http://knowmore.washingtonpost... [washingtonpost.com]
Re: (Score:3)
That is part of the problem
too many cows in CA
Re: (Score:3)
Supposedly you have a brain... try using it for a change.
Re: (Score:2)
Wait, what proof do you have that he has a brain (or at least a functioning one)?
Re:This state has way too many Republicans (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Why do you think there's so much economic and job growth in California? In fact, California leads the nation in total number of new jobs.
I think they put big signs at the state border, thanking Republicans as they leave.
Re: (Score:3)
I keep hearing about stuff like this. When I still lived in the US, non-citizens could not vote in US elections. When did this change?