The Future of California’s Water | Full Series

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  • Опубликовано: 3 фев 2025

Комментарии • 82

  • @randy-mw5dq
    @randy-mw5dq 6 месяцев назад +9

    We Californians around 5 years voted to pass funding to build more reservoirs, since that time none have been built and the moneys being used for special interests projects.

    • @rachelpickens6025
      @rachelpickens6025 17 дней назад

      Do you recall the name of the bill Californian voted for . I'd like to read it.. you said about 5 Years ago? Thank you 🙏😊

    • @randy-mw5dq
      @randy-mw5dq 17 дней назад

      @rachelpickens6025
      Yes it was 5 to 7 years ago and I think it was referred to as a rainy day fund or something like that.

  • @briggsviloria5823
    @briggsviloria5823 9 месяцев назад +9

    Real News! Thank you

  • @bosquebear1
    @bosquebear1 9 месяцев назад +36

    Bring back beavers! Seriously!

    • @Krispy1011
      @Krispy1011 9 месяцев назад +4

      I agree - hairy ones

    • @dennissalisbury496
      @dennissalisbury496 9 месяцев назад +4

      Yes, Beavers and their dames replenish ground water but that would be too simple a solution not requiring $billions in taxpayer money.

    • @UA_in_USA
      @UA_in_USA 9 месяцев назад +2

      Beavers will save the world 🌎

    • @boardcertifiable
      @boardcertifiable 7 месяцев назад

      Wish granted 🧞‍♂️

    • @EricUnderwood-v2x
      @EricUnderwood-v2x Месяц назад

      Huntington Beach has alot of them!

  • @lexuannhi
    @lexuannhi 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for doing this clip. It opened my eyes and helped me looking farther into our future, when whether I'm still here or not, the younger generation will be benefited.

  • @GnarlsBarkley123
    @GnarlsBarkley123 9 месяцев назад +10

    Bring back Tulare Lake! We need more reservoirs.

  • @eliafuimaono
    @eliafuimaono 9 месяцев назад +7

    Good stuff

  • @wild-radio7373
    @wild-radio7373 9 месяцев назад +2

    This presentation is FANTASTIC ❤

  • @frederickmarc-aurele2035
    @frederickmarc-aurele2035 9 месяцев назад +5

    Progress in strategically reusing highly treated wastewater has been very slow but steady for decades. Conservation, efficient/effective use of scarce water resources, and targeted reuse is a must in California.

  • @politicalchannel66
    @politicalchannel66 9 месяцев назад +5

    Good information

  • @Rodrigo-tk2fm
    @Rodrigo-tk2fm 9 месяцев назад +14

    The fact that we are still flushing the toilet with fresh water is absolutely wild and irresponsible

    • @etrankill3r14
      @etrankill3r14 9 месяцев назад +5

      Have you used japanese Toilets, They have some where you rinse your hands above the tank, so that water gets recycled into the bowl. It was a weird idea at first, but it grows on ya

    • @Krispy1011
      @Krispy1011 9 месяцев назад

      go ahead and do it if you thinks its so good or shut your pie hole!

  • @sonomahotsauce7244
    @sonomahotsauce7244 9 месяцев назад +1

    well done.

  • @patriciabray5726
    @patriciabray5726 9 месяцев назад +2

    Water is a subject that every person is going to be challenged to learn more about as the atmospheric conditions, rights and ownership and the need for learning and creating best practices hit communities around the world.

  • @CameronPosh
    @CameronPosh 9 месяцев назад +3

    nice

  • @riorocky3360
    @riorocky3360 9 месяцев назад +14

    separate the drink water pipe from non drink water use.
    just don;t flush fresh drinking water down the toilet. use shower water, dishwashing water, recycle water, sea water, 2nd, 3rd used water whatever, it is toilet, flushing with dirty water not going make me thirsty to drink or use the water from toilet anyway. there many coastal cities in Asia using sea water to flush.
    Navy ships use sea water to flush toilets.

    • @r22gamer54
      @r22gamer54 9 месяцев назад +3

      Sea water isnt a good idea cause it would cost a bunch of money to pump that warer and it would also damage our toilets. Many places already use recycled water for toilets and for plants.

  • @ShadeCandle
    @ShadeCandle 9 месяцев назад

    There was a water rights folder there labelled "YOLO". That definitely bodes well, lol.

    • @adamoliver4094
      @adamoliver4094 9 месяцев назад +1

      I know you're making a joke, but Yolo is a county in California just West of Sacramento.

  • @00crashtest
    @00crashtest 9 месяцев назад +2

    Honestly, agriculture will have plenty of water to use even during extreme droughts if everyone just uses drip irrigation or airtight greenhouses. That is because there is the law of conservation of mass after all. The atoms that make up the water originally in the river don't just disappear. The atoms that enter must leave at the same rate in order to keep the level of the river constant. Here, the only methods of leaving are flowing into the ocean, being incorporated into agricultural products, evaporating, and groundwater recharge.
    The flow rate of the Sacramento River minus the amount needed to maintain the minimum depth at the delta even during low water levels way exceeds by orders of magnitude the amount of matter that can be shipped out at any given time by truck, trains, or even giant maritime ships (if such a shipping channel had existed there) and transpiration combined. My bet is that virtually all, proportion wise, of the water that is taken from the Sacramento river is evaporated from the soil by flood irrigation or just using sprinklers directly on exposed soil. The farmers seem incredibly ignorant of hard science, which are the physical sciences.

  • @chaws314
    @chaws314 9 месяцев назад +3

    I feel like it should be about diversification.

  • @islandbirdw
    @islandbirdw 9 месяцев назад +3

    The Navy spearheaded desalination aboard ships in particular.

  • @EricUnderwood-v2x
    @EricUnderwood-v2x Месяц назад

    I have one Stock certificate for one share of Santa Ana Valley Irrigation District
    .65 cents assigned to the lot my Dad was born on in 1918... The date on the certificate is 1902! In Anaheim California

  • @grahamkearnon6682
    @grahamkearnon6682 9 месяцев назад

    Up here in BC we are well aware how the States want access to the Rockies water shed. There has been US talk since the 70's on diverting that source south.

  • @Ac_a
    @Ac_a 9 месяцев назад +10

    California should take care of California FIRST. NOT the rest of america.

    • @Daniel-ii6kf
      @Daniel-ii6kf 3 месяца назад +1

      By that logic, Colorado shouldn’t share its river with California, as they need to prioritize their own water shortages.

  • @adamoliver4094
    @adamoliver4094 9 месяцев назад

    Maintaining the salinity level of the ocean seems like a trivial concern. The shelf drops off quickly West of California. It's not a long, shallow culdesac like the Arabian gulf. Localized high salinity is much less likely near San Diego than near Al-Jubail.

  • @AveMaria1917
    @AveMaria1917 9 месяцев назад +1

    St. Kateri Tekakwitha, ora pro nobis

  • @lingth
    @lingth 9 месяцев назад +2

    California are happy to use Waters for their Vegan Milk.. their Almonds.. for almond milk, etc..

    • @henrytep8884
      @henrytep8884 9 месяцев назад +2

      California makes it for the entire country, but don’t forget to include avocado.

  • @unknOwN-nv9nu
    @unknOwN-nv9nu 9 месяцев назад +2

    Drought plus heat waves in California. You need water to survive. I’ll take recycled water and take that anxiety of waiting for rain any day. Times changed and we must too or it’ll be our downfall.

  • @LawrenceLudy
    @LawrenceLudy 9 месяцев назад +4

    90% of California`s rainwater flows into the ocean each year. Why can`t we store and recirculate more of this water, while still protecting fish and the environment.

    • @larryludy1382
      @larryludy1382 8 месяцев назад +1

      I think your 100% right. The future looks bleak with more scarcity and government control of our lives.

    • @MissMermaidTailz
      @MissMermaidTailz 5 месяцев назад +1

      Do we all not remember the giant snow 2 years ago? Where did that water go? They wasted it and put it in the ocean! 😢

    • @MissMermaidTailz
      @MissMermaidTailz 5 месяцев назад +1

      They need to use the technology they have now and track every flake of snow! ❄️

    • @AnthonyHerrschaft
      @AnthonyHerrschaft 8 дней назад

      In 2023, the record snowpack water from California's Sierra Nevada mountains primarily flowed into the state's major reservoirs and water systems, including the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers, as snowmelt runoff during the spring, significantly replenishing water supplies and helping to alleviate drought conditions; some excess water was also captured and stored in the California Aqueduct to manage potential flood situations.

    • @AnthonyHerrschaft
      @AnthonyHerrschaft 8 дней назад

      2023’s record snowpack when it melted, gathered in the rivers and recharged the empty water reservoirs that the multi year drought before that record rain and snow left empty. That spring there was real-time video of the reservoirs filling back up… there’s no need to push right wing lies when you can simply google the question you need help answering.

  • @davidsasse40
    @davidsasse40 9 месяцев назад

    Sf should have desal. Pump the brine into the salt ponds on rhe bay. Cargill would love it

  • @DarylRandy-s6c
    @DarylRandy-s6c 9 месяцев назад +3

    Education. Education. education.
    Prevention. prevention, prevention,
    The american "farmer" needs to start educating the farm laborer so that they can understand the way our ecosystem works.
    Im doing my part here on the river. It starts with you. Thank you news 10

  • @Darknimbus3
    @Darknimbus3 9 месяцев назад +1

    Title should be: “The Future of California, Arizona, and Nevada’s water” (i.e. California constantly steals its eastern neighbors’ water)

    • @DymonBeats
      @DymonBeats 5 месяцев назад +1

      because CA has farms.

  • @jacksongould4263
    @jacksongould4263 9 месяцев назад

    "We may not be able to slow the rate of climate change...". Are we already giving up on slowing or reversing climate change after hardly trying? Slowing climate change is the best way to mitigate impacts to our water system in a state that is overwhelmingly dependent on snowmelt water and have been pumping groundwater like its limitless while preventing most recharge for over a century.
    Definitely appreciate a focus on what cities and metropolitan areas are doing to be more water efficient because that is going to be critical going forward. Cities, especially in the southern part of the state, will face huge stressors from reduced water availability from historical diversions (Colorado River, CVP/SWP) and will have to mitigate that loss somehow.
    Farmers will also need to get their act together as by far the largest users of water in the state. Growing fewer water intensive crops (almonds, pistachios, alfalfa etc.) and increasing rice cultivation where appropriate will go a long way. Farmers also need to start being smarter about the way they farm, ie reducing the use of chemical fertilizers that contaminate groundwater and surface water by rotating fields, planting cover crops, generally taking measures to rebuild the topsoil, and increase soil organic carbon in the central valley will also have a massive impact on water quality and use.

    • @Rodrigo-tk2fm
      @Rodrigo-tk2fm 9 месяцев назад

      Humans do not act until life changing consequences occur. How does that look collectively? Maybe after a full blown global apocalypse and by then it will be a matter of how many humans can survive, not how many will die.

  • @jeromedamian5740
    @jeromedamian5740 Месяц назад

    California agriculture needs change to drought tolerant crops if it's going to have a future.

  • @dennissalisbury496
    @dennissalisbury496 9 месяцев назад

    The Sites Water Reservoir Project was delayed 50 years to create water shortages.

  • @mattfavaloro350
    @mattfavaloro350 9 месяцев назад

    Wait you could essentially stick a straw into the ocean and extract water that is usable for human consumption and irrigation with desalination plants. Israel Saudi Arabia many countries in the middle East used desalination to supply freshwater to their citizens and you're telling me you can't can bs

  • @paulgilliland2992
    @paulgilliland2992 9 месяцев назад

    The lady with the recycled water part has a strange delivery voice .

  • @lalah9481
    @lalah9481 9 месяцев назад

    Interesting that y’all didn’t show how sketchy the water ‘rights’ system and the water boards distribution debates, committees, and ‘votes’ have been.
    How billionaire owners have colluded with smaller ranchers to extract maximum water regardless of damages to local ground water and aquifers.
    There are entire towns without access to any water. There is infrastructure (roads, bridges, and canals) failing due to aquifers emptied without replenishing. The fact that we have too few companies drilling wells for access to deeper sources…
    Greed kills.

  • @ecofriend93
    @ecofriend93 9 месяцев назад

    47% of water in California is used for animal husbandry, more than any other industry and it cannot even meet the animal foods demand for CA. CA grows 80% of the whole world's almond supply. In terms of efficiency, there's no contest, animal husbandry is a huge waster (and as the new story highlights, stealer) of our water resources.

  • @dustybricks113
    @dustybricks113 9 месяцев назад +1

    LA and SD where founded as lumber towns due to the crystal clear water in the rivers filled with salmon. Now the hills are barren except houses... The forest was never replanted... And you wonder why you have no water... It is all by design. I was raised in SD, now I live where I'm free and can afford a nice safe neighborhood for my daughter.😊

  • @selvarajkannan9923
    @selvarajkannan9923 9 месяцев назад

    The biggest crisis humanity has been going to face deadly flooding,historic storm and high temperatures with drought 🙋‍♀️.In this connection animals are also under thread and crops yield is also plummeting for farmers across the country .Eventually it is awful global warning 🙏🇮🇳.

  • @jakehood7463
    @jakehood7463 9 месяцев назад

    An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Letting water run off into the ocean then trying to separate the salt from the fresh water is clearly the least attractive option. Necessary maybe but the more reliant on it you are, the worse of a job you're doing managing the water.

  • @melodyivey8066
    @melodyivey8066 4 месяца назад

    Use the recycled sewer water for crops

  • @kabanchan5768
    @kabanchan5768 9 месяцев назад

    no wee don't fudge cali

  • @oldbeatpete
    @oldbeatpete 10 дней назад

    No one "owns" the air or water.

  • @trinetteh
    @trinetteh 9 месяцев назад

    Tear down the dams & bring back the beavers..

  • @kblskables2877
    @kblskables2877 9 месяцев назад +1

    these people really spent 20 mins trying to make farmers out to be the bad guys?

  • @jaymzgaetz2006
    @jaymzgaetz2006 9 месяцев назад

    Why is desalination a last resort? Rising sea levels and the reduction of salinity in the ocean from human activity are a growing threat to ocean ecosystems and countries all over the world. These high tech desalination plants aren't practical especially for a place like California where you can have 3 jobs and still be homeless. They need to regulate how much water is allowed into the ocean where rivers meet the ocean lowering sea levels and resalinating the ocean. There's a lot that can be done to sea water without the need for an impractical desalination plant to make water suitable for crops. The problem with California is they believe that business and profits are more important than people and until they create a sustainable environment for people nobody will have any sympathy for California. Anything California comes up with that benefits the environment or people comes with a price tag that's impractical and unreasonable because the people that created it live in a state that is impractical and unreasonable for people to live. Something totally obvious for an oregon resident like myself dealing with californians fleeing at such a rate we're ready to build a wall to keep them out. There are people commuting by plane from oregon to California because of housing, traffic, and inflation. Instead of coming to oregon and wrecking our state...FIX YOURS.

    • @sentientflower7891
      @sentientflower7891 9 месяцев назад +1

      Desalination doesn't lower sea level at all.

    • @jaymzgaetz2006
      @jaymzgaetz2006 9 месяцев назад

      Nope...but water consumption does.

  • @adrianpineda3346
    @adrianpineda3346 9 месяцев назад +1

    Liberal Propaganda

    • @oldbeatpete
      @oldbeatpete 10 дней назад

      conservative propaganda.

  • @cloudatlasminer478
    @cloudatlasminer478 9 месяцев назад

    If you live in a dessert, you’d think maybe not the best place for a farm. The Egyptian did. Similar thing, creating irrigation, which will drought California even more.

  • @golden_ratio-y8r
    @golden_ratio-y8r 9 месяцев назад

    You can get water from the air!!!! Much cheaper! You can get water even in desert from air