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originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: CriticalStinker
What sucks too is farmers are penalized if they don't use the water,
Can you elaborate on this? Do rates go up if consumption goes down?
originally posted by: Lysergic
originally posted by: CriticalStinker
a reply to: Guyfriday
Answer that and you'll see that the "Water Wars" never really ended.
Oil will go out of style soon.
Water will probably be next. If we have renewable cheap energy, water won't be much of an issue for developed nations because of desalination... But a different story for the third world.
Bush said that water would be the next oil, as they bought up a huge supply in South America can't remember it was the largest aquifer but something along those lines.
"His land rests atop one of the largest freshwater aquifers in the world: Acuifero Guarani, by name."
5minforecast.com...
originally posted by: MiddleInsite
There's plenty of water, just not where people live. The Great Lakes for example. Over time, I have no doubt, people will MOVE if they can't drink.
See, problem solved. No need to worry. We can all go back to worrying about how longs it's been since Kamala Harris hasn't been to the border, or held a press conference. For those of you who get your news from FOX. LOL!
Water dissolving and water removing
There is water at the bottom of the ocean
Under the water, carry the water
Remove the water at the bottom of the ocean
originally posted by: MiddleInsite
There's plenty of water, just not where people live. The Great Lakes for example. Over time, I have no doubt, people will MOVE if they can't drink.
See, problem solved. No need to worry. We can all go back to worrying about how longs it's been since Kamala Harris hasn't been to the border, or held a press conference. For those of you who get your news from FOX. LOL!
originally posted by: Guyfriday
Here's a thought to fallow on, "Why is it that Nuts and Wine grapes are grown in the same areas of California where that isn't any readily access to water?"
originally posted by: camain
a reply to: JinMI
The issue with Desalination plants is that it has a huge environmental impact. First because it has to be built on the coast, which the land is valuable, second because to are sucking up millions of gallons of ocean via a pipeline, and spitting out millions of gallons of Brim salt water somewhere. The Brim is highly concentrated salt, you could spit it out to salt factories i guess, but you still have to put the excess somewhere in the ocean which will make a dead zone. The more you put in the ocean the bigger the dead zone. That impacts fisheries and tourism.
Camain
originally posted by: RickyD
a reply to: charlyv
A lot of what they call rivers in az are like that...it was the same in new mexico too. Not to mention most rivers were like the creeks I grew up with in Virginia.
Anyway they are seasonal...water only flows after snow melt makes it down or the rainy season kicks in.
originally posted by: charlyv
originally posted by: RickyD
a reply to: charlyv
A lot of what they call rivers in az are like that...it was the same in new mexico too. Not to mention most rivers were like the creeks I grew up with in Virginia.
Anyway they are seasonal...water only flows after snow melt makes it down or the rainy season kicks in.
Thanks, that makes sense. However, until we got north enough to Flagstaff and Prescott, that was some dry place! We were wondering where the farms with those circle watering fields got the water for the crops.