Posted on 07/26/2015 8:30:49 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Its not just producers and farmers who are getting hit with rising costs and growing shortages of water. When it comes to H2O, everyone better get prepared to pay more and get less.
In its long history, water has never been more precious, more controversial, more expensive or more essential to agriculture and commerce than it is right now.
A symbol of purity in cosmetic ads, a stand-in for quality in beer ads, the poster boy for violence and destruction during floods, hurricanes and tsunamis, water is currently so scarce out West that it threatens to decimate the nations most productive farming region (California) and cripple some of its most populous cities across the southwestern Sun Belt.
Water has even emerged as the calculus for measuring how ethical our food choices are: Hence the claim beef requires thousands of gallons of water per pound to produce, while grains and legumes consume only a fraction of the amount of water that animal foods require.
So say the industrys critics, at any rate.
The credibility of such accusations are suspect, but charges that livestock production and meat processing consume too much water have been bolstered by the impact of a serious drought now entering its fourth year in the western U.S.
In California, the drought is turning lawns brown, making #droughtshaming a trending topic and wreaking havoc with the states multi-billion-dollar agricultural industry. Even though farming has initially been exempted from the 25% reduction in water use mandated by the state for California cities and towns, the drought is taking a serious toll on growers and farmers.
According to a recent study from the University of California-Davis, the drought will likely cost California farmers more than $2.7 billion in losses, wipe out more than 18,000 jobs and result in the forced fallowing of more than 564,000 arable acres.
And thats this year alone.
This study does not address long-term costs of groundwater overdraft, such as higher pumping costs and greater water scarcity, according to the studys conclusions. The socioeconomic impacts of an extended drought, in 2016 and beyond, could be much more severe.
Richard Howitt, a professor emeritus at UC-Davis and one of the authors of the study, said the situation for farmers could get worse.
Howitt told National Public Radio that despite cuts of 60% in surface water supplies, access to underground water has allowed farmers to compensate for at least 70% of that. He said that meant the net reduction is about 8% of total irrigation water.
However, groundwater is now running dangerously low, especially in Californias Central Valley, the heart of the states farm country, an area that doesnt have the reserves of groundwater available elsewhere.
The impact [of the drought] is concentrated in areas that dont have access to underground water, the Central Valley, the San Joaquin Valley, the U-C Davis study noted.
Rising costs all around
Meanwhile, beyond the crippling shortages of rainfall and irrigation water that threaten U.S. agriculture and ultimately, the nations food supply urban residents are confronting another set of problems related not to supplies but to aging delivery systems.
As the era of cheap water comes to an end, said Tom Curtis, the head of government affairs for the American Water Works Association, rising costs for delivering water are poised to impact states and municipalities already struggling under budgetary constraints.
Not only farmers and producers, but virtually everyone either is or shortly will be faced with surging costs for an essential commodity which generations have taken for granted will always be available, and always be affordable.
Just go ahead and delete that expectation.
For starters, the main water lines in many older cities were installed as long as a century ago and now urgently need to be replaced. The price tag? According to AWWA estimates, such a project would cost more than $2 trillion over the next 25 years to upgrade and expand drinking water and wastewater systems nationally.
Thats the conservative estimate, by the way.
Meanwhile, cities across the Sun Belt are facing the prospect of future water shortages and are already spending massive amounts of money searching for additional sources of supply. Tapping into newer aquifers and building bigger reservoirs are temporary fixes, but dont solve the essential problem of providing sufficient water for millions of people living in what are desert landscapes.
Theres one other problem facing the majority of urban areas, both large and small: EPA rules require replacement of the dual storm-sewer and sanitary-sewer systems currently in place. Such systems overflow during storms or incidents of heavy precipitation and discharge raw sewage into surface waters.
Thats going to cost more hundreds of billions of dollars that cities and states dont have sitting in some rainy-day account.
So guess whos going to pay for it all?
You and me and every other resident of virtually every municipality in the country.
Water has become as critical as oil blue is indeed the new black and its poised to become not only as precious but equally expensive.
Dan Murphy is a food-industry journalist and commentator.
PING!
And yet they try to force everyone they can onto a community sewer system.
Global warming is the answer.
As the earth gradually warms and melts the icecaps, it creates more water in the oceans. More water in the oceans along with higher temps, means more evaporation. More evaporation means more water in the atmosphere. More water in the atmosphere means more rain and snow on the earth. More rain and snow on the earth means more water in the rivers and the underground aquifers. More water and snow on earth gradually lowers the temps. Also, means more ice for the icecaps.
Hmmmm... What was the question again?
I have a grand idea. Let’s have an open border and bring in even more people. That is how you solve the water problem.
Almost forgot . . .
Maybe if they all peed into the reservoirs.
No, the decimation of the nations most productive farming region (California) occurred by court order to save the f***ing snail darter in the Sacramento delta. Half of all precipitation is washed out to sea for this stupid, non-native species. F***ing environmentalist wackos.
charges that livestock production and meat processing consume too much water
And, there it is. Bogus excuses in order to attack what they really hate, animal consumption. More lies by the PETA type fools.
no no no as algore tells it, it will both flood the oceans and parch the deserts. and if we ask questions we are lower than a neanderthal’s knee.
Cut bait fish
I believe you are thinking of the Delta Smelt.
If there is a shortage of water, it’s because government is in charge of it. As Milton Friedman said, if you put the government in charge of the deserts, there would soon be a shortage of sand.
Lake Shasta in Northern California is an empty Mud Hole.
and the state is trying to cut off the water to an entire town (Mountain House Ca.)
and fining Tracy irrigation district for pumping water they have a right to.
Fascist Marxist Bastards in Sacramento.
Water has been more precious and in shorter supply, the loser writing this just does not know history.
A quick google of Great Depression and dust bowl might help give him a clue.
Technology is currently capable of desalination at a very economical price in areas where rain fall is unreliable and many parts of the United States are actually more concerned with floods.
The problem is not lack of water, it's lack of distribution infrastructure and lack of will to develop resources and confront “environmentalists” who oppose such development.
Water gets cut off.
People move out.
Land gets bought at fire-sale prices.
Water comes back on.
Follow the money.
I am under the impression that this is a government caused water crisis.
Not to say that there isn’t a drought, but the government has closed off lot of options out west and let in a lot of illegal aliens.
Ah, yes. You are correct. Thanks.
D*** delta smelts!
Correctomundo. Environmentalists caused this water situation deliberately.
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