The fight for water | DW Documentary

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  • Опубликовано: 9 авг 2022
  • Climate change is causing temperatures to rise. Extreme weather events and droughts are increasing. Springs and wells are drying up. And everyone needs more water. The battles for control over precious water reserves have begun.
    In some countries, water has always been available in abundance - and is wasted carelessly every day. But the climate crisis is changing that. Because the climate is warming, everyone needs more water than ever: for drinking, agriculture and industry. Water is the new gold.
    In many countries, the distribution battles for precious water reserves have already begun. In Mendocino, California, there is no longer enough water to flush the toilets. And in Germany, regional drinking water supplies collapse in hot weather. Groundwater levels have dropped to record lows in many places. Will we still have enough drinking water in the future? What happens when our water disappears?
    This is a three-part documentary series:
    Part 1: The fight for water - • The fight for water | ...
    Part 2: What happens when our water dries up? - • What happens when our ...
    Part 3: Who owns water? - • Who owns water? | DW D...
    Series playlist: • Thirst: When Our Water...
    #documentary #dwdocumentary #water
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Комментарии • 8 тыс.

  • @cloudyboyy8549
    @cloudyboyy8549 Год назад +3390

    Disneyland literally uses millions of gallons of water a day for their little theme parks, rich people used thousands of gallons to keep their 2 acred lands in California nice and green as they leave those properties vacant year round. Sue corporations and rich people for mishandling water during a crisis

    • @da1vinci1edi
      @da1vinci1edi Год назад +1

      Ofc its not gonna happen they are gonna feed the rest of us recycled and used water so we get even more sick and take even more drugs and develop even more side effects and die before we even get to our pensions

    • @muhammad-bin-american
      @muhammad-bin-american Год назад +159

      Absolutely!

    • @rotonuz
      @rotonuz Год назад +224

      Every industry that sells unnecessary goods does the same. They don't even care about their own life. Money has blinded them.

    • @Kittoes0124
      @Kittoes0124 Год назад +256

      Do your homework mate. I'm no defender of the rich, but the primary culprit is ridiculously irresponsible agricultural practices. Disneyland is not even a drop in the bucket in comparison.

    • @zanith56
      @zanith56 Год назад +70

      It’s not only California, bud.

  • @TomNook.
    @TomNook. Год назад +369

    Water has always been "gold"
    No-one can live without it

    • @gregbors8364
      @gregbors8364 Год назад +28

      The funny thing is, there have been wars for gold, oil, and even spices, but nobody actually *needs* those things.

    • @chihirostargazer6573
      @chihirostargazer6573 Год назад

      @@gregbors8364 all of those things have an imaginary value put on them. Gold is just a mineral and so are diamonds, spices are plants. The oil industry is pure evil that is destroying the environment for profit. Certain people decided these things would be "valuable" in order to put in place a system they knew they could manipulate in order to hoard wealth, and that is what they've done and continue to do.

    • @joejacko1587
      @joejacko1587 Год назад +8

      ​@@gregbors8364 an individual doesn't but a society does

    • @ragnarandersson2866
      @ragnarandersson2866 Год назад

      Trump he can live whit out water..
      He is super man.🤣🤣👍

    • @achim8239
      @achim8239 Год назад +5

      @@gregbors8364 Much of the unrest in hte Near East is caused by quarrels about the distribution of water.

  • @harrieelias5756
    @harrieelias5756 3 месяца назад +25

    DW is like I going to school and learn without having to pay tuition. I appreciate DW for your extremely positive contributions.
    Germany 🇩🇪 I love you.

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  3 месяца назад +3

      Thank you for watching! We're glad you like our content.

  • @acozylife8090
    @acozylife8090 Год назад +286

    This is literally why I’m going back to school and I’m going for water waste management thanks to these documentaries. I’ve been watching water docs for about a month now and I’m 24, I’m happy to say I finally know what I want to go to school for and this helped me figure that out.

    • @neal.karn-jones
      @neal.karn-jones Год назад +13

      Hurry up! Good luck!

    • @joanholland3438
      @joanholland3438 Год назад +10

      That great! Good luck to you and we need more people like you. I hope you can help this dilemma.

    • @nexusrift420
      @nexusrift420 Год назад +3

      with all the medications in the waste water... thats going to be vastly challenging i bet.

    • @urbanstuff9950
      @urbanstuff9950 Год назад +11

      Going to school based on ignorance.

    • @christopherdiedrich40
      @christopherdiedrich40 Год назад +7

      The University of Tube 👻

  • @brilliantmind9729
    @brilliantmind9729 Год назад +712

    Water is far more precious than gold. We can live without gold but we can never live without water

    • @dougwade1332
      @dougwade1332 Год назад

      Well it's good that there is plenty of water then huh? Maybe not where the liberals want to live but there is plenty of water same as always.

    • @joejacko1587
      @joejacko1587 Год назад +5

      an individual doesn't but a society does

    • @tg007ful
      @tg007ful Год назад +7

      wow, you truly are a "Brilliant Mind"

    • @gregorslana7723
      @gregorslana7723 Год назад +4

      Really? If I offered you 1kg of gold or 1 liter of water, which one yould you take?

    • @mrschultz7254
      @mrschultz7254 Год назад +25

      @@gregorslana7723 right now I'd take the gold but if I was in a desert with no water the gold is just a rock to me

  • @omarkenitra1558
    @omarkenitra1558 Год назад +71

    "When politics is dictated by the fight for water, then god help us".
    When this happens you can forget about morals and ethics. It will be survival of the fittest till no one is left.

    • @rotonuz
      @rotonuz Год назад +6

      It reminds me of Mad Max, Rango or the book of Eli.

    • @uci8124u
      @uci8124u Год назад

      Australia already sells water. They have done that for decades.

    • @DrumToTheBassWoop
      @DrumToTheBassWoop Год назад +5

      As soon as the trucks stop, and the reservoirs are empty, there will be a brief shock among the populace and then the panic sets it. God help us indeed. 😐

    • @ajs4287
      @ajs4287 Год назад +2

      Coming soon to the western US. As things stand, California will be left with zero water from the Colorado River after lake mead reaches dead pool, but las Vegas will then be able to guzzle down every drop that flows into the lake with their new drain pipe. The Hoover dam, because water cannot flow through the dam at dead pool, will then be preventing California from getting any Colorado River water. This is going to get nasty.

  • @ROZHify
    @ROZHify 11 месяцев назад +7

    DW is the best. Thank you DW

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  11 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment.

  • @lim8581
    @lim8581 5 месяцев назад +5

    The documentary paints a stark picture of the growing water crisis fueled by climate change. It's a wake-up call for all of us to cherish this precious resource and work towards sustainable solutions. Thank you for shedding light on this critical issue.

    • @BlueeWorrld
      @BlueeWorrld 5 месяцев назад

      Hello, would you like to check out my documentary channel?

  • @robertmanley2687
    @robertmanley2687 Год назад +78

    I live in a timber county in rural Georgia. There is green mold on the rocks in the forest. Huge thunderstorms almost every other day this summer. Our deep water well has sweet clear water. I am very grateful.

    • @SteffiReitsch
      @SteffiReitsch Год назад +16

      I'm in north Georgia . A few years ago it started getting wetter and wetter. Sometimes rains off and on for days. The ground stays soggy. The winters are warmer and wetter. The climate has changed. We're getting someone else's water! Too much. I'm sick to death of this climate change, but I'd rather get too much than not enough. This place is turning into a rain forest. Sheesh.

    • @a13xdunlop
      @a13xdunlop Год назад +9

      @@SteffiReitsch feels the same here in Scotland, warmer and wetter.

    • @loryndabenson2118
      @loryndabenson2118 Год назад +6

      Tennessee has sweet water too. I remember when we would visit my aunt in Tennessee my brother acne immediately cleared up drinking that water and it was always Soo hydrating

    • @veralynguillory8579
      @veralynguillory8579 Год назад

      You must be a child of God!

    • @rgarrett15
      @rgarrett15 Год назад

      when california runs out were gonna sweep across your lands and drink all of your water

  • @think_again82
    @think_again82 Год назад +64

    Reality has come to life,water is more vital than gold

    • @williambaker6622
      @williambaker6622 Год назад +1

      Silver is a main conpotant for cleaning water ,no silver no clean water

    • @SunnyLovetts
      @SunnyLovetts Год назад

      @@williambaker6622 component *

    • @paulheydarian1281
      @paulheydarian1281 Год назад

      Is water more important than Bitcoin?🤔

  • @ArgonDavid
    @ArgonDavid Год назад +4

    Tree plantation, Water conservation methods, rainfall water harvesting, storing water in man made lakes etc. 🙏😭 Water conservation methods World-wide action plans required 🙏😭

  • @wltungNeuron
    @wltungNeuron Год назад +16

    I live in Singapore and we don’t have water in the past (water used to be mainly imported from Malaysia and we still do today to a lesser extend) so we decided to be self sufficient since independence by allocating precious land as reservoirs and built water desalination plants and recycle our waste water. Now we are fully self sufficient if required but because desalination is expensive, we are still importing water from Malaysia. It’s important to be self sufficient not only for climate change but for our country cannot rely on others for such an important resource as it would compromise our country’s sovereignty should we unfortunately go to war one day with our Neighbours where they can threaten to cut off our water supply and we would be at their mercy if we are not water self sufficient. Therefore, I see this problem to be a common threat to countries in the future where wars will be waged for water rights.

  • @munyabrownn
    @munyabrownn Год назад +31

    Welcome to Zimbabwe. Most people have been living without drinking water for years now. Very informative and enlightening Doc

    • @thamtinmeng7063
      @thamtinmeng7063 Год назад

      Lucky for us in Malaysia... we have plenty of water all year round! Water is not a problem...

    • @owindustry
      @owindustry Год назад +4

      @@thamtinmeng7063 yes too much water is also problem. You will face more severe floods and landslides that will make your place inhabitable due to climate change.

    • @catatonicable
      @catatonicable Год назад

      Very bad gov..

  • @irenewilm8900
    @irenewilm8900 Год назад +206

    Being Australian and having lived through droughts all my life, I have the greatest respect for water. I spent 4 years in Western Europe and could not believe the wastage of this precious resource!! Is this perhaps a lesson? City dwellers particularly use water without thinking. Using all the underground water without replenishing it will ultimately have huge repercussions on the globe.

    • @albertbresca8904
      @albertbresca8904 Год назад +8

      we live in the driest continent on earth...
      the grey water is a good start....
      yes the droughts and floods in NSW are unpleasant (to put it lightly.. they freak me a f out!!) ... but then again the NSW government hasn't built more dams in years it seems (and with a steadily growing population you'd think that resources would increase as well... you'd think)
      droughts around the country... followed by floods... bushfires as they don't cut the huge amount of growth back... rabbits removed so the undergrowth again makes trouble for bushfire fuel....
      the desal plants i thought were a terrible waste of money I've read are producing some water(not sure if that justifies the 1.8 billion spent on the one in south Australia though..) ..
      i always wondered why they never (years ago) built a pipeline from the ord river scheme as apparently that has enough after for the entire continent... not sure why they stopped at the snowy river scheme as that was a great thing....

    • @kilaspKp1er
      @kilaspKp1er Год назад +3

      & Albert: Wow , your thoughts are so profound and full potential, you blokes are the pinnacle, You can see the mud through the dry, dead bushland and Australia, and its imported vinegar's thankyou for your patience and compliance while getting fucked. Here's a unique thought, this country is having all of its resources extracted by locust and undesirable from without, so how about we use it whilst we can from within. Take 60 minute+ showers and leave it running whilst you dry, take your deodorant and hairspray OUTSIDE and aim it directly up, scorch and salt your earth, the next gen wont be Australians so what in the fucks it matter? If our so called 'leaders' want cake... Australia is already gone, Australians are going extinct, so we may as well use it all before the other imports rob us of it explicitly or implicitly. One day they'll all understand.

    • @FaithandNova
      @FaithandNova Год назад +7

      As an American I can tell you we are the biggest at being ungrateful. We consume and waste so much

    • @TemplarX2
      @TemplarX2 Год назад

      @@albertbresca8904 The government wasted so much money on insane mandates and dubious vaccines, yet they did nothing to increase the underground storage capacity during this flood season; a season that may never occur again.

    • @brucearterbury1856
      @brucearterbury1856 Год назад +4

      Have you watched Greening The Desert?

  • @redherring5532
    @redherring5532 Год назад +3

    I remember Captain Planet warned us about this in the 90's 🤷‍♂️

  • @jaw9006
    @jaw9006 Год назад +2

    And here I'm from Indonesia been complaining about months constant rain, I will appreciated rain and clean water from now on

  • @mfadls
    @mfadls Год назад +12

    Imagine when you wake up in the morning you can't find anything flow anymore from your tap water. You only have three days...
    A very important documentary.

    • @rebajason1460
      @rebajason1460 Год назад +3

      I have three water catchment barrels catching rain off my roof. I could add more.

  • @droidsxi3271
    @droidsxi3271 Год назад +67

    Water has been the new gold for over a decade. People just don't realize it because they're used to always having it.

    • @dragoonseye76
      @dragoonseye76 Год назад +8

      Water has always been more valuable then gold

    • @carolynmorris7303
      @carolynmorris7303 Год назад +5

      I believe the water war is already starting. I read the comments on the news and documentaries about this, and people are saying get rid of the golf courses, swimming pools and fountains. Also, the lush green lawns.

    • @carolynmorris7303
      @carolynmorris7303 Год назад

      People are mentioning California as a water hog. That they're taking a lot of the water.

    • @dixspixels
      @dixspixels Год назад +3

      Not new gold
      New oil

    • @SansNeural
      @SansNeural Год назад

      @@carolynmorris7303 Water wars have never stopped.

  • @alicej.8739
    @alicej.8739 Год назад +2

    I'm from Aruba and we don't have freshwater sources, we desalinate the surrounding ocean to make it safe for drinking.

  • @africando89
    @africando89 Год назад +8

    I'm in a town southeast morocco now, and I'm really living this experience!! Hopefully I'm staying here just a night with a friend who lives here he is telling me that he is living this difficulties 1mounth and a half since the main river they pretend in is dry! And this makes me feel and live this issue seriously it's a bad thing !

    • @genkiferal7178
      @genkiferal7178 Год назад

      oddly, in america, the mississippi river also was extremely dry this year. where is all of this water going? it can't evaporate i to outer space.

  • @kabirahmed5993
    @kabirahmed5993 Год назад +97

    I must congratulate DW for this excellent documentary on water. Water scarcity was previously limited to the Middle East and some regions in Africa but now due to persistent droughts even US, Europe, Australia, Asia and even Canada are no better. Climate change has altered the rainfall patterns and we all need to change our lifestyles.
    Reminds me of a very popular song "We need to wake up, we need to wise up.....on RUclips.
    We need to raise awareness about water scarcity by changing our lifestyles to limit our water footprint.
    Thank you DW. Love you lots ❤️🥰

    • @andreawallenberger2668
      @andreawallenberger2668 Год назад +4

      I agree! Major props to you DW for yet another excellent, relevant, timely, in-depth, well-researched, and well-presented report. "Ausgezeuchnet!"
      ⚡️😎

    • @marievarenya7817
      @marievarenya7817 Год назад +4

      Water-consciousness, awareness. A very important project to be added to what we start to teach our children, (and grown-ups) especially in the well-to-do neighborhoods; where we still have the luxury of water abundance. Becoming aware of how much we just let our faucets running during dishwashing, tooth-brushing (instead of just turning on and off and on at the in-between times), and pre-running for our shower (to get to the right temperature before stepping in). Sprinkler-systems (when I see an important amount just run off in the gutter).

    • @joebloggs830
      @joebloggs830 Год назад +3

      Australia already had it's annual rainfall this year, and that was by March. People near Sydney are getting sick of being flooded every few months. No water scarcity issue here 🇦🇺

    • @kabirahmed5993
      @kabirahmed5993 Год назад +2

      Marie Varenya rightly said. The flash floods of August 2021 which struck Europe particularly Germany should serve as an eye opener for all. Not only do we need to use water in moderation but we need to limit our carbon footprint as well. Either we change our lifestyles or the Malthusian theory will take its toll.

    • @michelledavies2197
      @michelledavies2197 Год назад

      @@ivangamer8022 absolutely and we can blame alot of that on religion, stopping birth control and abortions and controlling women time to end the imaginary sky daddy.

  • @user-fd5ft2kf3o
    @user-fd5ft2kf3o Год назад +376

    Even here in Japan, we sometimes suffer from water shortage. We, at the individual level, may already be too late. The top leaders of each country need to talk more seriously about water issues. And we must do it soon.

    • @veganessence5270
      @veganessence5270 Год назад +33

      That's the problem all they do is talk

    • @gamingdxg
      @gamingdxg Год назад +2

      All of those public bath houses will need to close down :(

    • @AK-hs6kz
      @AK-hs6kz Год назад +20

      Many of these problems have been allowed to occur due to poor government policy and corporate corruption. Let's be honest. These problems were very predictable and I foresee more and more self made 'crisees'.

    • @widodoakrom3938
      @widodoakrom3938 Год назад +6

      Really in Japan?

    • @AK-hs6kz
      @AK-hs6kz Год назад +6

      @@widodoakrom3938 Really really

  • @michinwaygook3684
    @michinwaygook3684 Год назад +3

    So glad I live in Canada where we have the most freshwater in the world. Now if only we could make Canadians appreciate that fact and not squander it.

  • @valcliche
    @valcliche 20 часов назад

    Mexico City used to be a city built in the center of a HUGE lake. Nowadays we're having a big water crisis. I hope awareness about this vital and rare element rises VERY soon in every human mind and heart.

  • @uberdriver8743
    @uberdriver8743 Год назад +191

    This is eye opening. Germany is one of the last places in the world I would expect there to be a water shortage. If it can happen there, it can happen anywhere

    • @gigachad141
      @gigachad141 Год назад +8

      Like dwanye forge said in GTA 4
      „Expect the Unexpected and you will be pleasently suprised“

    • @maxchenmusterhausen5311
      @maxchenmusterhausen5311 Год назад

      Its actually crazy how our rivers are drying up right now. The lakes in my home town are so shallow its scary - i am living here for 30 years now and as far as i can remember, i could never see the bottom of these lakes. Now, in just a few weeks, you can walk over them. Water-features are just hanging about, being damaged as they where never intended to be out in the open. And still, idiots here sprinkle water in to their gardens. But right now, our priority seems to be sending weapons to the ukraine, angering a nation armed with thousands of nuclear warheads and investing 100 billion in to our military - where at the same time, our health care goes up in price because we couldnt afford 3 billion euros. These tards at the top are pissing me off. And in all this, we still have to wait years for weed to be legal because of reasons. Fukk this world.

    • @dadikkedude
      @dadikkedude Год назад +18

      Even in the Netherlands there are water problems. It's not that's the water is not there, the rivers are unusable because of the pollution.

    • @asnark7115
      @asnark7115 Год назад

      Germany, over the last year, has been one of the most poorly managed nations in the world. So bad it looks like sabotage in terms of energy and resource management.

    • @victoriacaruana3816
      @victoriacaruana3816 Год назад +8

      It will get worse,it’s written in the Word Of God.

  • @robtikana6404
    @robtikana6404 Год назад +255

    I live on the driest continent on earth. Something that really blows me away is the lack of consideration for the environment in Australia. The government allows cattle grazers to clear fell (govt. leased) land with bulldozers. I went to go fishing one year and the water hole (about 5km (3 mile) long and 300m across) was totally full of rocks, sand and gravel washed down from upstream. No attention is given to the preservation nor to the existence of micro-climates nor to erosion. All large fish, saw-sharks, rays etc have vanished while netting for fish is still permitted at the river mouths. There is no wisdom here. Excellent doco!

    • @GrumpyTinashe
      @GrumpyTinashe Год назад +3

      Damn. Sorry to hear that. I saw a documentary that due to mining and farming boreholes are now dry in Oz. Hopefully your government acts soon

    • @carolbaird8659
      @carolbaird8659 Год назад

      That's an outright lie, cattle farmers don't fell trees at all. So tired of the bull dribbled by people like you.

    • @palehorse6250
      @palehorse6250 Год назад +22

      Stop voting for right wing governments. We need progressive policy and policy makers if humanity is to survive. but that will never happen, because people vote based on really petty issues and no one thinks their world is about to end as they know it.

    • @sandasturner9529
      @sandasturner9529 Год назад +1

      Good observation.

    • @linebrunelle1004
      @linebrunelle1004 Год назад +4

      Aussies gotta have their barby

  • @emmy4537
    @emmy4537 Год назад +2

    More valuable than gold. Every living thing needs it to survive. We can live without gold.

  • @mortillery2306
    @mortillery2306 Год назад +1

    Vegas acting like they are making a difference after abusing the resource is the toughest part of the story. Thank you DW for doing something the US news won't

  • @andreasr6632
    @andreasr6632 Год назад +20

    When the lights go out, when water scarcity drives you away from your home, when food is not enough anymore, we will see how civilised the human race is indeed. Spoiler alert! Civilisation needs the above 3 things to exist.....

    • @setcheck67
      @setcheck67 Год назад +3

      Lights going out won't break civilization. You better damn believe water scarcity or starvation will though XD

  • @The145Club
    @The145Club Год назад +27

    Water is the key to life. Without water, there is nothing.

    • @janklaas6885
      @janklaas6885 Год назад +4

      soon, there is nothing.
      Less then 0.5% of all the water on earh is zweet water.

    • @BridgesDontFly
      @BridgesDontFly Год назад +10

      People should be required to have a license in order to have children.

    • @globalcitizen8321
      @globalcitizen8321 Год назад

      Water and Air... Apparently so much of them available, but also so much threatened by us, humans ...

    • @SansNeural
      @SansNeural Год назад

      Thumbnail asks "Is water the new gold?"
      No, DW clickbait writers, gold is gold and water has always been more important.

    • @SansNeural
      @SansNeural Год назад

      @@BridgesDontFly Yup. Right after intelligence tests are mandated for posting comments on RUclips.

  • @shawnp8076
    @shawnp8076 Год назад +1

    I think it's kinda funny how the 1st part of south parks streaming wars special was basically talking about this..

  • @loobylooroden6176
    @loobylooroden6176 Год назад +1

    Living in Scotland it's hard to comprehend having drought.

  • @MICEVVV
    @MICEVVV Год назад +24

    Humanity is doomed yet few people care

    • @meh3247
      @meh3247 Год назад

      @@ivangamer8022 Oh look, the Professor has spoken! ALL IS SOLVED!
      LMAO.
      Shut up fool.

    • @chihirostargazer6573
      @chihirostargazer6573 Год назад

      @@ivangamer8022 and in "developed" countries we use more resources than all third world countries. Everyone sucks in this story. And rather than build things sustainably and educate people in developing countries, encourage them to have fewer children etc... they continue to do things the same stupid shi**y way over and over again. It's absolute madness.

    • @alx8571
      @alx8571 Год назад

      @@ivangamer8022 ok ivan

    • @toekkababy5329
      @toekkababy5329 Год назад

      Should have kept population steady at 500 million

  • @WonderMagician
    @WonderMagician Год назад +274

    Thank you for presenting this critically important report. All living things depend on clean water, clean air, and fertile soil. Whenever I drive through a suburban area, with sprawling lawns in any part of our country, I feel stupefied: high maintenance, high water consumption, zero life-sustaining yield.

    • @TH-eb5ro
      @TH-eb5ro Год назад +8

      Agreed, do anything you can to encourage natural landscaping which needs less water. It is impacting many areas and humanity needs to prepare. This needs to be shared internationally and on social media.

    • @achim8239
      @achim8239 Год назад +9

      As I am sitting and watching my lawn turn brown, my eyes fall on the neighbours' lawn. Their garden is a lush green. That has to be stopped.

    • @Campaigner82
      @Campaigner82 Год назад +2

      @@achim8239 That neighbor will think you to be lazy for not watering your lawn. If you explain the issue to him, what will he say?

    • @sealyoness
      @sealyoness Год назад +1

      I wonder if anyone considers long-term sustainable management, taking weather variables into the plans? And who the H deserves to whine about their almond crop in a arid climate? They're nuts.

    • @cathrineflanagan6617
      @cathrineflanagan6617 Год назад +11

      Where I live my lawn stays green all the time, except during the Winter freeze. All by rain water. If there comes a time when we don't get enough rainwater to keep my lawn green I will landscape appropately for the climate. I refuse to waste water on my lawn when others don't even have enough to drink!

  • @iraallen7219
    @iraallen7219 Год назад +6

    Water has always been worth more then gold for people who know how life works..

    • @marcusm8009
      @marcusm8009 10 месяцев назад

      Same with clean air, soil, and wild food sources.

  • @BitsOfQuantum
    @BitsOfQuantum 8 месяцев назад +1

    Time to keep the oceans clean.

  • @victorcharnor5681
    @victorcharnor5681 Год назад +134

    Never a dull moment with DW.
    Very refreshing and educative doc.
    If all well DW, Media would have lived to it purpose.
    You guys have raised the bar too high for others to keep pace with.
    Mamamia
    Kudos

    • @starstuff5958
      @starstuff5958 Год назад +6

      love this channel..finally some real "news'

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Год назад +17

      Hello, Victor! Thanks a lot for watching and for your positive feedback. We appreciate you taking the time to
      comment and are glad you like our content!

    • @SansNeural
      @SansNeural Год назад +3

      @@DWDocumentary I am certain there was not a single sniff of sarcasm in victor's comment.

    • @kabirahmed5993
      @kabirahmed5993 Год назад

      DW, please let us know how many parts are in these series??

    • @kabirahmed5993
      @kabirahmed5993 Год назад

      @DW Documentary, please let us know how many parts are there in this series on water??

  • @wantstocomment7092
    @wantstocomment7092 Год назад +27

    what was shocking is that the fastest growing US cities are in the desert. Kindof points to what their priorities are.

    • @WolfgangVonKempelen838
      @WolfgangVonKempelen838 Год назад +1

      "Freedom"? Is that the right answer?

    • @schechter01
      @schechter01 Год назад +3

      What makes economic sense does not make ecological sense.

    • @WolfgangVonKempelen838
      @WolfgangVonKempelen838 Год назад

      @@schechter01 Economical sense will not matter anymore when the planet can no longer support life due to human behaviour. Maybe the rich and powerful might be able to escape to the moon or space in time; leaving Earth and however survives the dying planet to carry on making economical sense. I am sure that will work.

    • @wantstocomment7092
      @wantstocomment7092 Год назад

      @@WolfgangVonKempelen838 maybe. imean, wtf do I know about dry places where everyone carries a gun in their underwear. people are weird.

    • @WolfgangVonKempelen838
      @WolfgangVonKempelen838 Год назад

      @@wantstocomment7092 And it is getting worse I'm afraid Sir

  • @summertime104
    @summertime104 Год назад +2

    I do not understand why the engineers do not build desalination plants everywhere, since we are surrounded by oceans full of water. I know that I have seen the engineering designs on the internet, yet they are never built. Especially in California, where the entire state is bordered by a big beautiful ocean. It's astounding that there is such a simple solution, yet nobody builds the plants.

    • @suesue4081
      @suesue4081 Год назад

      if they fix the problem...then they wouldn't have a job anymore or a way to take/spend more of our tax money. just like not finding a cure to cancer or whatever else. they need sick people and they need us kept in fear. why didn't they promote healthy lifestyles during the pandemic? they locked out the gyms and gave free donuts for the shot instead. lol

    • @faradinadwi1031
      @faradinadwi1031 18 дней назад

      Because desalination is expensive

  • @askew9976
    @askew9976 2 месяца назад

    Wow! I have a whole new respect for water. My level of ignorance to this issue was beyond comprehension. I’ve heard and known of water shortages, but never understood how, when we are surrounded by water.
    I knew some about pottable water and filtration…I had zero idea that there were places in the USA that had water being trucked in.
    Water bottling companies can’t be helping. They aren’t making water, they’re redistributing it in plastic bottles. It’s sitting and waiting to be consumed…in plastic. The bottles are their business.

  • @goldfinga786able
    @goldfinga786able Год назад +33

    There will be a time one of the most expensive product will be water

  • @stopato5772
    @stopato5772 Год назад +8

    Rhine at an all time low, England in drought, set France on fire and tinder dry, Spain having 40C plus and rationing power - this summer really is a peak into our futures.

  • @dwalker6868
    @dwalker6868 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for the information

  • @dianamuringo3998
    @dianamuringo3998 Год назад +1

    Do you have a Spotify version of your documentaries?

  • @ukpreppermuminspire-shoppingpa
    @ukpreppermuminspire-shoppingpa Год назад +97

    Very informative and eye opening documentary. We are living in uncertain and challenging times, Thanks for sharing.

    • @johnl.7754
      @johnl.7754 Год назад +5

      But I think that they should have emphasis more on agricultural use of water since that is by far (USA is 80% of water use). Needs to only grow what each area naturally will grow).

    • @urbanstuff9950
      @urbanstuff9950 Год назад

      Sheep.

  • @jambayjambay7327
    @jambayjambay7327 Год назад +110

    As our mountain springs are drying up in Bhutan, we have been working on reviving them. The documentary is wonderful and thoughtful for all of us!

    • @International_Cartoons
      @International_Cartoons Год назад

      @gilda bra what immigration? This is ONE planet. "Countries" are made up in wars where politicians draw imaginary lines on a map. What immigration? :D

    • @nawal7658
      @nawal7658 Год назад +7

      @gilda bra Bhutan doesn't have an overpopulation problem. They're actually underpopulated

    • @lisabek72
      @lisabek72 Год назад +1

      How do you "revive" a spring?

    • @lisabek72
      @lisabek72 Год назад +1

      @gilda bra bs

    • @UserName_no1
      @UserName_no1 Год назад

      @F. Friedrich Kling Hauss Gee, that seem like an eco friendly solution, but it has one major flaw. The planet is warming up. Ask yourself where does rain come from. That's right, it evaporates from surface water on the planet into the atmosphere. Now consider this. If the population grows and depletes the ground water faster than it can be replenished then what?

  • @zebrinasamy7470
    @zebrinasamy7470 9 месяцев назад

    Are these datasets available in the Google Earth engine platform

  • @dwaynezilla
    @dwaynezilla Год назад +1

    It's not about if fixing climate change were easy, rather it's about if it were _immediately profitable._
    That's the state of things.

  • @jhconnor88
    @jhconnor88 Год назад +49

    Former environmental lawyer here. We are not going to "sue" or "reform" our way out of this crisis. Our current (at least in the US) legal system does not provide the tools needed to do that. Our environmental laws are designed (at best) to maintain the status quo - not improve or permanently protect ecosystems - or (at worst) allow corporations to gradually pollute and destroy ecosystems with only minor fines (that take years/decades to secure via litigation) when those corps go too far. This is what happens when capitalist countries pass environmental laws - ultimately they serve private property and profit, not environmental protection. (And they care nothing about the environments of other countries that US corps pollute in order to avoid the restrictions back home.)
    (TLDR:) Former enviro lawyer here. Ruling class has rigged the legal system of every capitalist country to serve profit and private property, not enviro protection. If you want to fundamentally change that, the solution will not be at the ballot box or with a lawsuit (ruling class would never allow that!), but on the streets via revolution. Either dust off those guillotines or get ready for a waterless cyberdystopia!

    • @jacobfinder7476
      @jacobfinder7476 Год назад +1

      Absolutely True!!!!!

    • @s.m9206
      @s.m9206 Год назад

      Facts

    • @schechter01
      @schechter01 Год назад

      Sounds terrific. We can build the guillotines & sharpen 'em up. Once the revolutionary vanguard starts killing designated environmental offenders, they won't stop there. People will be rounded up & decapitated just for questioning or arguing against the vanguard party's platform. Chaos will ensue, which will inevitably spawn an iron-fisted dictator who after assembling his army will crack down on the vanguard party's massacring & forcibly impose order.
      Yes, water scarcity is a serious problem. No sensible person is saying otherwise. But if you argue for revolution then you obviously haven't learned about real revolutions. Look into 18th-century France & early 20th-century Russia.

    • @PG-3462
      @PG-3462 Год назад +3

      Your whole comment doesn't make any sense. For example, the USSR wasn't capitalist, but yet it dried the entire Aral sea to increase its production of cotton. Even the USA never did something as damaging, even in modern times
      The problem is not the type of economic system, but overconsumption. The government can't implement new laws if people aren't willing to change their consumption behaviors and lifestyle.
      Lastly, companies don't consume water just for fun. They consume water to provide consumers something they want to purchase. Things will thus only change when everyone will change their lifestyle.
      Just as another example, a few years ago, promoters built a 3rd (yes, a 3rd one...) golf court in my town. Since the region is quite humid, they didn't invest into a sprinkler system... and the variety of grass they planted didn't survive more than 2 years. What do you think happened? Golfers didn't like that golf course because the grass wasn't perfectly green, and as there weren't enough consumers, it eventually gone bankrupt. In short, the same thing would happen to all other golf courts in my town if people stopped playing golf all together, or they could keep existing, but people would need to accept to play on non-green grass. If the second option is fine for consumers, golf courts would actually end up making more profits, as their operating costs would decrease. This is a perfect example to show that companies don't consume water just for fun as it is in general a cost increase.

    • @alx8571
      @alx8571 Год назад +5

      @@PG-3462 So capitalism IS the problem

  • @kwood1112
    @kwood1112 Год назад +22

    Excellent documentary DW - very well presented. This should be required watching for every single politician and business leader in the world. They can't keep kicking this can down the road - our civilization is truly at risk, now. My heart goes out to the gentleman associated with the GRACE mission. I can only imagine how frustrating and demoralizing it must be to literally be able to see what's coming, to warn those in charge, and have them dismiss you outright. They've been doing that to climate scientists for years, decades. Now, we are in the age of consequences, and it's becoming painfully clear they weren't just a bunch of "alarmists." We SHOULD be, we NEED to be alarmed. No water, no life - PERIOD. Time is running out.

  • @Sunrisemoonfalls
    @Sunrisemoonfalls Год назад +1

    Understandably digging the well deeper would be expensive.. but closing it off or capping it off sounds ridiculous!!

  • @kroon1930
    @kroon1930 Год назад +1

    I'm from the Netherlands. We are basically one gigantic river delta. 1/3 of us is even below sea level. Last place you'd expect water shortages... And yep, even here droughts are more and more common. Less and less rain. Every summer regulations for agricultural irrigation with ground water. There was even talk of regulating the amount of water used by companies this summer.

  • @PiXie232
    @PiXie232 Год назад +29

    This is one of the best documentaries I’ve seen in quite some time regarding the water crisis. It’s getting to the point where we need to be shouting it from every rooftop because no one seems to be listening. I live in UT and everyone here has green grass and they still water their lawns during the middle of the day during the summer. It’s incredibly frustrating to see. It should be outlawed- I’ve been saying for years they need to do some sort of compensation program so people can xeriscape their lawns- and what do you know? Las Vegas started doing it! I had no clue until I watched this!! I turned to my husband and was like omg!! What did I just say?! (Because I had just mentioned that very thing to him recently). All in all, great video:) Sobering.. but great!

    • @Sky-pt6lc
      @Sky-pt6lc Год назад

      I live near a lake in Ohio. I haven’t watered my lawn for over 20 years. I let nature water it. I quit watering because of costs and I don’t care if I don’t have a perfect lawn.

  • @kosmicheskiprah
    @kosmicheskiprah Год назад +25

    Just came back from a trip from the Danube, which is a natural boundary between Bulgaria and Romania. I can confirm that the level has went so low that not even ferries can operate. It hasn't rained for months according to locals and the Danube islands look so desertic...

    • @haniffmohamoodally
      @haniffmohamoodally Год назад +4

      Yet the Danubw river is a major and mighty rivers of Europe

    • @suntzu94
      @suntzu94 Год назад

      Go to any state in the great lakes and we have plenty of water 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @cunaeus22
    @cunaeus22 Год назад +21

    The mass movement of water from verdant areas to deserts and cities, accelerates the process of desertification. The place the water is moved to remains a desert and the area that it is taken from begins to become first a drought and then a desert.

    • @wstnli725
      @wstnli725 Год назад

      Just plant more and more trees. More varied vegetation will atract water without any doubt, but it takes years if you do not have woods. It's like the world problem of the Amazon forests or the destroyed corals around Australia under the sea, etcetera. It's not only California, but the entire world.

  • @TechnicalShivam-bh1hv
    @TechnicalShivam-bh1hv 2 месяца назад +1

    Amazing Documentary DW❤️❤️❤️. But is so Scary😱😱😱

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  2 месяца назад

      Thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts!

  • @bencera6067
    @bencera6067 Год назад +67

    DW you guys make some really great docs, always well presented and not sensationalized. Thank you.

  • @skrrskrr99
    @skrrskrr99 Год назад +14

    I love DW it’s such a nice break for me as an American that is constantly forced to see through fox and cnn lenses.

    • @Root__314
      @Root__314 Год назад +3

      Don’t watch Fox. You should know that by now.

    • @owindustry
      @owindustry Год назад

      CNN is a crap.

    • @skrrskrr99
      @skrrskrr99 Год назад +4

      @@Root__314 I don't. I still hear about it because I live in a society where people watch it.

    • @Novastar.SaberCombat
      @Novastar.SaberCombat Год назад

      I live in California. "FAUX" is a plague on humanity. So is Chump.
      I'm pretty upset about the staggering crime rates, too. It's like: THEY JUST DON'T GET IT. Everyone has learned NOTHING from Carl Sagan nor F.M. Rogers.
      So, it's like... F it. I can't complete a single objective here. I'm broke, have no connections, no work, and I'm nearly invisible: I'M SCREWED. 😓

    • @gigiis526
      @gigiis526 Год назад

      @@Root__314 CNN is the one he shouldnt be watching.

  • @jimlippi4001
    @jimlippi4001 Год назад

    As I'm watching this video I can't help but continuously commenting. The measuring of groundwater levels fluctuates just like the tides.

  • @digiryde
    @digiryde Год назад

    30 years ago there were scientists saying this was coming. Saying that no one warned of these issues 30 years ago is a selective choice to ignore the warnings that were given.

  • @MrBelmont79
    @MrBelmont79 Год назад +21

    I believe that is time to forbid grass lawns for good in the west. It’s such a waste. Shady trees 🌳 would be a great alternative for they provide shade, retain water when it rains and help with soil erosion. Of course in the beginning of their growth they require water, but once they grow up their roots go deeper and need less water. 🖖

    • @olivialim7541
      @olivialim7541 Год назад +4

      The species of tree matters too. Some species can deal with hotter and drier conditions

    • @jameseverett4976
      @jameseverett4976 Год назад +4

      Lawns are a waste of time, effort and expense, far beyond water usage. They are literally a fad. The average home did not used to have a lawn, because there was no point. But since the rich started having them, then the common folk decided they had to have them too, then it became an ordinance or 'home value' issue, and now people who DON'T want a lawn, and all the work and expense that go into it, are literally FORCED to maintain one.
      People are hopelessly stupid. Solve one problem and they'll go create another one to replace it, and for a stupid, vain reason that amounts to just being in vogue.

    • @Girtharmstrong69
      @Girtharmstrong69 Год назад

      Nah just ban mass immigration

    • @user-ez3il1yy6i
      @user-ez3il1yy6i Год назад

      @@jameseverett4976 Ban lawns is a great start because it's not needed !!!

    • @kamilareeder1493
      @kamilareeder1493 Год назад +2

      Yes 👍 and native cover plants help rebuild the native plant and insect population while being drought resistant. White sage is literally endangered 🥲💀 plant tons of that and others like it instead

  • @allenstewart9266
    @allenstewart9266 Год назад +4

    JEAN PAUL SARTE HAD IT RIGHT. MAN ONLY ADMITS HE HAS A PROBLEM WHEN THAT PROBLEM HAS ALREADY BECOME SO SEVERE THAT RECOVERY IS DIFFICULT AND RARELY IN FULL.

  • @classicalsrock
    @classicalsrock Год назад

    DW do us a favour and post links to the other parts when released on the first in a series, thanks!

  • @larkop6504
    @larkop6504 6 дней назад

    Thank god we have a well at the house, twice the depth of our neighbors. 40 degrees during the summer so essential.

  • @adityaguru6654
    @adityaguru6654 Год назад +251

    I am from the valleys and forests of central India and we currently have more than sufficient amount of water here. But things indeed are changing, I personally have seen that many of our small rivulets and streams have started drying up completely during summers, and excessive rains during monsoon leading to flood like conditions.

    • @jeffk464
      @jeffk464 Год назад +13

      India is rapidly industrializing and building a massive number of coal power plants.

    • @utkarshchoudhary3870
      @utkarshchoudhary3870 Год назад +4

      @@jeffk464 sorry but what country are you from..?

    • @kirankedlaya3180
      @kirankedlaya3180 Год назад +24

      India planted millions of trees and have run river rejuvenation and rally for rivers campaigns. Also working on river linking to better utilize the rivers. India is massively increasing renewable energy and electrifying its entire railway network, great incentives for electric cars, solar water heaters, low cost LED lights and much more. Rain water harvesting is mandatory in many states. In addition, we need to switch to vegetarian diets to save water.

    • @utkarshchoudhary3870
      @utkarshchoudhary3870 Год назад +12

      @@kirankedlaya3180 As a delhite, I beg to differ...

    • @kirankedlaya3180
      @kirankedlaya3180 Год назад +2

      @@utkarshchoudhary3870 Facts don't lie. So, you can have your opinions contrary to the facts. Your free will.

  • @yedilfana8206
    @yedilfana8206 Год назад +420

    DW Documentary never disappoints. Quality content as usual

    • @TheMwowner1
      @TheMwowner1 Год назад +13

      @Concerned Citizen the sheeple will believe anything the talking teleprompter tells them xDDDDDD

    • @jeffk464
      @jeffk464 Год назад +18

      @@TheMwowner1 Well I'm 49 and have seen the change, its not really a matter of belief when its in your face. Back when Al Gore made his movie it was more of an abstract idea, now its pretty damn real.

    • @user-ki9ez8wx7f
      @user-ki9ez8wx7f Год назад +7

      @@jeffk464 Tell 'em, Jeff.

    • @longdragon3
      @longdragon3 Год назад

      @@TheMwowner1 Which part of the world are you from? Europe?

    • @AstralApple
      @AstralApple Год назад

      Except it's trash and complete fear-mongering garbage. I recommend any native USA citizen, who is over 30 years old, and STILL doesn't know about 70 year old clowd bustyng technology, get their spit together. Said technology has been stolen, censored, and bogarted by the Pentagon for MULTIPLE GENERATIONS. It creates gentle, harmonious, rain that solves most droughts swiftly.

  • @edauvaa1730
    @edauvaa1730 Год назад

    Ex US Marine Engineer, Moses West had invented and Patented his "Atmospheric air to water, machine."
    That's right!
    Let me repeat.
    Air to Water, machine.
    We can never run out of water again, because water is only the fusion of two gases, Hydrogen and Oxygen.
    So, fuse those two gases, and you have water.

  • @spidey885
    @spidey885 8 месяцев назад

    In Pakistan, what I’ve noticed is that during summer there’s too much water in the river and then during winter the water is it lowest. It cause erosion and the widening of river banks which effects rice fields and homes in villages

  • @DarthSidious.
    @DarthSidious. Год назад +9

    I’m surprised DW documentaries are free on RUclips the quality is amazing I can literally watch all the documentaries and be satisfied

  • @jeffk464
    @jeffk464 Год назад +43

    You guys ended the story with the Salton Sea in California and how it used to be a huge vacation area. What you didn't mention was until 1905 it was a dry lake bed, with nothing around. In 1905 they made a mistake with canals that were coming off the Colorado river that took two years to fix. The damage they did let a huge amount of water spill out into the dry lake bed and create the Salton Sea from what was a dry lake bed. Everybody partied why it lasted but now the Salton Sea is going back to being a dry lake bed.

    • @marmac83
      @marmac83 Год назад +4

      Also it was never fresh water...

    • @gold9ja
      @gold9ja Год назад

      Interesting never knew that

    • @jazzcatt
      @jazzcatt Год назад +3

      You are right and wrong at the same time. Right because what you know is the information most people have heard or read, and wrong because the history, geology and hydrology of the Salton Basin goes back a good 10,000 years, long before the "accident" in 1905.
      From 1824 to 1904, Colorado River flows flooded the Salton Basin no fewer than eight times. For example, an 1840 flood created a salt lake three quarters of a mile long and a half a mile wide and, in June 1891, another outpouring of Colorado River water created a lake 30 miles long, 10 miles wide. It is uncertain as to how many times water has filled the Basin over the centuries but human intervention is responsible for inundating the basin only once.

    • @tomatlanta2665
      @tomatlanta2665 Год назад

      @@marmac83 it was fresh water

    • @urbanstuff9950
      @urbanstuff9950 Год назад

      An example of why DW Tv is NOT credible.

  • @joeygarza9550
    @joeygarza9550 Год назад +1

    Holy crap! I live in Fort Bragg, CA, which is just 7 miles north of Mendocino township, and I had no idea fresh water was being trucked into Mendocino County. That explains why my water bill doubled in August from $30 to $60.

    • @marcusm8009
      @marcusm8009 10 месяцев назад

      My bill is $128 monthly.

  • @liferx4343
    @liferx4343 7 месяцев назад

    Living in New Mexico, the idea of running out of water seems very real and scary. Even water conservation doesn't seem to help.

  • @frankd7905
    @frankd7905 Год назад +29

    When cities use water most of it is recycled. However when you use water for irrigation it is really consumed. As Mr Powell said build large reservoirs would not be a good long term solution. When ground water is used and not allowed to replenish, yes even using personal catchment systems the aquifers will never recharge. Just because you can pump water it does not mean you should pump water. In California the land is subsiding because of the ground water being extracted. Now this land is no longer has the ability to store water. This is blamed on climate change but really it is because we are harvesting more water than can practically be sustained. Blaming climate change for this is like blaming match manufacturers for a rash in houses burning down. Sigh why do we always try to blame something complex.

    • @johnwunder3521
      @johnwunder3521 Год назад +1

      GREED.

    • @reginald6045
      @reginald6045 Год назад +3

      When water is used for irrigation it is indirectly consumed by humans everywhere it’s a whole of community problem that needs everybody to chip in not just farmers.

    • @Bikes0420
      @Bikes0420 Год назад +1

      Pretty naïve to say climate change has nothing to do with it at the same time

    • @frankd7905
      @frankd7905 Год назад

      @@Bikes0420 Yes it does have something to do with it. However how much of this is anthropomorphic? You do of course realize that the river Thames has frozen in the past as well as the canals of the Netherlands. There have been no formal debates on climate change. We wish to make fundamental changes to society as it has evolved over the past 600 generations because we, in all our infinite wisdom know the "right way" to do things. I tire of the narrative that the aristocracy is trying to throw at us and the gullibility of the people listening to the ideology and narratives. Sigh

    • @frankd7905
      @frankd7905 Год назад

      @@reginald6045 I am aware of that. Do the research and you find that 75% of the water is used to irrigate fields that would lie dormant and 20% for cities.drinking and sanitation needs. This all results in grey water being treated and put back to into the water system. Not so with irrigation. I am just quoting what Mr Powell said all these years back. You can go ahead and put your head in the sand and continue down this path. It is the very definition of insanity.

  • @davevornberger
    @davevornberger Год назад +13

    That quote from Gary Kremen is pretty funny. Kudos to DW Documentary for leaving it in! I needed one light-hearted moment in this otherwise very important piece. Great video and channel!

  • @MsHumble4
    @MsHumble4 Год назад

    Is WATER Also Controlled… by “some” ?
    Plenty of water where I am … and the 🌞 visiting during the day… Looking at the plants and seeing them so happy and that Bumblebee around makes me Happy.

  • @user-md9yv7jx2c
    @user-md9yv7jx2c 3 дня назад

    I remember when buying water at the store was ridiculous, I remember watering the lawn in Las Vegas

  • @zoickn
    @zoickn Год назад +21

    Here in Malaysia, we always get rains. But we are definately not sitting on gold mine. We experienced great flood early this year and many suffered from getting access to clean water. It was awful time for us.
    I definately appreciate water more now.

    • @userplay305
      @userplay305 Год назад +1

      Yeah it can be drought in clean water too tho.

    • @yzyz7779
      @yzyz7779 Год назад

      Now maybe we can selling float to them.haha Alhamdulillah 🤲

    • @demonsrexis
      @demonsrexis Год назад

      And we will have water rationing after one month without rain. I am not exaggerating.

  • @harrykersey3181
    @harrykersey3181 Год назад +9

    As I sat in my nursery in Merritt Island Fla , my uncle Frank strolled up to my potting table and said " One day water will be worth more than gold " and then looked straight at me and said , Maybe in your lifetime . I stopped using overhead Irrigation and went to drip . That was 40 yrs ago and have been a big advocate for drip rather than overhead and know the future looks dim and their is no time for debates those days are long gone . If its not all hands on deck soon we wont get another chance . Toast to life on the edge of a razor . No room for error ...

  • @elijahmeadows68
    @elijahmeadows68 Год назад +1

    Remember what that dude said on six feet under? Future wars will be over water

  • @James-mw7zv
    @James-mw7zv Год назад +33

    Whenever there is a shortage of anything, rich get fabulously rich and the poor dies horribly. 😢

    • @kerrynight3271
      @kerrynight3271 Год назад +6

      I'm afraid that happens even without shortages. But you make a good point.

    • @guilhermepicolloduarte8110
      @guilhermepicolloduarte8110 Год назад

      The poor deserve it

    • @gozerofgozmis4181
      @gozerofgozmis4181 Год назад +3

      @@guilhermepicolloduarte8110 so we should take all you have

    • @guilhermepicolloduarte8110
      @guilhermepicolloduarte8110 Год назад

      @@gozerofgozmis4181 Try it useless eater

    • @giuseppe_M
      @giuseppe_M Год назад +2

      @@guilhermepicolloduarte8110 I WOULD WATCH WHAT YOU SAY BECAUSE THE POOR OUT NUMBER YOU 1,000,000,000,000 TO 1

  • @Adyen11234
    @Adyen11234 Год назад +23

    People seemed to have forgotten that South Africa Cape Town HAS actually gone through a complete drought where there is little to no water for months. And Cape Town isn't some middle of nowhere city either! It's a fairly famous tourist location and comparable to some first world country city.

    • @bsfoxo3329
      @bsfoxo3329 Год назад

      It’s in Africa.

    • @MetaphysicalExplorations
      @MetaphysicalExplorations Год назад

      So what that's it in Africa,what are you implying

    • @bsfoxo3329
      @bsfoxo3329 Год назад

      @@MetaphysicalExplorations A lack of water in Aftica isn’t a rare occurrence.

  • @johnnyspliff4900
    @johnnyspliff4900 Год назад

    As a Michigander ive always appreciated my situation in regards to water. If you know, you know

  • @rerehuia709
    @rerehuia709 Год назад

    As a Indigenous person in my older years, I smile in sadness, sitting on what's left of our home This Planet. Watching you all scramble in panic over what We have always known. Our, my children and grandchildren will suffer because of greed. Consequences will come home to roost. Common sense has left this world. How many acres of roof do you have? Return the forests, collect the rain. I just shake my head at the stupidity. CrankyGranny Western Australia

  • @johninaryan951
    @johninaryan951 Год назад +12

    We went on holiday to Elba/Italy and they had only salt water in the taps and toilet.
    They don't use important water for flushing.

    • @97I30T
      @97I30T Год назад +3

      That's actually pretty smart.

    • @gamecubekingdevon3
      @gamecubekingdevon3 Год назад +3

      does the use of sea water for the flush cause any extra-corrosion for the pipes?

  • @kmlund42
    @kmlund42 Год назад +128

    Well done and I am frightened for folks that live in the south West that still do not grasp what is ahead for crops and everyday life without water. This is an absolute emergency yet they are selling new homes at a breakneck speed and not telling buyers what is ahead for them. So irresponsible. No one will believe until the water actually runs out, sad.

    • @barnold23
      @barnold23 Год назад +14

      It drives me nuts seeing people still buying huge overkill gas guzzling trucks for personal use. People who don't own a boat, or a trailer of any kind - they just want a big truck. Please people... Buy the most fuel efficient vehicle that suits your lifestyle, and for the love of god - strongly consider EVs if you can afford them.

    • @sonnyjohnson8887
      @sonnyjohnson8887 Год назад

      Hey , two things certain for United States : colapse of its Ponzy economic system and climate change choking its natural resource :water

    • @MT-wy6tw
      @MT-wy6tw Год назад +4

      Sad but true, I know someone who moved to Vegas, I told them that this is looking to be a problem, but she went anyway. God be with everyone in these parts of the world, and the people who will suffer from mass migration

    • @wandererofthewasteland400
      @wandererofthewasteland400 Год назад +8

      “People miss the well when the water goes dry “

    • @dasburke
      @dasburke Год назад

      you are worried about the idiots buying houses in a desert? get your priorities straight.... its like buying a EV and thinking you are saving the world. idiots

  • @a7128
    @a7128 Год назад +1

    as Jake LaMotta's coach once said....'no water!'

  • @benweir665
    @benweir665 Год назад

    Excellent documentary

  • @borisharhaji6870
    @borisharhaji6870 Год назад +33

    Ok, I would like someone to explain to me two things:
    1. The water from the surface and the water from the ground CANNOT dissappear, they can only change place (they don't evaporate I to space). Is the issue that places are becoming drier and other wetter, so net-zero impact in a way, but clearly in practice, makes both habitats uninhabitable?
    2. Why don't we use desalination plants more? Why don't we push more research into developing alternative sources for water transportation, as 2/3 of the Earth is water?
    Please don't use generic "it is expensive", bacuse: it seems it is roughly 10x the cost of "normal" water processing, which again, it is still VERY CHEAP.
    I am 100% on board acknowledging we the people are killing Earth and causing ton of pollution and are wasting resources all the time. I am genuinely interested in some answers to above questions, especially to desalination.
    I will Google my answers too, but I also like talking to real people if anyone is interested in answering :-)

    • @maxchenmusterhausen5311
      @maxchenmusterhausen5311 Год назад +8

      Your second points is the solution in my opinion - and yes, this "expensive"-argument remains stupid and shortsighted. At one point a PC had costs in the millions. Cars where an absolute luxury - science and improvements always made things cheaper. ALWAYS. except some kind of profit was to be gained and someone used a monopoly on an idea. Its simply an unwillingness from private companys to inovate - and politicians still supporting the idea that such things can be run private and some infrastructure statewise. But now, the world should simply come together - like they had done with CFCs ages ago - and come up with a solution to use salt-water in a cheap way. Which is 100% possible. We traveled to mars. States have to stop giving such important things to the "free market" and assure such an essential pillar of human life is always avialable and cheap. Not a luxury because assheads like nestle are demanding profits for faceless, emotionless monsters behind stocks.

    • @LuvBorderCollies
      @LuvBorderCollies Год назад

      Killing the earth? I agree. We are killing the earth and ground water from the production of corn for ethanol. Marginal and that should have remained uncropped was plowed under to increase acreage. Corn sucks nutrients from the soil like crazy so you have to dump tons of fertilizer to get enough crop to pay for itself. Then there's all the herbicides and insecticides getting sprayed on the plants and soil. Do you think all these poisons just evaporate or magically disappear?? No. they accumulate and leach further and further into the subsoil.
      The past 50 years has seen a huge jump in chemical use. The last 30 has been really bad.
      Add: forgot to mention the mind-boggling amount of water is required. So much water that 15 years +/- ago a number of ethanol plants had to shut down because the deep aquifer was getting sucked dry.
      And for what purpose?? To produce a really crappy low energy fuel to "save the environment". It's the biggest scam ever and tax dollars subsidize it all.

    • @everythingmatters6308
      @everythingmatters6308 Год назад +2

      You are correct on the first part. Desalination is not the answer. Oceanographer Jim Massa should have a video on his channel "Science Talk" explaining all about why.

    • @user-nv4mk8hc6p
      @user-nv4mk8hc6p Год назад +1

      the second point is easy to refute by politicians by saying its expensive and other private corporations will lobby against it.

    • @robertosantos-vx6pn
      @robertosantos-vx6pn Год назад +3

      You are so right. Israel a desert has water abundance and they did it with ingenuity such as desalination and other strategies. This is a problem mostly created by humans, mostly politicians. Let the free market creat solutions and have bureaucrats stay out of the way.

  • @RajaAli-ei7me
    @RajaAli-ei7me Год назад +97

    One of the things that I liked about this documentary is that they have not talked about any "possible" solution to this problem. If they had then people would not have taken this very seriously. It really is a very serious issue. Especially in the third world or developing countries. In Pakistan, you don't need to be a scientist to see these changes. People in almost every city are facing a dire water crisis.

    • @Ethiopiainmymind.
      @Ethiopiainmymind. Год назад +4

      A solution but chaos.
      Motivate ur people you can do this brothe Pakistan will prevail!!!

    • @Ethiopiainmymind.
      @Ethiopiainmymind. Год назад

      That's today's problam raja they just talk about problems and manipulate us by using the problems for their own sake.
      The solution is first we have to plant a tree, I am from 🇪🇹and we started this things, we called it green legacy planting 25 billion trees in 4 years and we plant 25 billions.
      We have to do the same things all over the world
      The rich are busy by polluting the air and producing in wrong way.
      They never brough

    • @miodragsavic7350
      @miodragsavic7350 Год назад +3

      More rain, that's the only solution. There are less and less rain around the world and that is the main issue. Global warming is the problem.

    • @Ethiopiainmymind.
      @Ethiopiainmymind. Год назад +6

      @@miodragsavic7350 yeah we need to planting trees to get constant rain and to control climatic change.

    • @kv1ikklunsj238
      @kv1ikklunsj238 Год назад +2

      The point you make reflects a sad status of the human race.

  • @awesomesauce9661
    @awesomesauce9661 Месяц назад

    23:06-23:36 Logos
    23:36-25:00 Kairos
    26:10-26:23 Logos
    26:24- Logos
    27:34- Logos
    28:01 Ethos
    28:36 Ethos
    28:51 Logos/ Ethos
    29:25 Ethos
    30:50 Ethos

  • @griffithberserk1367
    @griffithberserk1367 Год назад +46

    Thanks for this level-headed, precise documentary about an immensely important topic! A perfect example for qualitative journalism

    • @zidbits1528
      @zidbits1528 Год назад +1

      A lot of people in the U.S think, "Oh, we have the great lakes. We're fine!" You'd be wrong. The great lake states and Canada signed a treaty called the great lakes compact which forbids the export of water out of those states. If you want great lakes water, you're going to have to move back to the great lake states. Time to start cleaning the rust off that belt. They're gonna be in for a growth boom.

    • @ajmuzz22
      @ajmuzz22 Год назад

      Yore a fool of you think this is a good documentary

  • @sealyoness
    @sealyoness Год назад +12

    In 1998, my geology professor said that the biggest problem desert communities have is that when the aquifers empty before having sufficient replacement, the stone around them collapses. Now water CANNOT replenish them. It's a bit late now to notice decades of mismanagement without a plan to reverse it. Also - WHY was anyone farming in a desert? Any one wanting to raise a crop ought to consider harvesting and exporting energy - or consider the usefulness of condensers, like those Luke's uncle used on Tatooine. Or how about a career in water reclamation and restoration? Or am I preaching to the stagnantly ignorant?

    • @Starfish2145
      @Starfish2145 Год назад +1

      I have been railing against growing cotton and alfalfa in the desert for years. They’re still doing it

    • @sealyoness
      @sealyoness Год назад

      @@Starfish2145 AND ALMONDS!! One of the thirstiest trees. Yeah, they need certain conditions, but can't these folks find alternative plants, like dwarf tree with fewer leaves? Alfalfa turns to dust without constant irrigation, and I can't imagine cotton being viable there at all. Then there's the greedy real estate axholes. I remember when retirees were all about moving to AZ for air quality - then whining because their lawns won't stay green without constant watering. They used to p/me/o the most.
      I predict that if ever the winds change, there'll be dreadful rainstorms that will force people off the land - the water won't have anywhere to go. Nor will some of the people.

  • @Ben_La_goulette
    @Ben_La_goulette Месяц назад

    Water 💦 is life. A living creature
    Water got feelings..

  • @alexismiller288
    @alexismiller288 Год назад +1

    Cold & icy places will be worth so much more in the future

  • @grebulon9558
    @grebulon9558 Год назад +11

    Las Vegas is the most insane place on Earth.
    A big city.
    With millions of people.
    In the middle of a desert.
    🤔🤔🤔
    What could possibly go wrong?!?!?

    • @kerrynight3271
      @kerrynight3271 Год назад +1

      And much of their income is from tourists who fly there to drink and gamble. I agree, what could possibly go wrong?

    • @DrumToTheBassWoop
      @DrumToTheBassWoop Год назад +1

      Las Vegas hasn't got long, I can see it being a complete ghost town/ruin in my lifetime.

    • @chihirostargazer6573
      @chihirostargazer6573 Год назад +1

      What about Dubai?

    • @grebulon9558
      @grebulon9558 Год назад +1

      @@chihirostargazer6573
      Dubai is coastal, so can operate water desalination plants.

  • @nat3816
    @nat3816 Год назад +196

    Here in Singapore, we are already self sufficient in water supply via 3 methods of desalination, water conservation by recycling our used water to turn them drinkable again and the accumulation of rainwater in our reservoirs. Back in those days where climate change was unheard of, we have already started the water sufficiency journey because our country was reliant on Malaysia for water supply and they constantly had the idea that if we did anything they are displeased, they can always turn our tap off. It made the Singapore PM then very concern as we were sorely reliant on Malaysia for our water supply and any water stoppage are national knee bending events. Our PM sought to fix our water sufficiency issues to remove the reliance on Malaysia. We remembered the Malaysians taunting us so hard when our leaders introduced the water recycling or NEWater plan as Singaporeans being so desperate they need to drink recycled pee or sewage water. That’s the kind of reaction they gave to us for our approach. Today, we are definitely thanking the Malaysians for their constant threat to turn the tap off because we are now more ready than many countries in managing water issues cause by climate change with a sustainable approach.

    • @DroneStrike1776
      @DroneStrike1776 Год назад +17

      It's so easy to talk when your country only has 5 million people and a more tropical climate. So tell us, why do you get almost everything else imported then? Tell us folks why Singapore import 90% of food? Self sufficient in water but dependent on everything else. California, Nevada, and Arizona has 50 million people, in a mostly desert climate, of course water is going to be an issue. That's 10 times more people than your little country. Do you think it's easier to maintain a flow of water for 5 million in a tropic climate or 50 million in a desert climate?

    • @nat3816
      @nat3816 Год назад +21

      @@DroneStrike1776 we have a plan to get 30% of our food supply grown in Singapore by the year 2030, we call them 30 by 30 plan. The main reasons for not having 100% self sufficiency in the past is due to our governmental policy to get high value jobs for the people as our land is scarce and agriculture jobs are not well paying in the past. Currently, due to high tech farming, we can grow food indoor in buildings to improve on food security in the tiny land of ours. Some of our fishes, prawns and vegetables supplies are all growth indoor in Singapore now. It can actually avoid the climate issues that is plaguing the world today. Our country can maintain good food security thru the imports of food stuff from all over the world + our current 30% home growth food source, there is more cushion for food security for our future. At this moment, we are still planning for future water sufficiency and not resting on our laurels yet. Our country should be more concern about our population of 5 million and our future plan allows for future population expansion as well.

    • @UseBefore2007
      @UseBefore2007 Год назад +28

      @@DroneStrike1776 Dude chill, they were relating how their situation has improved compared to their own past scarcity, no need to get so defensive.

    • @mhcbon4606
      @mhcbon4606 Год назад

      @@nat3816 so do you plan to host your own solar industry too ? And the mines too ? I am being sarcastic to illustrate the fact that all of those measures are short terms runaway schemes.

    • @nat3816
      @nat3816 Год назад +4

      @@mhcbon4606 we have plans for renewable energy but we don’t have the means to install more solar panels to power our country as land is scarce, so the alternative is to host solar panels in different countries like Australia or tap into Vietnam’s solar resources for renewable options. We mainly uses natural gas for energy. The current options are importing gases from Indonesia and Malaysia through a pipeline and we also imports liquefied natural gas from Australia, US, Qatar and Angola among other countries. There is not a lot of self sufficiency in these areas due to our small size and our people’s only options are to earn the money to afford all we need.

  • @j.w.2391
    @j.w.2391 Год назад +3

    After seeing the F.lint, Michigan and Jackson, Miss water crises, I have increased respect for our Water systems. I've learned to conserve and Not to waste it by running it unnecessarily. When I was a home owner one thing I stopped doing was Watering the Lawn. I had neighbours who would water for an Hour and the concrete walkway/ steps too. So many North Americans are still obsessed with having a Golf Green Lawn----who cares?
    I fear Pure / uncontaminated water will be the battle ground of privilege between the "Haves" and "Have Nots". We must Never Privatize Water.

  • @soysanto9939
    @soysanto9939 Год назад +1

    The Salton Sea is not a good example. It was a dry lakebed until 1905, when the Colorado River broke though an irrigation canal and flowed for two years before it was fixed. It is highly saline but an excellent stop for migrating birds.

  • @benzun9600
    @benzun9600 Год назад +19

    I live in a small western town in mountains . So grateful for our rivers and well water

    • @dewmontain123
      @dewmontain123 Год назад +3

      Shhhh!!

    • @godofdestructiondiecast6756
      @godofdestructiondiecast6756 Год назад +1

      I will say this don't take it for granted the things that we take for granted that like water is going to be like having money resources going to be the new money not just the water food as well too this affects a lot of things you can't grow crops that means half of the population is going to start yeah we are serious trouble here everywhere

    • @marcusm8009
      @marcusm8009 10 месяцев назад

      I don't need to see the mountains to be thankful of them.

  • @hantykje3005
    @hantykje3005 Год назад +24

    Very important subject. My country dependent on hydro electric power in combination with little rain and snow over the past years. The result is lower water levels in lakes and rivers. This makes me really concerned for fish stocks, birds and small animals depended on the water because it represents their home, so to speak. Fishing is a really important hobby to me.

    • @nenmaster5218
      @nenmaster5218 Год назад +1

      Its important?
      Well, then dont blame me for the Randomness when i
      recommend more Info-Sources, like Some More News and Second Thought.

    • @schechter01
      @schechter01 Год назад

      Do you live in the Netherlands or Holland, by chance?

    • @achim8239
      @achim8239 Год назад +2

      @@schechter01 Probably not, the Netherlands are not known for hydropower... Must be Norway.

    • @hantykje3005
      @hantykje3005 Год назад

      @@achim8239 I live in Norway, yes. You?

    • @gigiis526
      @gigiis526 Год назад +1

      Considering the fact that this documentary points to human beings being at risk with water depletion its pretty bizarre that you are more concerned about fish and animals and your "hobby". Maybe you dont understand the gravity of the situation worldwide.