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Earth Politics

As Drought Worsens, California Orders Record Water Cuts 599

New submitter GordonShure.com writes: The State of California has made an unprecedented move by uniformly restricting water supplies across the entire state as demand outstrips supply. Farms are most affected, though food prices aren't anticipated to rise in any hurry: imports from out of state continue apace. Notably, this is a problem Silicon Valley hasn't much helped to solve.

Will this move induce meaningful modernization upon the infrastructure supporting the state's thirty-eight million residents? Or will things continue to be corn, corn, corn for the time being?
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As Drought Worsens, California Orders Record Water Cuts

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  • by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Saturday June 13, 2015 @02:06PM (#49904441)

    Instead of spending $68 Billion on a single high speed rail line between 2 cities that are already linked by several adequate transportation options, maybe we should use a fraction of that money for water projects? Moving water to where people live is a simple engineering problem. Why not solve it instead of being a victim of the weather?

    • to discuss sensible zoning restrictions. Constant population growth in under-resourced areas make a handful of very wealth people even more wealthy, but it's madness to allow it to continue at the expense of the local environment. Just say no to the developers. We have exceeded the carrying capacity of local water supplies. Also...stop farming in the desert.

      • by Kohath ( 38547 )

        It's not "madness". It's progress. It's relatively simple to transport water to people. We just have to decide to do it instead of second guessing every choice everyone ever made about where they live and work.

        • by Waffle Iron ( 339739 ) on Saturday June 13, 2015 @03:11PM (#49904795)

          Sure. But only as long as you make those people who chose to live in water-deprived areas pay every god damned cent of the cost of your infrastructure boondoggles, including compensation for external costs such as environmental damage to areas other people live.

          If we were to actually do that, I bet many of those people would choose to move out of CA real quick.

          • by Kohath ( 38547 )

            Sounds like you'd rather punish people than help them (or even allow them) to live better lives. Why?

    • by andymadigan ( 792996 ) <amadigan@gmNETBSDail.com minus bsd> on Saturday June 13, 2015 @02:42PM (#49904635)
      There's no need to move water save for a few exceptional cases in rural areas where local farming has completely depleted the water table. The answer is much simpler: stop farming. It's 2% of CA's economy or around $40 billion. If we cut out the thirstiest plants first we can save tons of water without sacrificing much of the economic benefits. Water use by people is fraction of Ag water use.

      Any water we brought in would effectively be for farm irrigation, I doubt the farmers are willing to pay the cost for such a project.
      • by Vegan Cyclist ( 1650427 ) on Saturday June 13, 2015 @03:02PM (#49904755) Homepage
        You're right that residential use is a tiny fraction of California's water (and it's silly trying to get people to act on this thinking it'll make a difference), and agriculture is in the range of 80% of all water use...but of that, over half is devoted to livestock. So it's the animals that are the problem - not the produce. Also lot of America's produce comes from California, and I think it'd be difficult for the rest of the country to compensate. Getting rid of livestock, however, would go a long way to conserving water AND keeping people well fed. Here are some stats on that [veganstart.org].
        • by Baloroth ( 2370816 ) on Saturday June 13, 2015 @05:42PM (#49905567)

          veganstart.org

          Oh yeah, that looks like a nice unbiased source. For example, it omits to mention that 2/3rds of the water that goes into animal feed is "green water", i.e. rain and other renewable sources. In other words, animal-based foods require large amounts of water, but it's mostly renewable water. In order to say that getting rid of lifestock would actually help the problem, you'd need to look at how much water would be required for foods to replace meat and dairy entirely, and where that water would need to come from (it doesn't help the problem if you replace lifestock with plants if those plants end up requiring more water from aquifers than the lifestock does).

          BTW here's the full report [pacinst.org] (PDF warning) on water usage in California if anyone is interested in more numbers.

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by Anonymous Coward

            In order to say that getting rid of lifestock would actually help the problem, you'd need to look at how much water would be required for foods to replace meat and dairy entirely, and where that water would need to come from (it doesn't help the problem if you replace lifestock with plants if those plants end up requiring more water from aquifers than the lifestock does).

            In what world is meat begin fed a vegan free diet? On Earth, cows drink water, but they also eat plants. There is no way in which it is more efficient to feed a corn to a cow to grow meat that people can eat later. It is better to feed the corn to the people directly. Most animal feed in the US is corn based, so don't bring up red herrings about free range grass eating cow. Also, you do not need to COMPLETELY replace meat 100%, so skip that red herring too.

            Please insert next red herring to continue...

          • by Vegan Cyclist ( 1650427 ) on Sunday June 14, 2015 @12:37AM (#49907087) Homepage
            As someone else pointed out, there isn't a whole lot of 'green water' in California right now. So now what?

            There are already many charts showing how inefficiently livestock convert resources...per calorie, per calorie of protein, or nearly any other metric, we're much more efficient eating plants ourselves. (And the fact is: we can live without meat, but can't live without plants.)

            Finally, just because it's a vegan website doesn't invalidate the resources it links to. The resources are all there, just go through it yourself. (And try not to cherry-pick items that make a thin defence for your case.)
      • There's no need to move water save for a few exceptional cases in rural areas where local farming has completely depleted the water table. The answer is much simpler: stop farming. It's 2% of CA's economy or around $40 billion. If we cut out the thirstiest plants first we can save tons of water without sacrificing much of the economic benefits.

        Stop farming? That is an absolutely clueless position for two reasons:

        (1) CA produces over half of the fruits and vegetables consumed in the US.

        (2) The CA central valley has the exact same problem as the areas where you thinking water should be moved into. The central valley is *not* a desert. Like those rural areas you mention it is incredibly fertile land with insufficient surface water. Plus the CA central valley has a climate that allows for year round production. Other parts of the US mine aquifer

    • Moving water to where people live is a simple engineering problem. Why not solve it instead of being a victim of the weather?

      Because there isn't any water to move - California long ago outstripped it's natural supplies and has also already taken all the water they can from adjacent areas.

    • by fermion ( 181285 ) on Saturday June 13, 2015 @04:05PM (#49905097) Homepage Journal
      Back in planet reality, fresh water is a finite resource. In the fantasy land that is especially inhabited by conservatives we just take fresh water from one place and move it to another, but where will it come from? Is Las Vegas going to give up it's water so that california can use it? If they did, be sure it would not come cheap. Water rights are paramount, and those with rights have the ability to charge whatever they want. Sometimes money can help. Las Vegas is building a new pipeline so it can tap the lower portions of the reservoir. That is a temporary solution. Rainwater reclamation for most structures would help a great deal. Desalinization would help, but would require a large amount of extra energy and would increase the cost of water a non trivial amount.

      Which is the problem. People want a solution that will not raise the cost of water so they can continue to waste it. We cannot continue to treat water as an infinite resource that can be sold at cost assuming a near zero cost of production(actual cost is a few dollars per thousand gallons). Yes, we should have low cost for the first maybe 1000 gallons a household uses per month, but after that costs should be set by the market.

      It is amazing how quickly even the most ardent conservatives becomes a socialist when they asked to pay for water. How the though of losing green lawns and swimming pools makes then forsake their Ayn Rand philosophy. The thing is that tier prices would provide the funds to exactly what so many conservatives want. it would provide funds to acquire additional water rights and build additional infrastructure. As a bonus these things would be paid for directly by those who benefit from them, not the general taxpayer many of whom probably are responsible water users.

      Here is another thing that would make conservatives happy. There is water available but it is often being wasted on two profit crops, like Alfalfa hay. As mentioned, tared prices would free up funds to buy water rights. Paying farmer a dollar per thousand gallons of water would mean they would probably make more money than growing and selling the alfalfa.

      Instead the socialists are winning because low water rates is forcing states like California to take that water away from farmers, thus threatening their livelihoods. I don't know why applying the solution that Cuba used to solve it's problem is preferable to good old capitalism.

  • by Crashmarik ( 635988 ) on Saturday June 13, 2015 @02:06PM (#49904443)

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    Of course in a state that knew it had 7 year droughts and a history of 100 YEAR + long droughts the greens managed to get their way and prevent the needed infrastructure from being built.

    I really need to know what the science was behind these decisions ?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Ryanrule ( 1657199 )
      the problem is the farms. they need to go.
      • Because no one needs to eat ?

        People that live in all those communities don't need work ?

        I'm no green but seeing farms that have been worked for generations shut down because assholes have gained control of the politics is heart rending.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by BitZtream ( 692029 )

          People who move to the desert and then demand someone else supply them with water (which comes from out of state btw) so they can grow crops that would NEVER grow there on their own ...

          Yea, fuck those people and their ignorance, they did it to themselves and its bullshit they are dragging down others with them.

          They KNEW this was an issue, how did they know? BECAUSE THEY HAVE TO PIPE WATER IN FROM HUNDREDS OF MILES AWAY AND THEIR CROPS DON'T STAND A SNOWBALLS CHANCE IN HELL WITHOUT SOMEONE ELSES WATER.

          You'r

        • by CaptainPinko ( 753849 ) on Saturday June 13, 2015 @02:31PM (#49904587)
          Maybe those farms never belonged there in the first place, or they should have not let the population grow to the point that it was unsustainable?
        • I'd say that those farms haven't worked for generations. It's just the true costs of farming in a water poor region haven't been felt as badly before and the poor decisions on the past are being felt. You have some farmers see water being transported by their fields when they aren't being allocated any to other farms with unlimited allocations just because of when the allocations where given out. And people are draining the aquifers as fast as they can drill the wells without thinking of the consequences

          • No, farming in an area when you absolutely need to have water transported in so that you can harvest a crop doesn't work in the long run.

            Sure, it does. We've been doing it for thousands of years. In this case the only problem is that they are taking it from a place that still needs it.
            That obviously doesn't work. On the other hand, taking it from the ocean there would be an infinite supply. That is the correct solution. While
            they're at it, they should build up capacity past what is needed and use some of the excess desalinated water to replenish the water table that
            they so recklessly deplinished.

    • Of course in a state that knew it had 7 year droughts and a history of 100 YEAR + long droughts the greens managed to get their way and prevent the needed infrastructure from being built.

      your unsustainable farming is catching up to you, nothing more. what was the science behind the decision to starting farms in a desert? shortsightedness is a problem... which is why you started farming crops that require the more water of any other crop IN A DESERT .

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 13, 2015 @02:09PM (#49904461)

    I don't understand why we continue to allow incompetent government management of a critical resource. How many times do we have to prove that PRIVATE management of natural resources is better than useless wasteful goverment before people believe it?

    If we privatize the water, then competition will simultaneously allow greater resource utilization at a lower cost and with greater access for everyone. Guaranteed.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      Because private management of resources isn't better. That's just you're invocation of your magic sky faerie god; the Invisible Hand. Some of the worst environmental disasters in history have been the product of private corporations.

      At least we can throw governments out. Corporations are bequeathed a nearly impenetrable shield by way of the legal system and the brain dead religiosity of the Libertarian church of the Free Market.

    • If we privatize the water, then competition will simultaneously allow greater resource utilization at a lower cost and with greater access for everyone. Guaranteed.

      What could possibly go wrong? [youtube.com].

  • Desalination (Score:5, Insightful)

    by LynnwoodRooster ( 966895 ) on Saturday June 13, 2015 @02:12PM (#49904475) Journal
    Here in Ventura County we pay more for water than in Israel or Saudi Arabia, two countries with much more severe water problems than California - and who get a large (or even majority) portion of their water from desalination. We have the world's largest body of water right next to us - and we simply don't utilize it. Desalination.
    • Here's sort of the problem with that...

      Israel and Saudi Arabia have no water. They haven't had water for the past couple thousand years. Therefore, they need desalination plants.

      Is this drought going to be the new norm for California? Or are we in a cycle?

      So we build desalination plants. And then it rains. Then what? Do you pay to keep those plants running--remember that those plants cost money to run. They also cost money to be maintained so that they can be used when a drought comes. Are you willi

      • Re:Desalination (Score:5, Insightful)

        by pla ( 258480 ) on Saturday June 13, 2015 @02:51PM (#49904689) Journal
        So we build desalination plants. And then it rains. Then what? Do you pay to keep those plants running--remember that those plants cost money to run.

        Yes, you do! You live in the middle of a fucking desert! This drought will eventually end, but you will have another one. More importantly, even without the drought, you already had your neighbors to the North ready to tar and feather you due to rainwater collection restrictions and river passthrough quotas.

        You choose to live in a place with no water. You have the fifth largest economy in the world. You bail yourselves out of your current self-inflicted disaster - And then yes, you maintain that solution for next time.
        • by PRMan ( 959735 )
          Our water table is so low that we NEED to keep using them anyway. We need to let the groundwater rebuild.
      • Are you willing to pay money for the land, pay money to build them, and pay money for the maintenance for when we don't need them? Or will you begin whining about all this useless infrastructure at that point?

        Governments have been doing this for thousands of years. There are even stories in the bible about "saving for a rainy day" or in this case, saving
        for a drought. The US Government has caves all over this country full of honey, cheese, corn, and military equipment not to mention nukes that
        will never be used "just in case". Current estimate is that the drought cost California over 1.5 billion last year. If they build a desalination plant and
        then it rained it would be worth it to spend a few million a yea

    • Re:Desalination (Score:4, Interesting)

      by JonWan ( 456212 ) on Saturday June 13, 2015 @03:32PM (#49904933)

      OK, I looked it up....
      Ventura Calif.
      Water for single family housing 15,000 gals 75.65
      Waste water 62.45
      total 138.10 bi monthly

      West Texas near Lubbock
      My water bill 3000 gals PER MONTH
      Water 65.86
      Sewer 34.00
      Total 99.86
      Bi Monthly 199.72

      I've said it before suck it up Calif. Until you pay at least what I pay for water you get no sympathy from me.

  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Saturday June 13, 2015 @02:18PM (#49904513)

    He said that the difference is that the state has grown in population to 38 million and has vast acres of farmland to irrigate, a problem with which the state cannot be blamed.

    the actual populous takes a surprisingly low amount of water. the problem was and always has been the absurd crops they are trying to raise there. the state can't be blamed? who is HEAVILY subsidising water for farmers? THE STATE. who has refused to restrict water to farmlands until now? THE STATE. who has refused to change until it's half a decade too late? THE STATE.

    i dont feel bad for California because this is their payment for their tireless efforts, day in and day out to use all the water they possibly can. this isn't a punishment, they earned this.

  • by Eravnrekaree ( 467752 ) on Saturday June 13, 2015 @02:42PM (#49904641)

    A scenario like this has been warned about or some time. The policymakers have ignored these warnings. Instead, they spent money on wasteful projects such as long distance high speed rail, projects which are not really feasible in a state like California. Basically, California is run by foolish idiots who ignored their states real problems and instead wasted money on expensive and wasteful long distance rail projects, which are more about optics than about value. Before you misunderstand, understand that rail inside cities is a good idea, but the market dynamics for that is very different from rail lines between cities. Building long distance high speed rail is far too expensive and will not really be a good value at all, partly due to planes likely being preferable to many, with all of the costs and funding being accounted for. The amount of track that has to be installed is far greater, than in cities where you can serve commuters with far less trackage. For ground based transport an upgrade to bus lines would be a much more cost effective solution.

    Instead of spending money on that it should have spent it on more water projects, including desalination, reservoirs and storage. Things like water storage and transport are just not as hip and cool sounding as massively wasteful white elephants like the long distance rail.

    • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

      ...planes likely being preferable to many...

      Sure, I'll put up with a four hour check-in and being prodded and poked and felt up by a fucking Rent-A-Cop.

      On second thought, when's the next train?

      (in England, we don't have x-ray machines at railway stations).

  • Said it best.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    1:33 to 1:43 sums it up.

    TL;DR version You live in a fukin' desert! You get your water by stealing it from others!

    Need water? Move to a place that has water. Just not the states you already stole it from.

  • by ihtoit ( 3393327 ) on Saturday June 13, 2015 @03:15PM (#49904825)

    Hydraulic fracturing requires freshwater. This is apparently because the salt content of sea water corrodes the plumbing that's designed to withstand as yet unnamed chemical cocktails but which are known to contain hydrochloric acid. And if you believe that, I have a bridge you might be interested in. Now, we're not talking a few thousand gallons of freshwater here, we're talking SEVERAL HUNDRED TONS - PER TREATMENT. What spoil is "recovered" does not come near the spoil that went in, so it has to go somewhere, right? Where does it go? Nobody's telling us (it's a fucking trade secret!), so we can only make the assumption that it eventually seeps back into the water table to contaminate it - which is why it'd be nice to know what's going on down there.

    Fracking consumes more fresh water per surface area than any suburb, even the 20mm-high-lawn lot.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 13, 2015 @03:24PM (#49904879)

    The reason tech startups aren't solving water problems in california is because for the most part it is not in need of a technical solution. California has more than enough water for residential, commercial, and industrial use. Even if it didn't, waste water reclamation was tried, and defeated by a bunch of idiots branding it as toilet to tap. Even if that wasn't enough, desalination can be done at costs that are practical for residential use when compared with the infrastructure and maintenance for distributing the water.

    The real issue is agriculture. Agriculture uses 80% of the developed water in california, and agricultural use is covered by a set of insane historical policies relating to water rights based on seniority which gives certain people the right to divert essentially unlimited amounts of water from rivers or pump out of aquifers, and requires others to fight over whatever is left.Those left behind in the seniority lottery are in fact practicing water conservation, but the senior holders have no incentive to spend on dime on water conservation, and haven't even taken the simplest efforts to reduce waste. Instead they fight legally any attempt to even get them to report how much water they are taking, and generally make crazy idiotic statements about how their rights are being infringed. The problem can't be solved without their involvement, and any tech company would be insane to bet their business and their capital on political reform of water rights.

  • by scubamage ( 727538 ) on Saturday June 13, 2015 @07:26PM (#49906057)
    Nestle was pumping around 1m gallons a week out of the ground for sale. Are they still doing that, or has the state finally decided that maybe it's not a good idea to tell citizens they can't have water, but tell megacorps they can?

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