[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498537#p27498537:59n3cark said:AZDutch[/url]":59n3cark][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498387#p27498387:59n3cark said:Toolie[/url]":59n3cark]Stuff.
I lived in Las Vegas for 9 years and I've lived in Phoenix for 25. Do you want to know why they farm in CA and AZ? Because we can farm basically year-round. This part of the country provides you with things like oranges in the middle of winter. You opine that farming in the desert is "not a sustainable practice even without a drought" but you are completely wrong. People have been farming in deserts since civilization took root. Which happened in the desert, if I'm not mistaken.
Yes, farming uses a lot of water. Growing food is important, though. The new problem we are facing in the southwest is not farming, but rather population growth. When you have quantity of water X, you can use that water to either grow food or grow a city. Yes, perhaps you're right and some point in the future we're going to have to move food production elsewhere because of increased demand for water from other sectors of the economy, but this problem is not caused by farming. In Arizona, though, the farms are being replaced by the expansion of the cities. I don't see the farms just moving farther out, at least not in this area.
And I'd like to point out two misconceptions about Arizona. First, the Phoenix area is largely independent of Colorado River water. Yes, there is a canal that brings us water from the Colorado River, but it is fairly new. The Phoenix area mainly gets its water from the Salt River watershed, which is water that falls on northern and eastern Arizona, eventually runs into the Gila River and later into the Colorado north of Yuma, AZ. Second, the article says that sometimes only a trickle of water makes it to the ocean from the Colorado. That is as much the fault of the Mexicans as it is ours. I drive over the Colorado whenever I go to California, and believe me, it is not a trickle. It's south of the border that the river is really divided up and destroyed. And it is good that every last drop of that water is being used. At least we aren't screwing up the ocean like the east is with the Mississippi.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498713#p27498713:1hhpuqz9 said:Bengie25[/url]":1hhpuqz9][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27497769#p27497769:1hhpuqz9 said:Karmashock[/url]":1hhpuqz9]
There are plenty of other parts of the USA that have plenty of water for themselves, but they don't produce the bulk of our grains.
Exactly. California is literally right next to the largest body of water on a planet that is 2/3rds covered by water. There should be no water shortage in California, ever. At worst, water may become expensive, but if you build enough desalination plants, you should never run out of water when you live next to the Pacific Ocean.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27497885#p27497885:3kvsern3 said:The Final Omega[/url]":3kvsern3]The ocean next to California has plenty of water but it needs to be desalinated. The people of California better get comfortable with fossil fuel or nuclear power because the power needs of desalination for a large state like California will be massive.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498889#p27498889:19aq9wnb said:PervertRyan[/url]":19aq9wnb]Regarding desalination plants: How much water would a nuclear reactor producing 3 GW of thermal energy be able to desalinate and for how many people would that supply water?
In climate modelling, MCA is often used when you have some variables within the model that are not as tightly constrained by basic physics or empirical data, basically where their value has a large enough uncertainty. That way you can run numerous simulations with numerous values for those variables and see how they influence the evolution of the model in each run. This used to capture the spread of behaviors within the uncertainty of the variables' values.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498973#p27498973:2nsupo9a said:dcoleman[/url]":2nsupo9a]Monte Carlo analysis is mentioned to impress the non-statistically astute. I programmed an MC program from scratch an embarrassing many years ago (FORTRAN anyone?). I can tell you that the output is totally dependent and can be manipulated to a desired output by assumptions input to the model. You can get it to say anything. So stating that MC analysis predicted X is a useless and misleading statement without giving the model assumptions in detail.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27497787#p27497787:2skvyzdc said:jdale[/url]":2skvyzdc][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27497757#p27497757:2skvyzdc said:forbin42[/url]":2skvyzdc]"precipitation in the Southwestern US is projected to decline as a result of anthropogenic climate change"
This statement is just short-sighted and misleading. The result is of climate change, plain and simple. To say that the cause of the potential drought is man-made is factually false and used to to polarize a political position. Is the climate changing? Yes. Is the climate changing solely because of man-made factors? I dare you to find a reputable scientist to make that statement.
If you focus on just the political aspect instead of the problem and solution, you are just going to hurt a lot of people and waste a lot of money.
No one is going to claim the climate is changing "solely" because of man-made factors. Now, change that word to "principally" or "primarily" and it's a different story.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498357#p27498357:25bru7ac said:bothered[/url]":25bru7ac][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27497827#p27497827:25bru7ac said:zephonic[/url]":25bru7ac]It is baffling to me how nobody here (in LA) seems to care about the impending water shortage. It has been in the news, but people seem unwilling to modify their behavior accordingly.
Typical "close-the-barn-door-after-the-horse-has-bolted" behavior, if you ask me.
I've lived in so-cal for the last 40 years or so and I've lived through several droughts. At this point, we have low-flow showers, low-flow sinks, low-flow toilets, artificial turf and gravel - no plants, modern efficient appliances, etc. And we use these things all the time, not just during drought time. During a drought we shower less and flush less. How much more can I cut back?
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498973#p27498973:3kbz7qgx said:dcoleman[/url]":3kbz7qgx]Monte Carlo analysis is mentioned to impress the non-statistically astute. I programmed an MC program from scratch an embarrassing many years ago (FORTRAN anyone?). I can tell you that the output is totally dependent and can be manipulated to a desired output by assumptions input to the model. You can get it to say anything. So stating that MC analysis predicted X is a useless and misleading statement without giving the model assumptions in detail.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498833#p27498833:13jhikrh said:dagar99[/url]":13jhikrh][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498713#p27498713:13jhikrh said:Bengie25[/url]":13jhikrh][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27497769#p27497769:13jhikrh said:Karmashock[/url]":13jhikrh]
There are plenty of other parts of the USA that have plenty of water for themselves, but they don't produce the bulk of our grains.
The bulk of US grains is produced in the Midwest, not the West or Southwest. The Midwest is a bit short of water, but nothing like those other areas.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498815#p27498815:2n0tcvmo said:Toolie[/url]":2n0tcvmo]So it's irresponsible for us to continue to essentially demand the product, but I'm a little baffled why no one in the southwest saw this happening and simply said no, we can't sustain this. It's all rather short sighted. Whether it's population or farming, there doesn't appear to be enough water down there.
By the way, I saw this short film a few years ago when the Banff Festival rolled through town. These guys try to follow the Colorado to the end and run out of water. No single party is responsible for the state of things. It's a big problem.
https://vimeo.com/22818762
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498757#p27498757:2hork8qj said:alxx[/url]":2hork8qj]It seems more of a political problem?
Does anywhere in the south west recycle its sewage/waste water ?
Any or much grey water use/reuse ?
Any large projects or proposals for water pipelines ?
solar desal and "solar" pumping stations are available though Dubai seems to have brought up a lot of the solar desal tech.
Here in Sydney , home water use was massively reduced by switching to low flow toilets and showers.
The state ngovernment provide low flow shower heads free of charge and even sent out plumbers to fit them(via the water authorities). They encourage people to install rainwater tanks.
https://www.sydneywater.com.au/web/grou ... 045260.pdf
Does the US have water efficiency stars/ratings on new washing machines , toilets , taps etc?
http://www.sydneywater.com.au/SW/water- ... /index.htm
Problem here now is politicians trying to privatise the water supplies, which is going to jack up prices like nothing else. Already happened in other areas of Australia , south east Queensland.
Other problem for Sydney with changing climate is increased risk of bad floods so they are lowering dam levels, looking at increasing the wall heights but this reduces the water supply so Sydney is going to have to build another 2-3 desal plants which are going to be private which will massively increase water prices.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498889#p27498889:3vl5jtr4 said:PervertRyan[/url]":3vl5jtr4]Regarding desalination plants: How much water would a nuclear reactor producing 3 GW of thermal energy be able to desalinate and for how many people would that supply water?
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27497863#p27497863:1kchtogv said:cmattair[/url]":1kchtogv]Just a quibble but the Colorado River empties into the Gulf of California, not the Gulf
Mexico.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27499199#p27499199:3ew76ubg said:GFKBill[/url]":3ew76ubg]Wow, the IAEA actually had a software tool so you can noodle with the numbers on nuclear desalination:
http://www.iaea.org/NuclearPower/Desalination/
And yes, it does sound like an inevitable option. Water water everywhere...
In many US states, including California, there were/are legal obstacle with rain water harvesting.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498757#p27498757:1y3aqe8d said:alxx[/url]":1y3aqe8d]Here in Sydney , home water use was massively reduced by switching to low flow toilets and showers.
The state ngovernment provide low flow shower heads free of charge and even sent out plumbers to fit them(via the water authorities). They encourage people to install rainwater tanks.
n some states, such as Colorado, previous water law stated that all precipitation belonged to existing water-rights owners, and that rain needed to flow to join its rightful water drainage.
Yes, California has water efficiency ratings on new low flow toilets which are mandatory.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27499169#p27499169:2aiivlby said:Theala Sildorian[/url]":2aiivlby][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498757#p27498757:2aiivlby said:alxx[/url]":2aiivlby]It seems more of a political problem?
Does anywhere in the south west recycle its sewage/waste water ?
Any or much grey water use/reuse ?
Any large projects or proposals for water pipelines ?
solar desal and "solar" pumping stations are available though Dubai seems to have brought up a lot of the solar desal tech.
Here in Sydney , home water use was massively reduced by switching to low flow toilets and showers.
The state ngovernment provide low flow shower heads free of charge and even sent out plumbers to fit them(via the water authorities). They encourage people to install rainwater tanks.
https://www.sydneywater.com.au/web/grou ... 045260.pdf
Does the US have water efficiency stars/ratings on new washing machines , toilets , taps etc?
http://www.sydneywater.com.au/SW/water- ... /index.htm
Problem here now is politicians trying to privatise the water supplies, which is going to jack up prices like nothing else. Already happened in other areas of Australia , south east Queensland.
Other problem for Sydney with changing climate is increased risk of bad floods so they are lowering dam levels, looking at increasing the wall heights but this reduces the water supply so Sydney is going to have to build another 2-3 desal plants which are going to be private which will massively increase water prices.
Yeah, we have all that stuff. It's not enough; too many people live in parts of the country that are desert because the climate is favorable.
Americans are notoriously resistent to change; low flow toilets don't work very well, so people resist them. Ditto showerheads. We resent not being able to have it our way.
Water pipelines are not a solution in the West. It just steals water from one place that needs it to another place that needs it.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498757#p27498757:1anw0tyv said:alxx[/url]":1anw0tyv]It seems more of a political problem?
Does anywhere in the south west recycle its sewage/waste water ?
Any or much grey water use/reuse ?
Er, what exactly do you think the San Joaquin Valley (San Joaquin River, Kings River), Sacramento Valley (Sacramento River) and Los Angeles Basin (Los Angeles River) are? River valleys are deserts half the year and flood the other half the year anywhere near the equator, just go look up every single river you listed for proof. Dams have moderated the flood/famine swings, but every one is still within an area classified as semi-arid, just like the areas of California I listed above. (The Mohave Desert, on the other hand, is extremely arid and only the crazy Barstow and Inland Empire/Antelope Valley guys live there.)[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498655#p27498655:1kebgveo said:TomRoche[/url]":1kebgveo][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498537#p27498537:1kebgveo said:AZDutch[/url]":1kebgveo]People have been farming in deserts since civilization took root. Which happened in the desert, if I'm not mistaken.
You're mistaken. Agriculture originated in river valleys (Mesopotamia/Tigris+Euphrates, Nile, Indus, Huang He) generally surrounded by otherwise warm/arid lands. Agriculture led to civilization, which promoted excessively-intensive agriculture, which promoted desertification of those same regions. History repeats.
What happens in deserts is, people see gods--i.e., decivilization.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27497903#p27497903:32h7grsc said:mdrejhon[/url]":32h7grsc]Time to build some nuclear powered desalination plants, if things become even more dire than this.
As long as they have Generation 4 safety (fully fail safe on complete failure of powered safety systems, unlike TMi/Chernobyl/Fukushima).
Delaying a couple of mega projects will free up enough money to do this, I think.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498537#p27498537:wbmrdc6s said:AZDutch[/url]":wbmrdc6s]I lived in Las Vegas for 9 years and I've lived in Phoenix for 25. Do you want to know why they farm in CA and AZ? Because we can farm basically year-round. This part of the country provides you with things like oranges in the middle of winter. You opine that farming in the desert is "not a sustainable practice even without a drought" but you are completely wrong. People have been farming in deserts since civilization took root. Which happened in the desert, if I'm not mistaken.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27498387#p27498387:wbmrdc6s said:Toolie[/url]":wbmrdc6s][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27497781#p27497781:wbmrdc6s said:심돌산[/url]":wbmrdc6s]Maybe we should stop growing lettuce in the desert.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27497767#p27497767:wbmrdc6s said:Just Joe[/url]":wbmrdc6s]Maybe they should stop watering their lawns so much and paint them green instead.
I just spent the last week driving through the Visalia/Fresno/Merced areas to access the bevy of parks in the Sierras and I couldn't believe the amount of farming that was attempting to going on there. I'm from New England and was not that familiar with the valley before hand, but farming seemed so incongruous with the reality of that environment. There were signs all over the place about water equaling jobs, and although I couldn't understand why you would decide to farm there in the first place, I was sympathetic.
So I was asking myself what these people could possibly be lobbying for. Nature can't read the signs. And then I got to the foothills and saw that there is water coming from the mountains, but it has already been dramatically depleted by the farming and the drought. It is apparently now being more heavily restricted. Water levels were 10s, if not 100 feet below where you could see they had been previously. New trees and additional pavement have crept into this zone that was formerly under water. This has been unfolding for a while. I wonder what the people expect would happen if the gates were suddenly opened and those lakes were finally sucked dry. It's not a sustainable practice even without a drought, sadly. Admittedly I'm an outsider, but this seemed like the reality of the situation to me. It was profoundly stressful to see it.
Yes, farming uses a lot of water. Growing food is important, though. The new problem we are facing in the southwest is not farming, but rather population growth. When you have quantity of water X, you can use that water to either grow food or grow a city. Yes, perhaps you're right and some point in the future we're going to have to move food production elsewhere because of increased demand for water from other sectors of the economy, but this problem is not caused by farming. In Arizona, though, the farms are being replaced by the expansion of the cities. I don't see the farms just moving farther out, at least not in this area.
And I'd like to point out two misconceptions about Arizona. First, the Phoenix area is largely independent of Colorado River water. Yes, there is a canal that brings us water from the Colorado River, but it is fairly new. The Phoenix area mainly gets its water from the Salt River watershed, which is water that falls on northern and eastern Arizona, eventually runs into the Gila River and later into the Colorado north of Yuma, AZ. Second, the article says that sometimes only a trickle of water makes it to the ocean from the Colorado. That is as much the fault of the Mexicans as it is ours. I drive over the Colorado whenever I go to California, and believe me, it is not a trickle. It's south of the border that the river is really divided up and destroyed. And it is good that every last drop of that water is being used. At least we aren't screwing up the ocean like the east is with the Mississippi.
You appear to be right. Looking at more data, this is about what we had in 1975 which was also a bad drought year.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27497809#p27497809:grdfubex said:maxwell[/url]":grdfubex][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27497769#p27497769:grdfubex said:Karmashock[/url]":grdfubex]Which is why we're supposed to have water reserves to take us through these years. The old city planners were very good about providing enough water for the existing and future population. Much of our water needs are met by legacy water resources set up by past generations that assumed future generations would have added to the infrastructure. But just as in Australia, they didn't. There is plenty of water in the American west. Some of it might have to be piped hundreds of miles to get where it is needed. But there is plenty to go around. You just have to run the aqueducts, build the reservoirs, and keep tabs on current demand.
The current drought in California is as far as I can tell about 10 percent below average. Ten... percent. Please correct me if I'm wrong. I looked up precipitation charts for california and compared them to the last 25 years. We're about 10 percent below the average according to those charts. Which means the system isn't so much stressed by the drought as it is by an utter lack of infrastructure. If it only takes a ten percent swing to send the system into panic, the system is not appropriately fault tolerant.
This is the American South West... water is sometimes scarce. A swing of more then 50 percent should be required to send the system into panic... not ten. And even then, the system should be able to provide for everyone for many years under that condition... long enough that if needed we can build another aqueduct in the middle of the drought to bring water in from places where there is no drought.
Take Oregon for example... lots of water. Washington state... lots of water. The old city planners of Los Angeles brought water into LA from Nevada and the owens valley project.
Where those old men still with us they would suggest we do the same thing again... possibly on a bigger scale as the city is a great deal larger then it was then.
IF they did this, they wouldn't need to steal water from the farmers. And the farmers wouldn't need to drain the aquifers to keep their farms running.
California received about 25% of their usual rainfall in 2013, and are headed towards that again in 2014. I don't know where you got 10% from, but you are way, way off and well into your 50% panic mode range. Reservoirs are about 25% full at best [http://www.cdec.water.ca.gov/cgi-progs/reports/EXECSUM]
Moving water around is a short term (decades) solution to a long term (centuries) problem. Too many people living in an area that can't support it. The only long term solution is to move the people - the price of water should be born by the residents.
Your simplistic solutions have been tried before and didn't work then. Have you seen owens lake? have you seen mono lake? Have you been to Bakersfield? What will you do when Seattle runs dry? Vancouver?
I was living in LA during the last mini drought (02/03) and no habits were changed...talking to old neighbors they are tired of the drought news ...so habits still not changing much.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27500749#p27500749:100a4wc6 said:Karmashock[/url]":100a4wc6]
You appear to be right. Looking at more data, this is about what we had in 1975 which was also a bad drought year.
They were supposed to build in a capability to deal with sever drought years as a result of that drought. Guess they didn't.
As to Seattle... you do realize that food and electricity is shipped in from great distances to cities right? We have resources brought to us from around the world.
Unless you're suggesting we go back to a rural life style where we get everything locally, you are an advocate of concentrating resources in areas where they are needed. And that means running some fucking aquaducts. There is plenty of surface water in the US. Far more then we or the fish need. We just need to harness more of it. Some might say that will create ugly industrial works. Fine... make the industrial works pretty or hide them. That's just an engineering problem. The logistics are something that can be solved. There are areas that have more water then they need and areas with less water. Move A to B.
The Romans were able to move water hundreds of miles in their day. We should have no trouble moving it thousands if needed.
Instead of moving the people, how about moving the farms? I know almond trees for example take a long time to establish themselves, so we should have started years ago. Still, better late than never.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27497809#p27497809:3uh9t9jf said:maxwell[/url]":3uh9t9jf][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27497769#p27497769:3uh9t9jf said:Karmashock[/url]":3uh9t9jf]Which is why we're supposed to have water reserves to take us through these years. The old city planners were very good about providing enough water for the existing and future population. Much of our water needs are met by legacy water resources set up by past generations that assumed future generations would have added to the infrastructure. But just as in Australia, they didn't. There is plenty of water in the American west. Some of it might have to be piped hundreds of miles to get where it is needed. But there is plenty to go around. You just have to run the aqueducts, build the reservoirs, and keep tabs on current demand.
The current drought in California is as far as I can tell about 10 percent below average. Ten... percent. Please correct me if I'm wrong. I looked up precipitation charts for california and compared them to the last 25 years. We're about 10 percent below the average according to those charts. Which means the system isn't so much stressed by the drought as it is by an utter lack of infrastructure. If it only takes a ten percent swing to send the system into panic, the system is not appropriately fault tolerant.
This is the American South West... water is sometimes scarce. A swing of more then 50 percent should be required to send the system into panic... not ten. And even then, the system should be able to provide for everyone for many years under that condition... long enough that if needed we can build another aqueduct in the middle of the drought to bring water in from places where there is no drought.
Take Oregon for example... lots of water. Washington state... lots of water. The old city planners of Los Angeles brought water into LA from Nevada and the owens valley project.
Where those old men still with us they would suggest we do the same thing again... possibly on a bigger scale as the city is a great deal larger then it was then.
IF they did this, they wouldn't need to steal water from the farmers. And the farmers wouldn't need to drain the aquifers to keep their farms running.
California received about 25% of their usual rainfall in 2013, and are headed towards that again in 2014. I don't know where you got 10% from, but you are way, way off and well into your 50% panic mode range. Reservoirs are about 25% full at best [http://www.cdec.water.ca.gov/cgi-progs/reports/EXECSUM]
Moving water around is a short term (decades) solution to a long term (centuries) problem. Too many people living in an area that can't support it. The only long term solution is to move the people - the price of water should be born by the residents.
Your simplistic solutions have been tried before and didn't work then. Have you seen owens lake? have you seen mono lake? Have you been to Bakersfield? What will you do when Seattle runs dry? Vancouver?
I was living in LA during the last mini drought (02/03) and no habits were changed...talking to old neighbors they are tired of the drought news ...so habits still not changing much.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27499489#p27499489:19djzsyx said:Kanchou[/url]":19djzsyx]
ETA: OK. It was "illegal" to harvest rainwater before. Just that one had to apply for a permit, and the "rightful" water right owners can object to block it.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27497913#p27497913:25wzr5ij said:valkyriebiker[/url]":25wzr5ij]forbin42 said: This statement is just short-sighted and misleading. (snip)
And THIS is a prime reason why little is being done. The anthropogenic climate change deniers are so rabidly ensconced in their position precisely because to admit otherwise conscribes them to do something about it.
What better way to avoid taking responsibility for mitigating deleterious climate change than to simply deny it altogether? It's a fascinating thing to witness -- and will ultimately lead to our sooner destruction.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=27500055#p27500055:nwis597q said:Basekid[/url]":nwis597q]The future is very very bleak when even on Arstechnica (which I assume is mostly visited by educated people) there are tons who still believe climate change is a hoax.