Posted on 03/16/2015 5:01:21 AM PDT by HomerBohn
Once upon a time, much of the state of California was a barren desert. And now, thanks to the worst drought in modern American history, much of the state is turning back into one. Scientists tell us that the 20th century was the wettest century that the state of California had seen in 1000 years. But now weather patterns are reverting back to historical norms, and California is rapidly running out of water. It is being reported that the state only has approximately a one year supply of water left in the reservoirs, and when the water is all gone there are no contingency plans. Back in early 2014, California Governor Jerry Brown declared a drought emergency for the entire state, but since that time water usage has only dropped by 9 percent. That is not nearly enough. The state of California has been losing more than 12 million acre-feet of total water a year since 2011, and we are quickly heading toward an extremely painful water crisis unlike anything that any of us have ever seen before.
But dont take my word for it. According to the Los Angeles Times, Jay Famiglietti is the senior water scientist at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory/Caltech and a professor of Earth system science at UC Irvine. What he has to say about the horrific drought in California is extremely sobering
As our wet season draws to a close, it is clear that the paltry rain and snowfall have done almost nothing to alleviate epic drought conditions. January was the driest in California since record-keeping began in 1895. Groundwater and snowpack levels are at all-time lows. Were not just up a creek without a paddle in California, were losing the creek too.
Data from NASA satellites show that the total amount of water stored in the Sacramento and San Joaquin river basins that is, all of the snow, river and reservoir water, water in soils and groundwater combined was 34 million acre-feet below normal in 2014. That loss is nearly 1.5 times the capacity of Lake Mead, Americas largest reservoir.
Statewide, weve been dropping more than 12 million acre-feet of total water yearly since 2011. Roughly two-thirds of these losses are attributable to groundwater pumping for agricultural irrigation in the Central Valley. Farmers have little choice but to pump more groundwater during droughts, especially when their surface water allocations have been slashed 80% to 100%. But these pumping rates are excessive and unsustainable. Wells are running dry. In some areas of the Central Valley, the land is sinking by one foot or more per year.
Are you starting to understand why so many experts are so alarmed?
For much more from Famiglietti, check out this 60 Minutes interview.
According to the U.S. Drought Monitor, essentially the entire state is suffering drought conditions right now. And as you can see from the map below, most of the state is currently experiencing either the highest or the second-highest classification of drought
Nearly 40 million people live in the state of California at the moment.
What are they all going to do when the water is gone?
In some rural areas, reservoirs are already nearly bone dry. And in other areas, the water quality has gone way down. For example, in one Southern California neighborhood black water is now coming out of the taps
Residents of a Southern California neighborhood are concerned about the fact that the water flowing out of the taps in their homes is the color black. Thats right; the water coming out of their faucets is indeed black not gray, not cloudy but black. Inky, opaque black water that the water company says is okay to drink.
Those who live in Gardena, California, are understandably skeptical when asked to consume water that strongly resembles crude oil or something emitted by a squid. The water reportedly also has an odor of rotten eggs or sewer smell, according to one resident.
Perhaps you dont care about what happens to California.
Perhaps you believe that they are just getting what they deserve.
And you might be right about that.
But the truth is that this is a crisis for all of us, because an enormous amount of our fresh produce is grown in the state.
As I discussed in a previous article, the rest of the nation is very heavily dependent on the fruits and vegetables grown in California. The following numbers represent Californias contribution to our overall production
-99 percent of the artichokes
-44 percent of asparagus
-two-thirds of carrots
-half of bell peppers
-89 percent of cauliflower
-94 percent of broccoli
-95 percent of celery
-90 percent of the leaf lettuce
-83 percent of Romaine lettuce
-83 percent of fresh spinach
-a third of the fresh tomatoes
-86 percent of lemons
-90 percent of avocados
-84 percent of peaches
-88 percent of fresh strawberries
-97 percent of fresh plums
Without the agricultural production of the state of California, we are in a massive amount of trouble.
And of course there are other areas all over the globe that are going through similar things. For instance, taps in Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paolo are running dry as Brazil experiences the worst drought that it has seen in 80 years.
The world simply does not have enough fresh water left at this point, and that is why water is being called the new oil. The following comes from CBS News
Its been said that the wars of the 21st century may well be fought over water. The Earths population has more than doubled over the last 50 years and the demand for fresh water to drink and to grow food has surged along with it. But sources of water like rainfall, rivers, streams, reservoirs, certainly havent doubled. So where is all that extra water coming from? More and more, its being pumped out of the ground.
Water experts say groundwater is like a savings account something you draw on in times of need. But savings accounts need to be replenished, and there is new evidence that so much water is being taken out, much of the world is in danger of a groundwater overdraft.
And if scientists are right, what we are experiencing right now may just be the very beginning of our problems. In fact, one team of researchers has concluded that the Southwestern United States is headed for a megadrought that could last for decades
Scientists had already found that the Southwestern United States were at great risk of experiencing a significant megadrought (in this case meaning drought conditions that last for over 35 years) before the end of the 21st century. But a new study published in Science Advances added some grim context to those predictions.
Columbia University climate scientists Jason Smerdon and Benjamin Cook, and Cornell Universitys Toby Ault were co-authors on the study. They took data from tree rings and other environmental records of climate from the Southwest and compared them to the projections of 17 different climate models that look at precipitation and soil moisture. When they made the comparison between past and future, they found that all the models agreed: the next big megadrought is coming, and it will be way worse than anything weve seen in over 1,000 yearsincluding droughts that have been credited with wiping out civilizations.
Needless to say, along with any water crisis comes a food crisis.
Virtually everything that we eat requires a tremendous amount of water to grow. And at this point, the world is already eating more food than it produces most years.
So what is going to happen to us as this water crisis gets even worse?
Why not desalination? There’s an ocean out there.
Do not worry about the delta smelt, they will be fine.
Put the dams back online and let the Farmers use the available water INSTEAD OF allowing the water to flow into the sea
Government does not worry about people in environmental regs, only delta smelt. It will take a complete change in government regs in Washington to make any change, and that includes a complete flushing of all regulators and regulations.
I have dozens of asparagus plants in my perennial garden, growing about 20 perennial climbing spinach plants under grow lights, I have 3 dwarf peach trees, MANY strawberries, and 2 plum trees.
Carrots, bell peppers , cauliflower, broccoli, celery, leaf lettuce, Romaine lettuce, tomatoes, and artichokes are not hard to grow.
I don’t do much with lemons or avocados.
Give California back to Mexico, and build a huge fence around it (as much to keep the liberal moonbats in as the illegals)
Until it stops being a communist state, I don't!
Well, of course I do.
Because the liberals who run Cali would much rather have the issue than a solution. Hold the issue in front of voters' noses every election and they'll bite at it, just as a speckled trout goes after a salmon egg on a hook. Desalination would rehydrate the thirsty landscape out there, and provide the folks with all the drinking water they could ever need (wouldn't it also assuage all those climate nutjobs' concerns about the "rising ocean," too?). It has worked for decades for the Israelis. But instead, Cali's state government wants $17 billion trains.
Any article that says “all the models agree” has lost all credibility with me.
This is another “crisis” to be exploited.
It is true that we have been “mining” water. But food in the United States costs less than half it does in Europe. The extreme crisis will occur in the marginal populations, like in Africa and Bangladesh, that will not be able to afford increases in food prices.
Well.. the uber-liberal coastal region, anyway. There are still some Americans languishing behind the lines there.
Over reliance on California is foolish in the best of times. Its an arid state with a potential for serious drought always looming.
Crops should be regionally diversified. 2012 is a perfect example. The midwest apple crop was virtually non existent but the northwest apple crop boomed. Root crops and leafy green vegetables also do very well in those regions.
That said, abundance is a good thing. If we grow more than we need we will never have a shortage.
So the desert conditions are the “historical norm”? Who let the little nugget of truth out? I keep hearing the drought is caused by man made image change...
That would take a lot of CHEAP energy. No NUCLEAR power plants, No cheap energy.
America's marginal populations do their grocery shopping at KFC, which will remain largely unaffected. :)
Why not stop dumping water in the ocean for the smelt?
They will be free, per Obama's edict, to invade other parts of the country.
California is now and always has been a desert. There was never a time when California was not a desert.
The coming of too many people to overuse the supply of imported water has created unsustainable urban sprawl. The weather of sunshine and no rain is the reason there is desert. Sunshine and no rain produces desert. Desert with mega population is doomed
Maybe if CA dries up the fruit and vegetable monopoly will end. Other states can start growing fresh fruit and veggies and it can be picked by Americans. Not with the indentured slave CA model uses.
Amazing how that ‘desert’ manages to feed America.
because common sense hasn’t prevailed in our country for over 30 years—maybe longer.
I came here to say this. :)
They’ve got an OCEAN of water. They just need to take the salt out. This is how they do it in the oil-rich countries in the middle east.
Build two huge plants and get plenty of water.
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