Here we have a story from the AP. Fiction at it’s best. Anyone remember the story of “Chicken Little”.
Water Shortages Seen in Many States
An epic drought in Georgia threatens the water supply for millions. Florida doesn’t have nearly enough water for its expected population boom. The Great Lakes are shrinking. Upstate New York’s reservoirs have dropped to record lows. And in the West, the Sierra Nevada snowpack is melting faster each year. Across America, the picture is critically clear – the nation’s freshwater supply can no longer quench its thirst.
The government projects that at least 36 states will face water shortages within five years because of a combination of rising temperatures, drought, population growth, urban sprawl, waste and excess.
“Is it a crisis? If we don’t do some decent water planning, it could be,” said Jack Hoffbuhr, executive director of the Denver-based American Water Works Association.
Water managers will need to take bold steps to keep taps flowing, including conservation, recycling, desalination and stricter controls on development.
“We’ve hit a remarkable moment,” said Barry Nelson, a senior policy analyst with the Natural Resources Defense Council. “The last century was the century of water engineering. The next century is going to have to be the century of water efficiency.”
The price tag for ensuring a reliable water supply could be staggering. Experts estimate that just upgrading pipes to handle new supplies could cost the nation $300 billion over 30 years.
“Unfortunately, there’s just not going to be any more cheap water,” said Randy Brown, Pompano Beach’s utilities director.
It’s not just America’s problem – it’s global.
Australia is in the midst of a 30-year dry spell, and population growth in urban centers of sub-Saharan Africa is straining resources. Asia has 60 percent of the world’s population, but only about 30 percent of its fresh water.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a United Nations network of scientists, said this year, that by 2050 up to 2 billion people worldwide could be facing major water shortages.
The U.S. used more than 148 trillion gallons of water in 2000, the latest figures available from the U.S. Geological Survey. That includes residential, commercial, agriculture, manufacturing and every other use – almost 500,000 gallons per person.
Coastal states like Florida and California face a water crisis not only from increased demand, but also from rising temperatures that are causing glaciers to melt and sea levels to rise. Higher temperatures mean more water lost to evaporation. And rising seas could push saltwater into underground sources of fresh water.
Florida represents perhaps the nation’s greatest water irony. A hundred years ago, the state’s biggest problem was it had too much water. But decades of dikes, dams and water diversions have turned swamps into cities.
Little land is left to store water during wet seasons and so much landscape has been paved over that water can no longer penetrate the ground in some places to recharge aquifers. As a result, the state is forced to flush millions of gallons of excess into the ocean to prevent flooding.
Also, the state dumps hundreds of billions of gallons a year of treated wastewater into the Atlantic through pipes – water that could otherwise be used to irrigation.
Florida’s environmental chief, Michael Sole, is seeking legislative action to get municipalities to reuse the wastewater.
“As these communities grow, instead of developing new water with new treatment systems, why not better manage the commodity they already have and produce an environmental benefit at the same time?” Sole said.
Florida leads the nation in water reuse by reclaiming some 240 billion gallons annually, but it is not nearly enough, Sole said.
Floridians use about 2.4 trillion gallons of water a year. The state projects that by 2025, the population will have increased 34 percent from about 18 million to more than 24 million people, pushing the annual demand for water to nearly 3.3 trillion gallons.
More than half of the states expected population boom is projected in a three county area that includes Miami, Fort Lauderdale and Palm Beach, where water use is already about 1.5 trillion gallons a year.
“We just passed a crossroads. The chief water sources are basically gone,” said John Mulliken, director of water supply for the South Florida Water Management District. “We really are at a critical moment in Florida history.”
In addition to recycling and conservation, technology holds promise.
There are more than 1,000 desalination plants in the U.S., many in the Sunbelt, where baby boomers are retiring at a dizzying rate.
The Tampa Bay Seawater Desalination Plant is producing about 25 million gallons a day of fresh drinking water, about 10 percent of that area’s demand. The $158 million facility is North America’s largest plant of its kind. Miami-Dade County is working with the city of Hialeah to build a reverse osmosis plant to remove salt from water in deep brackish wells. Smaller such plants are in operation across the state.
Californians use nearly 23 trillion gallons of water a year, much of it coming from Sierra Nevada snow melt. But climate change is producing less snowpack and causing it to melt prematurely, jeopardizing future supplies.
Experts also say the Colorado River, which provides freshwater to seven Western states, will probably provide less water in coming years as global warming shrinks its flow.
California, like many other states, is pushing conservation as the cheapest alternative, looking to increase its supply of treated wastewater for irrigation and studying desalination, which the state hopes could eventually provide 20 percent of its freshwater.
“The need to reduce water waste and inefficiency is greater now than ever before,” said Benjamin Grumbles, assistant administrator for water at the Environmental Protection Agency. “Water efficiency is the wave of the future.”
MorganLighter
I fail completely to see why you categorise this story as fiction. The sky is indeed falling. The USA has squandered its natural resources at a ferocious and entirely unneccesary rate – water is just one of them. If you think water is renewable because it falls from the sky, bear in mind that for 100 years or more, America has been “mining” its resources of groundwater through water wells. This resource only renews itself very slowly – consequently, many groundwater aquifers are drying up, becoming polluted or sucking in salty seawater if near the coast. This puts more pressure on the surface water resources such as rivers and lakes – which of course have been heavily polluted.
This would be manageable but for the issue of population movements.
Take California as an example. According the 2005 California Water Plan, the state’s population will increase by 31.5% by 2030 from 36.5 million to 48 million. Even by 2015, this will rise by 12.6%. Even if all the desalination projects currently planned for California were implemented – and most are currently being blocked by the Coastal Commission and other bodies – this would only cater for half of that 12.6%. Southern California has traditionally piped its water in from the Colorado river; its share of this water is now decreasing. The deficit is going to have to be made up somehow and water conservation (bricks in the cistern, hosepipe bans etc) is one tool in the box.
Don’t knock it! It’s real.
No need to worry, Morgan. Just have some more Kool-Aid.
The sun has plenty of energy. Why not use that to produce potable water? I know it can be done. I have had my own plant operating for years, pretty primitive, but it worked.
rdbdwelsh@iprimus.com.au
Gypsy Davey,
Thank you for your wonderful comments. The purpose of my calling this a ‘fairy tale’ was to see who would respond and what they’d have to say. Some time ago I wrote a piece (as a guest author on another site) similar to the one above and no one seemed to pay attention. SO – I thought I would try it again but with a different spin on the title. Sorry, if you think was deceptive. I am well aware of the situation we are in.
Southern California also gets a tremendous amount of water from Norther California via the aqueduct that takes water from the northern rivers. An interesting book on how that all got started is “The King of California” by Mark Arax and Rick Wartzman. An, yes, also from the Colorado which is at its’ lowest level since recorded time – if what I read is correct.
Jared Diamond (Author of Guns, Germs and Steel), published a book in 2006 entitled “Collapse” which goes into detail what and how we are in the shape we’re in and have been for some time.
I am dumbfounded by the ‘head in the sand’ attitude of our state in the inactions and blockage of desalination plants and the lack of rationing. Here’s one that will make you scream (I’m assuming you live in CA) – where we live there are NO WATER METERS – we can let the hose run all day and night and pay the same. Isn’t that insane.
Regarding the California Water “Plan” – I wonder if they factored in the rise in alien population – if not, we’re really in for a world of hurt.
Take care and hope to see you back soon.
Bill,
I have no idea what you mean by your remark. If you’re alluding to the Jim Jones ‘kool-aid’ murder/suicide affair in Guyana – then it’s not funny. Besides, it wasn’t kool-aid, it was cyanide laced ‘FlaVor-Aid.
If I’m off base then let me know.
Ray Welsh,
What a fantastic idea. Leave it to a guy from Australia to teach the world how to conserve! Kudos to you.
What we’ve done to conserve is to have our house re-plumbed so that the waste water from sinks and clothes washer goes into a grey water tank to water the vegetation, wash vehicles, etc. Our black water goes through a septic tank and it’s cost prohibitive (at least for us) to run that through any type of reverse osmosis/charcoal filtering system to recover much of that.
We don’t have a dish-washer (actually we took it out) and wash by hand using less water than the newer d/w use.
Thanks for your comment. Gonna visit your site soon.
Ray – Thought your link was your website. I should have looked closer. Do you have a website?