You Cali mofos might be bathing in bottled water soon- Lake Mead plummets to unprecedented low, 5th set of human remains discovered

The salt? Sell it, make road salt with it, mix for saltwater fish tanks...etc.

sidebar: when you first start a saltwater tank and do water changes you gotta buy salt mix to make the seawater... so if they're removing it from seawater to begin with.... and any biologicals that they remove.... make fertilizer with it :dunno:



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Road salt is the worst for the environment, and fish tank water? come on son...
 
Road salt is the worst for the environment, and fish tank water? come on son...
:confused: ...What would be the problem here? You're already removing the salt from sea water..... the salt mix could be used for home aquarium use as well as full sized commercial aquariums not near the ocean...... for my 220 gallon aquarium I have to purchase sea salt mix to make salt water for regular water changes... where are they getting it from? And I'm sure that there are thousands of other uses for it

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:confused: ...What would be the problem here? You're already removing the salt from sea water..... the salt mix could be used for home aquarium use as well as full sized commercial aquariums not near the ocean...... for my 220 gallon aquarium I have to purchase sea salt mix to make salt water for regular water changes... where are they getting it from? And I'm sure that there are thousands of other uses for it

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uhhmnmn, some of us just eat fish and don't keep them as pets...wtf is your angle bot?
 
Water from the Great Lakes can be pumped into the Mississippi River. The Great Lakes make up 20% of the Earth’s fresh drinking water.

The only other option is desalination of the oceans.

The tech is there to do it. Just like anything it will cost money. Along with the Will to do it.
Fuck you. They got laws against that. Let them bitches out west die of thirst. You want GL water then you are welcome to move there.

Otherwise enjoy the water Nestlie steals for you losers out west.

When the place goesa up in smoke, don't think you gonna move back east without paying that west coast price plus double.

Once the flood gates open the Midwest ain gonna be a rest haven for you west coast MFers.
 
It's going to be people flooding in from other countries. Places like the middle east won't be habitable. These Republicans really gonna lose it lol.
 
I am a hard-core Democrat and laughed at him in the 90s but I take back all of that laughter because he was correct.
Like with the Internet he deserves some credit but he wasn't the first or only person warning us about climate change. Scientists have known about for at least 50 years.
 
Like with the Internet he deserves some credit but he wasn't the first or only person warning us about climate change. Scientists have known about for at least 50 years.
Scientist was saying the same thing 50 years ago but Al Gore took the stick and ran with it. Again Al Gore was 100% correct and the problem we have now shit is going to get worse. And don’t even get me started with the virus is this popping up all over the place right now that’s another story
 
Scientist was saying the same thing 50 years ago but Al Gore took the stick and ran with it. Again Al Gore was 100% correct and the problem we have now shit is going to get worse. And don’t even get me started with the virus is this popping up all over the place right now that’s another story
Yeah, this shit is going to get much worse. Florida will definitely see it in a few decades because I know they're not doing anything to preserve the coastline down there. Then, of course, all of the tropical diseases moving north as it gets warmer.
 
Yeah, this shit is going to get much worse. Florida will definitely see it in a few decades because I know they're not doing anything to preserve the coastline down there. Then, of course, all of the tropical diseases moving north as it gets warmer.
Oh yeah Florida is definitely going to be underwater and I hate to say it but it has a chance to happen in my lifetime. The changes the Al Gore is talking about is accelerating…. The changes we are seeing now didn’t supposed to happen until 2050 or 2040
 
Oh yeah Florida is definitely going to be underwater and I hate to say it but it has a chance to happen in my lifetime. The changes the Al Gore is talking about is accelerating…. The changes we are seeing now didn’t supposed to happen until 2050 or 2040
Scientists already declared it's past the point of no return. We're seeing worse wildfires, droughts, extreme weather events, etc. Politicians don't have the will to fix it and meanwhile the right belittles Gore and Thundberg.
 
I remember them showing how bad it was when trump was out there bout them wild fires...and the state,,county and city knew this day
Was coming and it sho nuff came,, Damm sucks to be them...im smack dabb in tha middle of these great lakes son....
 
Scientists already declared it's past the point of no return. We're seeing worse wildfires, droughts, extreme weather events, etc. Politicians don't have the will to fix it and meanwhile the right belittles Gore and Thundberg.
I dabble in meteorology and astronomy in my opinion the only way that this process can reverse itself if the earth goes through another Ice Age….. Yes it will kill a lot of people on this earth but people need to think of earth as a living thing. Also right now the ocean currents is almost coming to a stop which is going to make the weather more crazy.
 
I remember them showing how bad it was when trump was out there bout them wild fires...and the state,,county and city knew this day
Was coming and it sho nuff came,, Damm sucks to be them...im smack dabb in tha middle of these great lakes son....
Trump made that situation worse with his stupid comments he barely wanted to help California they had to force him to help this is why he needs to stay far away from Washington hope he will be in jail one day.
 
uhhmnmn, some of us just eat fish and don't keep them as pets...wtf is your angle bot?
:confused: ...Bot? wtf are you smoking? I've been here longer than you... You acting like having a saltwater aquarium is some strange fucking hobby. FOH with dumb ass talk.... :smh: :smh: :smh: :smh: :smh: :smh: :smh:

sidebar: you sound like you've been indoctrinated or something
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This is a predication map over the last week. You can see how much rain the southwest doesn’t get.

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If I was to create a map for a year, it would look very similar. Southern Cali isn’t built for long term human settlement. The next 10 to 20 years us going to be interesting for that part of the country.

However, I did read an article that El Niño years will become more frequent with climate change which will help improve the drought in Cali if predictions hold true.
I was just discussing this with somebody on Facebook the reason why it’s really bad for the last few years in the south west is there has been a persistent La Niña. For those who don’t know La Niña is a cold pool of water in the eastern central Pacific Ocean. This event also makes the hurricanes more active for the East Coast of America and we are currently in a La Niña phase.
 
They better build a pipeline from the pacific in Cali to lake mead and have filtration points along the round to have a consistent floor of water
 
How Nanotech Can Help Solve The Fresh Water Crisis

Nanotechnology is a process that involves manipulating and controlling matter on the atomic scale. In the process of water purification, this involves using nanomembranes to soften the water and eradicate biological and chemical contaminants as well as other physical particles and molecules.

 
Picked up a load this morning in Portland, OR headed to SLC, UT.

I’m driving east on I-84 along the Columbia River. Anybody familiar with this area knows the Columbia River is like the Mississippi River of the Pacific Northwest.

I noticed 2 of the Hydroelectric Dams along the way, The Dalles Dam and John Day Dam. They had all the gates open allowing all the water behind it to flow out to relieve pressure on the dams. The Columbia River is pretty maxed out from the snowpacks melting out from the Mountains in Canada.

The Dalles Dam
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The John Jay Dam
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What got me is all that water flows right out into the Pacific Ocean where it’s not needed. That water should be pumped out and circulated around the West where it’s heavily needed like Lake Mead and Lake Powell.

That is fresh water basically running down the drain.

Instead of Oil Pipelines like the Keystone XL, we need pipelines/canals to move that water south and other locations in the US.

Like I said earlier, politicians gotta have the will to do it.

And folks need to push these politicians to make it happen.
 
Colorado River states need to drastically cut down their water usage ASAP, or the federal government will step in

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An aerial view of Lake Powell on the Colorado River along the Arizona-Utah border on Sept. 11, 2019.

During a U.S. Senate hearing on Western drought earlier this week, the commissioner for the Bureau of Reclamation told the states in the Colorado River Basin that they have 60 days to create an emergency plan to stop using between 2 and 4 million acre-feet of water in the next year or the agency will use its emergency authority to make the cuts itself.

For context, the entire state of Arizona is allowed to use 2.8 million acre-feet of Colorado River water each year.

“The challenges we are seeing today are unlike anything we have seen in our history,” Commissioner Camille Touton said at the hearing. She said hotter temperatures driven by climate change have led to less water reaching Lake Powell and Lake Mead, the two largest reservoirs in the U.S., which have both recently hit their lowest levels on record.

The Colorado River system supplies water and hydropower to millions of people in the West and is the lifeblood of the seven states and 30 native tribes in the river’s basin. The river system has reached critically low levels amid decades of drought and warming temperatures, which dries out soil that then saps the moisture from snowmelt that would otherwise flow into rivers and reservoirs.

Touton said the seven states must “stay at the table until the job is done.”

The federal direction comes just a month after the bureau announced it wouldl hold back water in Lake Powell on the Utah-Arizona border. It’s the first time the agency has used its emergency power to delay a release of water from Lake Powell that normally goes to Arizona, California and Nevada. Instead, the federal agency plans to keep more than 480,000 acre-feet of water in the reservoir to prop up supplies to protect hydropower production.

In a separate action announced earlier this year, upper-basin states worked with the Bureau of Reclamation on a plan to send another 500,000 acre-feet to Lake Powell from Flaming Gorge Reservoir on the Utah-Wyoming border under their drought response agreement for the year.

Commissioner Touton’s directive dropped just a couple of days before the University of Colorado Boulder’s annual Colorado law conference on natural resources, which is focused on the Colorado River.

“That elephant is filling this whole room,” John Fleck, a water policy professor at the University of New Mexico, said at the start of his talk at the conference. Fleck, who has also written multiple books on the Colorado River, watched Touton’s testimony in his Alamosa hotel room en route to the conference.

“I kind of blanched,” Fleck said. “[Two to 4 million acre-feet] is a stunning amount of water,” he said.

Fleck said the directive, combined with the “threat” of federal action if the states don’t act, creates an extraordinary challenge for water managers and users in the Colorado River Basin — a group he noted included many of the people at the CU Boulder conference.

To explain the federal agency’s reasoning for calling for such massive cuts, bureau hydrologic engineer James Prairie presented to attendees an updated forecast of expected flows into Lakes Powell and Mead over the next few years.

By early 2024, projections show water levels in Lake Powell could drop too low for hydropower turbines to operate and generate electricity.

Tanya Trujillo, the assistant secretary of the U.S. Department of Interior for water and science, joined the conference virtually to talk about the Colorado River crisis and the demand for states to conserve more water.

“We are facing the growing reality that water supplies for agriculture, fisheries, ecosystems, industry and cities are no longer stable due to climate change,” Trujillo said.

Trujillo said the agency’s order for water cuts includes Colorado and other states in the upper part of the river system, even though they don’t rely on water supplies collected in Lake Powell and Lake Mead.

“We need to be taking action in all states, in all sectors, in all available ways,” Trujillo said. “We need to be thinking as one basin.”

Trujillo said it’s up to states to decide how to make the water cuts and said the agency didn’t have a formula for appropriate conservation measures. She said the states have been charged with creating lists of potential ways this water can be saved and that the federal government wants to support those ideas with funding and resources. Trujillo said some of the federal support for states’ efforts would come from the bipartisan infrastructure law enacted in January, which set aside billions of dollars for Western water projects.

Speaking on a conference panel, Anne Castle, a senior fellow at the Getches-Wilkinson Center at CU Boulder and a former assistant secretary for water and science at the U.S. Department of the Interior, wondered what the federal government’s demand might mean for Colorado if junior water rights holders are cut off from using the Colorado River.

“What do our ski areas look like if we don’t have snowmaking anymore? Those are junior water rights,” Castle said. “What does it look like if part of our West Slope agriculture doesn’t exist anymore? What does that do to food security, what does it do to those communities? Those are the things that we’ve got to be thinking pretty hard about.”


CONTINUED:
Colorado River states need to drastically cut down their water usage ASAP, or the federal government will step in | Colorado Public Radio (cpr.org)
 
I've been saying for years: California need water desalinization plants and several of those super scooper planes (for fires).

Our leaders are walking around with their heads up their asses talking about "Winter Blend vs Summer Blend" gasoline. While they're taxing the shit out of us, tearing it off with both hands.

It's fucking ridiculous, here.

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Pressuring water through a membrane is different than what happens in nature using the Sun. Nobody knows the long term effects of any microplastics or chemical leaching. There is alot of agriculture exporting food to other countries who are desperation importing, causing problems.
If you build out more reservoirs, you will be revisiting this issue again. No wonder California is treating companies like shit, they are trying to repel people out of the state.
 
membrane1.jpg


Pressuring water through a membrane is different than what happens in nature using the Sun. Nobody knows the long term effects of any microplastics or chemical leaching. There is alot of agriculture exporting food to other countries who are desperation importing, causing problems.
If you build out more reservoirs, you will be revisiting this issue again. No wonder California is treating companies like shit, they are trying to repel people out of the state.
I can agree with you.

California wants rich people here, and the people whom are going to be servicing those rich people. Everyone else can get the Hell out.

People are leaving in droves. The cost of living is too high. Taxes are way too high. Gasoline, yeah! Food, again, yeah... I'm not surprised that people are leaving here and going to the South.
 
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