RussDill
Philosopher
Does California have desalination plants?
Desalination plants would have no effect on the current issue because the price is too high for agriculture users. By many orders of magnitude.
Does California have desalination plants?
In the meantime, we have a-holes like the CEO of Nestle declaring that he should be allowed to bottle MORE water for private sale:
http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2015/05/15/3659415/drought-isnt-nestles-problem/
and a former CEO saying that all water should be privatized:
http://naturalsociety.com/nestle-ceo-water-not-human-right-should-be-privatized/
and spoiled rich people who demand unlimited water for their lawns/pools/ etc
http://www.washingtonpost.com/natio...c6f998-0e39-11e5-9726-49d6fa26a8c6_story.html
California has to be introduced to renewable energy as well. Our huge desal plant is designed to be powered by renewable energy. And unlike those who are calling it a White Elephant, I think it's an insurance policy. There will be more droughts.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victorian_Desalination_Plant
In the meantime, we have a-holes like the CEO of Nestle declaring that he should be allowed to bottle MORE water for private sale:
http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2015/05/15/3659415/drought-isnt-nestles-problem/
and a former CEO saying that all water should be privatized:
http://naturalsociety.com/nestle-ceo-water-not-human-right-should-be-privatized/
and spoiled rich people who demand unlimited water for their lawns/pools/ etc
http://www.washingtonpost.com/natio...c6f998-0e39-11e5-9726-49d6fa26a8c6_story.html
As was said before, this is nonsense. The fact that the overkill hypothesis is a viable scientific explanation for the mammalian megafaunal extinction at 12ka or so (depends where you are--it's ongoing in some parts of the world) is proof of that! Plus, our view of the Americas is heavily colored by the fact that Europeans mostly saw them post-Apocolyps. Disease wiped out most of the population of the continent before Europeans could move in--meaning that yeah, they lived in ballance with Nature because so many of them had died that their entire civilization collapsed into nothing. The only people who survived are those who could handle living lives stripped of the security civilization offers. THIS IS NOT SOMETHING WE SHOULD STRIVE FOR. Anyone who disagrees can be dismissed as not taking the idea seriously--anyone who did, would be dead already by suicide, because that's the logical and inevitable conclusion of such a line of thought.bit_pattern said:I had some issues with the way the tragedy of the commons was framed by the presenters as being a foible of human nature. It's really not, it's a foible of the socio-cultural structures that developed in Europe. For the vast span of human history, people have worked together in common to utilise their environment and conserve it for the common good. Our way is not set in stone, it's not "human nature", it's just culture. And cultural systems can change..
Unchecked immigration by people with outrageous birth rates from cultures which have no environmentalist ethic is devastating. Look up some of the stories of what they're doing to our national parks, for one example.
We could just build a wall around SoCal to contain the problem?
We could just build a wall around SoCal to contain the problem?
We also bottle soda, tea, beer, wine, all sorts of beverages. The total California bottled water usage, all companies, is about 3 billion gallons. Los Angeles residential use per year is 179 billion gallons. Alfalfa uses 1.7 trillion gallons of water each year. And with bottled water, we are talking about water that people will drink. Someone is seriously barking up the wrong tree.
I really don't know where to start on this article. There isn't much here regarding water. It seems to be all about slavery and GMOs. And there is a video that it's claimed is the nestle ceo saying that corporations should own all the water. The video actual claims no position on who should own water.
And again, making a villain so we can avoid the real issues.
Meantime we are building the Bullet Train to Nowhere instead.
Maybe it's not too late to re-route it through the Pistachio fields?
Incidentally I got a letter in the mail from the utility letting me know that I have cut my summer water usage by 72% over pre drought years. I got a credit on my bill for my efforts. So conserving is possible if one puts any effort into it.
Does Nestle need to be shut down and stop exporting the state's water for profit? Yes.
Do the rich landowners that want to use scarce water for green lawns they don't need and golf courses and other wasteful water uses need to be stopped? Yes.
Every drop counts.
Your conservation efforts don't include bottles in your bedroom, do they? I seem to recall that not working out so well before.
I like how all these outsiders keep telling us we're "doomed" and "stupid" and so on. People need to get some perspective. Right now the most important thing is the Dodgers winning the World Series.
Anyone that roots for the Dodgers probably is already in the early stages of heat prostration and should hydrate immediately.