Something is Drinking 50% of the Colorado River's Water

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  • Опубликовано: 19 янв 2023
  • Click seed.com/mic15 and use code MIC15 to get 15% off your first month's supply of Seed’s DS-01™ Daily Synbiotic. Thanks to Seed for sponsoring today’s video on the Colorado River!
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    Colorado River Basin Basics:
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    2014 Pulse Flow Results:
    www.usgs.gov/news/a-river-ran...
    Lake Levels Resources:
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    Climate Change Portion of River Flow:
    www.usgs.gov/news/colorado-ri...
    Colorado Water Usage:
    waterknowledge.colostate.edu/...
    Colorado Ag Overview:
    www.nass.usda.gov/Quick_Stats...
    Colorado Irrigation Percentage:
    d32ogoqmya1dw8.cloudfront.net...
    New Mexico Ag Overview:
    www.nass.usda.gov/Quick_Stats...
    New Mexico Ag Percentage:
    www.ose.state.nm.us/WUC/wucTe...
    California Water Use by Sector Quote:
    cwc.ca.gov/-/media/CWC-Websit...
    California Pacific Institute Analysis - Feed Crop Water Usage:
    pacinst.org/wp-content/upload...
    California Water Usage by Crop - UC Davis Chart:
    i.insider.com/552be7066da8110...
    Arizona Ag Water:
    www.arizonawaterfacts.com/wat...
    CNN Report on Arizona:
    www.cnn.com/2022/11/05/us/ari...
    Arizona Irrigated Acreage by Crop:
    wrrc.arizona.edu/sites/wrrc.a...
    Water Usage of Alfalfa and Various Crops - Table from Texas AgriLIFE Data:
    cms-static.wehaacdn.com/hoard...
    Smithsonian Article - Las Vegas Use Quote:
    www.smithsonianmag.com/scienc...
    Nevada Ag Water Use:
    guinncenter.org/how-does-neva...
    Nevada Ag Overview:
    www.nass.usda.gov/Quick_Stats...
    Nevada Crop Specialist Quote:
    www.rgj.com/story/news/2015/0...
    Nevada Ag Tiny Part of Economy:
    www.statista.com/statistics/1...
    2020 Nature Sustainability Paper - Quoted Several Times:
    www.nature.com/articles/s4189...
    50% of West's Water Feed Quote:
    projects.propublica.org/killi...
    Pacifica Institute - 60% of West's Irrigated Land is Feed:
    pacinst.org/wp-content/upload...
    High Country News Article on Alfalfa:
    www.hcn.org/articles/landline...
    Vice Video: • 40 Million People Rely...
    Local Arizona News: www.azfamily.com/2022/08/16/c...
    ABC News Segment: • Native American tribes...
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Комментарии • 464

  • @allatamusic
    @allatamusic Год назад +55

    It is so disconcerting how people are eager to scream ' Climate Change' and not look at the main source of water usage/waste and their own personal daily consumption of resources. People do not really want to take responsibility on this level yet.

    • @someguy2135
      @someguy2135 Год назад +11

      Climate change is worsened by meat and dairy production. Ending animal agriculture as we know it is needed to achieve the goals of the Paris Agreements of 1.5-2 degrees Celsius. Switching to a fully plant based diet is the most effective way for each of us to minimize our environmental footprint.

    • @someguy2135
      @someguy2135 Год назад +7

      Each person switching to a plant based diet would save 219,000 gallons (829,000 liters) of water every year! "UNESCO Institute for Water Education: The production of a meat-based diet typically consumes twice the amount of water as compared to a plant-based diet.
      National Geographic:
      "On average, a vegan, a person who doesn't eat meat or dairy, indirectly consumes nearly 600 gallons of water per day less than a person who eats the average American diet."
      Diet change-a solution to reduce water use? (IOP Science):
      This 2014 research finds "reducing animal products in the human diet offers the potential to save water resources, up to the amount currently required to feed 1.8 billion additional people globally."-Truth Or Drought (Title follows- "How Would a Vegan Shift Save Water?")

    • @ApexRevolution
      @ApexRevolution Год назад

      Because personal responsibility means nothing when 100 corporations pollute more than like 90% of the population? Stop being a liberal.

    • @allatamusic
      @allatamusic Год назад

      @@ApexRevolution It means something to me and my community DESPITE knowing the above and limits to making big change.
      But thanks for the label, didn't know that's what I was *lol*.

    • @palarious
      @palarious Год назад

      @@someguy2135 "the goals of the Paris Agreements of 1.5-2 degrees Celsius"
      You mean the goals that wouldn't actually stop climate change, just slow it, but would cripple the very economies that care enough to do something?
      Seems like it'd be a lot smarter to invest in space industry, lunar manufacturing, and launch a constellation of solar shades to a Lagrange point from factories on the moon

  • @jamieamodeo2551
    @jamieamodeo2551 Год назад +10

    People would rather have meat than water. Craziness.

  • @ConsciousBrosCommunity
    @ConsciousBrosCommunity Год назад +10

    Its absurd. Animal agriculture must be abolished asap

    • @The_Savage_Wombat
      @The_Savage_Wombat Год назад

      Abolish all agriculture in the desert. It's an ecological apocalypse.

  • @thearchitecturegirl
    @thearchitecturegirl Год назад +22

    I read “when the rivers run dry” by Fred Pearce before I went vegan, and I’m sure having that information in the back of my mind helped me switch. Really eye opening book, although quite old now.

    • @kennickel878
      @kennickel878 Год назад

      The Water Knife by Paolo Bacigalupi

    • @kevinouellette5316
      @kevinouellette5316 Год назад

      So you won't eat hunted or privately owned small farm meat because of mass agriculture?

  • @raycooper9116
    @raycooper9116 Год назад +13

    This is unbelievably awesome that you put this together. I knew about some of this as I hiked from Las Vegas to the Grand Canyon via the Arizona Strip in April 2021.
    I saw the low level in Lake Mead. What was evident also is the Arizona Strip which is roughly all the state of Arizona above the Grand Canyon is suffering from 150 years of cattle ranching. It’s dying.
    This was marginal grazing land even at its best, spring fed desert. There were once ranch houses that are now derelict. The leases were purchased by one or two who are trying to hang on but it’s futile. That’s the only good news, otherwise they’ve destroyed the landscape. Nature will come back.
    Thank you for doing this!

    • @raycooper9116
      @raycooper9116 Год назад

      @Nicegram-Me-MictheVegan Hi Mike Thanks for reading my comment
      If you like I can send you some 82% Cacao Organic World Peace Chocolate. Would love to get your input. The business is growing.
      We will create a non-profit vegan arm of the business. Moving to Portland Oregon later this year.
      Please provide shipping address. Chocolate needs to be chilled and served cold.

  • @chrisconklin2981
    @chrisconklin2981 Год назад +120

    I spent a good deal of my working career measuring water flows on the upper Colorado River. In the West, water is a fighting word. Your presentation is top notch. You missed southern Utah and their desire to water golf courses and the lawns of California refugees. Otherwise you are spot on about the meat industry. Legacy water rights are a real problem. Thanks

    • @josorzo11
      @josorzo11 Год назад +3

      California refugees not longer have green lawns

    • @someguy2135
      @someguy2135 Год назад +16

      Each person switching to a plant based diet would save 219,000 gallons (829,000 liters) of water every year! "UNESCO Institute for Water Education: The production of a meat-based diet typically consumes twice the amount of water as compared to a plant-based diet.
      National Geographic:
      "On average, a vegan, a person who doesn't eat meat or dairy, indirectly consumes nearly 600 gallons of water per day less than a person who eats the average American diet."
      Diet change-a solution to reduce water use? (IOP Science):
      This 2014 research finds "reducing animal products in the human diet offers the potential to save water resources, up to the amount currently required to feed 1.8 billion additional people globally."-Truth Or Drought (Title follows- "How Would a Vegan Shift Save Water?")

    • @user-no2mz9hl4f
      @user-no2mz9hl4f Год назад +4

      I agree that lawns and golf courses are an environmental issue. So are fast fashion and single-use plastic (for different reasons). But if someone is looking to make the biggest impact with just one lifestyle change, the switch to a plant based diet is the answer. I don’t even think, from an environmental perspective, it would have to be 100% plant based; I think upwards of 80% plant based would make a huge difference, which roughly works out to 4 or fewer meals which include animal products per week.

    • @twogood4m394
      @twogood4m394 Год назад +4

      Please correct me if I am wrong but I was under the impression that golf course water was in the category of parks/recreation which only was about 8% of the water usage. It just doesn't seem to make sense to go after that when agriculture is up in the 80%+ of water usage.

    • @chrisconklin2981
      @chrisconklin2981 Год назад

      ​@@twogood4m394 It is true that agriculture consumes the vast majority of the available water. The assumption being that by reducing meat consumption, this will help to solve our water problem. This will require a tremendous modification of the traditional western perspective.
      You mention that golf courses are included along with parks. Maybe so, but if you tour the small towns of the west, each has a municipal green grass park and they are well used by the public. Golf courses are a more recent addition and are mostly private clubs. I guess it is the symbolism that this represents that concerns me.

  • @iscovidoveryet7828
    @iscovidoveryet7828 Год назад +5

    If you're wondering where the water went, you need to look no further than the plastic bottle of water produced by Nestle.
    We have the same problem with them in Canada. The Grand River west of Hamilton is only 2 inches deep in most places because they're sucking up the aquifer for fractions
    of a penny on the dollar.

  • @suicune2001
    @suicune2001 Год назад +3

    It seems the human race is willing to go without water for ourselves rather then stop giving it to animals. That has to meet the definition of insanity somewhere.

  • @svettaa.8784
    @svettaa.8784 Год назад +3

    This is so informative! Thank you for the video, Mic.

  • @LouisGedo
    @LouisGedo Год назад +7

    *Create a Better 🌎 and a Better You by...............Living Vegan* 💜

  • @allisonmae3445
    @allisonmae3445 Год назад +5

    Absolutely amazing video!!! Thank you for putting this together. I knew the Colorado River was not in good shape, but I didn't realize it was this bad. There really aren't words to describe the level of frustration for this. Lately, I've been extra angry about corporate greed and have been getting more and more bothered seeing people mindlessly eat meat. For something like this to be happening because people are making bank killing and exploiting animals is next level.

    • @kevinouellette5316
      @kevinouellette5316 Год назад

      People have been eating meat since forever?! Mindless eating meat? The Earth's climate changes constantly, always has. Should we kill all animals that eat meat since they are being mean to other animals? Also I'm sure this guy's facts could be argued with other facts that contradict his point of view

  • @laurieparis2203
    @laurieparis2203 Год назад +5

    Can't watch more than five minutes as this topic is giving me a severe anxiety attack. Humans are destroying our planet and all we can do is sit back and watch while policing our own wasteful habits.
    Thx for bringing this topic to the fore for those with stronger constitutions than mine. 🌱

  • @annieo2766
    @annieo2766 Год назад +2

    Excellent information, thanks, Mic!

    • @annieo2766
      @annieo2766 Год назад

      Sorry, cant figure out what to do...

  • @thecakeisalie652
    @thecakeisalie652 Год назад +7

    As a teen I visited the grand cannyon, colorado river and hoover dam and the location where storm cathrina wiped the skywalk away (I am from Germany and it was the 1st and the last time I visited that impressive land). At 17 my English was mediocre but we talked to the Hualapai folks there and they reported the same thing as the guide at Antelope Canyon. The build of the hoover dam did a tremendous damage to the landscape after damming the river. Depending on the place we visited, the tone changed from criticising the building because of the damage it did to the environment up to plain "yay we got water" attitude at the info cards at hoover dam. This trip changed me since then to appreciate nature more because it can be destroyed easily. It is sad to see that there are even more issues -- not the ones that were espectec by global warming in 2005 when I was there but on top that water deal is mortifying IMHO. Just why...? I highly recommend anyone who can reach this land by car - go there, look at that little river, talk to the lokals what it means for them. It will have an impact on you, because you have so much beautiful nature that is worth protecting.

  • @brandygibson5003
    @brandygibson5003 Год назад +33

    I was born and raised in Arizona and I do not even know how to begin to describe the sadness I feel at the thought of the Colorado drying up. I do know, that when it is gone, some of the most beautiful parts of Arizona (and the world) will likely disappear too.
    All for what? For greed? And so people can continue to enjoy a food system that has been proven again again to be damaging to us in every way possible.
    I just feel so tired. Honestly. Tired and hopeless.
    I've known climate change was going to screw us all for a long time. However, it looks like it's going to happen even sooner than originally thought, because humans suck so damn much. And that just opens a pit of dispair.

    • @berniv7375
      @berniv7375 Год назад +2

      🌱🙂🌱

    • @NeneChan203
      @NeneChan203 Год назад +6

      I share your same exact feelings of tiredness, hopelessness and frustration. It's so, so saddening, watching this unfold and still seeing most of people laughing and joking about it, dismissing it, posting childish "eating a steak rn watching this" and "i'll eat double the meat so your efforts won't matter" comments, so on and so forth. Human beings are killing this beautiful planet, the only planet we have, along with billions of beautiful animals that go through unmeasurable suffering, because of selfishness and greed. Because they can't give up their addiction to corpses and they demand more and more. It's really disheartening. Sometimes it really gets to me and it becomes hard to accept to live in a world like this.
      Sorry for the rant, I wanted to support and share your feelings. I hope somehow things will change.

    • @suicune2001
      @suicune2001 Год назад +2

      @@NeneChan203 Trust me, I get it. I've been feeling the same way the last few months. With everything that is going on politically and watching the world fall apart, knowing we're basically on a 30 year countdown timer, it REALLY makes it hard to give a crap about anything. Heck, I'm even publishing a book soon and while that gave me a little hope for a little while, I don't honestly expect it to have a big impact. I should probably go to a therapist but then I'd just make the therapist vegan and depress the heck out of them too. lolci.
      Part of me wants to get back to eating super healthy and lose a little bit of weight for my book release and put out a good face and the other part of me wants to screw it and eat vegan cheesecake.

    • @NeneChan203
      @NeneChan203 Год назад +1

      @@suicune2001 I'm really sorry to hear that you're going through so much. It's amazing that you've been working on your own book though, that requires a lot of effort and skills, so great job for doing that. :-) It's an incredible accomplishment. As for the rest, I try to hang onto the little bit of hope that I can find. I try to think that through online activism, more and more people are seeing the horrible truth of animal ag and turning vegan, even though, regrettably, it's still a very very small percentage of people... We can only hope and stay strong. I wish you the best of luck though, and a great success.

    • @suicune2001
      @suicune2001 Год назад +1

      @@NeneChan203 Thanks,! I just requested a proof copy of my book from Amazon. It should be coming in the mail tomorrow. If everything looks good then actual publishing should be in a couple weeks. I want to make an audiobook as well. I have some equipment to record it but I don't actually know how to publish an audiobook and neither does my publisher. I want to give my e-book away for free if Amazon lets me. I don't want anyone to claim they can't afford it or I'm just publishing it for money.
      Part of me wants it to get enough attention I get asked for interviews but the introverted part of me HATES that idea. lol. But if I have interviews then that means more exposure for people to read it and more potential people to go vegan.
      My book is very different than most books. I go hardcore into the science, the government regulations, and reports AND I provide direct links to my references. I don't just state "99.7% of milk contains mastitis and 79% contains E. coli." I also provide the link to the USDA 2014 Dairy Report so they can see it for themselves. I'm hoping to gross them out with the truth. Disgust is a very strong motivator.

  • @AdamTLyon
    @AdamTLyon Год назад +1

    Literally LOL’d at that Colorado transition. Loved this video and your thumbnails are always so good.

  • @heatherh.946
    @heatherh.946 Год назад

    Another incredible video! Thank you for all of your intense research and time that you put into providing this information.

  • @joeycmore
    @joeycmore Год назад

    Well presented. Thank you for opening my eyes.

  • @seattleareatom
    @seattleareatom Год назад

    Great video. THANKS!

  • @tnijoo5109
    @tnijoo5109 Год назад +33

    So crazy to think of how much food could be grown if alfalfa wasn’t being grown.

    • @someguy2135
      @someguy2135 Год назад +10

      Switching to a fully plant based food system would feed millions more people. I have seen the study.

    • @johnlopez5031
      @johnlopez5031 Год назад +7

      Ya no thanks i eat meat always will

    • @Reeeeves
      @Reeeeves Год назад

      @@johnlopez5031 🙄 Then continue your destructive habits and mindlessly going about your life. Sad, strange little man.

    • @UnlimitedHangout1
      @UnlimitedHangout1 Год назад

      @@johnlopez5031 Ya thanks, I eat Johnny Lopez and his friends n family and I always will.

    • @ElvenClaw
      @ElvenClaw Год назад +9

      @@johnlopez5031 it’s that attitude that has us all in this predicament

  • @bohditony
    @bohditony Год назад +3

    🙏 this topic is not mentioned in reports too often. As animal farmers see its their right to the use(abuse) of the water. Even if it leaves millions of people with out water.

  • @michealfriedman7084
    @michealfriedman7084 Год назад +2

    Saudi Arabia owns massive hay fields in Arizona. They get to use as much water as they want.
    That hay is shipped back to Saudi Arabia.

    • @The_Savage_Wombat
      @The_Savage_Wombat Год назад

      They got a lot of money. Laws and common sense don't apply to them.

  • @AH-xs3hg
    @AH-xs3hg Год назад +2

    I moved from a lower basin state to an upper basin state in part due to concerns of water scarcity. This is a really good video, I'm going to point people to it if I talk to them about this. Definitely those of us in the southwest are feeling a bit nervous about this.

  • @brentbaumgartner1198
    @brentbaumgartner1198 Год назад +2

    Excellent video, again. Thanks for all the work you put into getting the facts out in a very clear way.
    You may have done a video on this topic before, but I hope you can update it--I'd like to know how legislation in the farm bill, in particular, prohibits people from challenging agriculture in the law, making changing laws nearly impossible.
    Thanks for you and your channel!

    • @MictheVegan
      @MictheVegan  Год назад +1

      Yes I really need to do an Ag Gag law video!

  • @parkersavage8774
    @parkersavage8774 Год назад +4

    It's the end of the world as we know it.

  • @kamaliancirranoush1916
    @kamaliancirranoush1916 Год назад +3

    Good video Mike! I like it 👍🏻

  • @soupysoup931
    @soupysoup931 Год назад +3

    5:40 even if California is flooded which is a sorta normal thing in winters, it's all gonna dry like crazy in heatwaves in the summer when shit can get as high as 100+ down there in the desert so it's as good as useless. Thanks for the coverage.

  • @Twisted_Cabage
    @Twisted_Cabage Год назад

    Love your vids Mic. Thanks for your hard work and critical thinking. Be well brotha!

  • @AbsolutePerspective
    @AbsolutePerspective Год назад

    Thanks

  • @JasonJrake
    @JasonJrake Год назад +16

    As a school kid on the 80s, I know Arizona was already taking this seriously. In 4th grade the science hour was about xeriscaping (low water landscapes) and other ways to not waste water at home or in places like school and church.
    We also learned that we had to be careful with water and electricity because most of what is produced goes to California.
    Unfortunately the Electronics and Farming industries are given special deals there which causes them to not take these limited resources seriously.
    From what I understand, many of the suburbs of Phoenix actually rely on abundant ground water sources.

    • @MictheVegan
      @MictheVegan  Год назад +7

      That's awesome, it seems like the residential education is there but the political resource management is...not as you can see by the Arizona section of the view! Thanks for sharing :)

    • @JasonJrake
      @JasonJrake Год назад +2

      @@MictheVegan I should clarify that I grew up in a Mormon-controlled part of the Phoenix area, which in hindsight had private-level public schools as a side effect of the religiously motivated “meddling” of so many parents.
      A couple years later the same school was the trial for a sixth grade environmental/ecology curriculum. Other school districts may not have been as forward thinking.
      But the 4th grade state-history curriculum definitely made a point that Arizona-California is one of the few interstate water disputes that broke out in shooting (possibly while AZ was still a territory) and that’s how serious water is to survival.
      Thanks for covering this ticking time-bomb problem! It never hurts to bring more light.

    • @jeffk464
      @jeffk464 Год назад +3

      Water wise is low water landscaping and in my opinion can look more lush. Xeroscape is supposed to get by without any irrigation, so just rainfall, basically a cactus garden.

    • @The_Savage_Wombat
      @The_Savage_Wombat Год назад +1

      @@jeffk464 Eliminating all irrigated landscaping might save about 1% of the lower Colorado River water. But people won't have lawns to throw a frisbee or pools to swim in. The rate of obesity and diabetes would skyrocket. People need a place to exercise safely. Otherwise, they just sit in front of the TV playing video games or on the computer typing comments on RUclips.

  • @russellwilson5246
    @russellwilson5246 Год назад +3

    here in australia the CSIRO say dairy uses 50% of allocated water.we have the media blaming china and almonds too.seems thats a animal product industry destraction bit like sugar makes you fat.

  • @stephenieannarumma9064
    @stephenieannarumma9064 Год назад

    So good Mic. Thank you! Do you ever sleep? lol

  • @olallaeddy
    @olallaeddy Год назад

    It was almost dry in the early 70s in Yuma AZ and no water made it to Mexico. The golf courses look great in every state sucking water out.

  • @78cheerio
    @78cheerio Год назад

    I really like your thoughtful analysis, visuals, attitude and insights. You can pick any number of topics as far as I’m concerned. Likely your audience is intelligent and curious too, so perhaps they wouldn’t mind either.

  • @Mark4Jesus
    @Mark4Jesus Год назад +19

    My sister sent me a link to carnivore Paul Mason and I was bored so I watched. He said it's not true that raising cattle wastes water because they pee and water the fields. 🤣

  • @fernandocifuentes9258
    @fernandocifuentes9258 Год назад +1

    Love u mate, the world needs people like you

  • @meandyouagainstthealgorith5787
    @meandyouagainstthealgorith5787 Год назад +1

    Arizona sunshine is great for growing lettuce in winter, and Mexico (often forgotten, but equally dependent) grows green onions and other greens that are mostly shipped to the US. The alfalfa could be grown elsewhere. Cotton is disappearing for other reasons.

  • @michaeld4861
    @michaeld4861 Год назад +2

    Dang, nice breakdown!

  • @rebeccawatson9284
    @rebeccawatson9284 Год назад +1

    I hope you enjoyed your visit, anyway! We're colorado proud in our beautiful state! ✌️

  • @Human_Herbivore
    @Human_Herbivore Год назад +1

    People defending animal agriculture always tell me I have no idea because something, something, something green, blue water.

  • @marzettik
    @marzettik Год назад +1

    Wow, cows are thirsty, who knew? LOL

  • @vegmoto
    @vegmoto Год назад +2

    Last summer, I rode a motorcycle with galloping buffalo in a salt flat that used to be covered with water of the Great Salt Lake. At the time I thought it was really magical and romantic, and now that I know about the Great Salt Lake's fate, it feels more tragic.

  • @rn5697
    @rn5697 Год назад +1

    Interesting topic.

  • @07MoPower
    @07MoPower Год назад +1

    74.1 gallons of water to produce one pound of avocados.

  • @user-lu6cy7hm2t
    @user-lu6cy7hm2t Год назад

    the alps are also pretty much snow less this year...had a flight few days ago above and there was not much snow at all...its frightening...the next 20 years will be crazy coming to water...

    • @kevinouellette5316
      @kevinouellette5316 Год назад

      The Rockies are loaded with snow right now and there is going to be severe flooding from the melt this year.

  • @All_Things_Out_Doors
    @All_Things_Out_Doors Год назад +1

    Out east, we are perfect for growing hay....but big solar is taking up farm fields for solar panels. Yet in the bright sunny west, we are planting hay and no panels ....makes sense. Smh

  • @terryelizabeth2841
    @terryelizabeth2841 Год назад

    Stark but well reasoned. A very convincing argument.

  • @MichaelSuperbacker
    @MichaelSuperbacker Год назад +2

    Lock Ness Monster?

  • @jackpanella3285
    @jackpanella3285 Год назад

    How do you expect it to rain or snow without evaporation?
    Approximately 85% of atmospheric moisture evaporates from the ocean. The rest comes from evapotranspiration on land.
    When moisture from the Pacific climbs the Cascades or Sierra Nevada, precipitation is going to fall on the way up. When the air continues down the other side, the relative humidity drops as the air heats up. If you want precipitation on the other side, the moisture has to come from land and inland surface waters.
    Evaporation is good. Without it you're cutting off large regions of the country.
    By the way, I ended the drought, by removing obstructions to atmospheric circulation near Snowflake, Arizona. Look at the current Drought Monitor. The end of the drought starts in Arizona.

  • @davidthescottishvegan
    @davidthescottishvegan Год назад +3

    The Colorado River is probably running out of water due to the animal agricultural industry and the Almond industry ( not the most sustainable nut due to the water issue) Thanks for another awesome video Mike.

  • @deutziana4370
    @deutziana4370 Год назад

    Thanks for this information. You presented a very persuasive case for how switching to a vegan diet is an effective way for individuals to conserve water. I made the switch five years ago to improve my health. Protecting the environment is a compelling reason for me to stay committed to eating plants.

  • @miken1463
    @miken1463 Год назад +6

    Mic great presentation. Nice use of spreadsheets. Appreciate all the research that went into this. People need to understand this crisis for what it is. All the cities that you listed as the main consumers are huge progressive bubbles with progressive values. If you did a door to door poll asking questions like: Do you care about the health of our nations rivers. Do you care about the wildlife that depend on these rivers. Do you want to make a difference in creating sustainable rivers? The answers in Portland, SF, LA and Denver would be Yes Yes Yes. So we have another example of cognitive dissonance. Where a person’s beliefs and their actions are not aligned. You and people like you need to be on a bigger platform speaking these simple truths in 3 minute news bites and start chipping away at the overwhelming ignorance on this subject. Sorry 20 minute presentations are way too long. But I enjoyed every minute of it.

    • @someguy2135
      @someguy2135 Год назад +2

      I favor doing both long videos and excerpts from them for the new RUclips shorts feature. Those clips could also be used on Tic Tok, etc.

  • @tofutuesday
    @tofutuesday Год назад +1

    Living in Phoenix I know about this issue all too well. Even though animal ag is the main issue, I'm always amazed at the fact that the Phoenix metro area has zero water restrictions and surprised at how many people insist on planting and watering lawns. It's completely unnecessary in the desert

  • @markbelanger5754
    @markbelanger5754 Год назад

    It's amazing what a no brainer the fix is. And it's sitting right out in plain site. The Beef industry, meanwhile is pushing out all of the small ranchers and monopolizing into four large companies (or already has)...Seems like they are on a crash course trajectory. Thanks for keeping up the great work Mike!

  • @Loohan7
    @Loohan7 Год назад

    I'll have to think about this when I enjoy the cheap prices on alfalfa pellets that I fertilize my veg garden with...

  • @starsaligninthesky
    @starsaligninthesky Год назад +3

    Why don't people catch their own water? It boggles my mind that people pay for water when it literally is free.

    • @cosmichef75
      @cosmichef75 Год назад +8

      They made it illegal in some states.

  • @charlessexton5798
    @charlessexton5798 10 месяцев назад

    Lots of good information, which the media don't give.

  • @justalurkr
    @justalurkr Год назад

    "The Water Knife" by Bacigalupi is what we have waiting

  • @timhanser1943
    @timhanser1943 Год назад

    Great vid . Lake mead is at 28% . Really enjoyed.

  • @reason3581
    @reason3581 Год назад

    Of all elephants ever being in any room throughout the entire history of elephants in rooms, animal agriculture has to be by far the biggest.

  • @Bellasafari
    @Bellasafari Год назад

    Nestle’ draining it. I am on the Colorado River down by YUMA, it is flowing greatly.

  • @st.peterunner8758
    @st.peterunner8758 Год назад +3

    Hope this video does as good as the Salt Lake video!

  • @Tonii080
    @Tonii080 Год назад +2

    California barely rained for years until now. So, it’s weird for people to think that it made a big difference.
    Like another commenter said, it will dry up soon enough with how hot it gets.

    • @thatsalt1560
      @thatsalt1560 Год назад

      I follow a gardener in California and he seems to really use the sources of water he has to the max, both rain and "grey". It seems to working well, but it does cost to arrange it.

    • @The_Savage_Wombat
      @The_Savage_Wombat Год назад

      @@thatsalt1560 Grey water use is illegal in Las Vegas. Only the large casinos are allowed to use it.

  • @sophiasummers1637
    @sophiasummers1637 Год назад

    What about the million or so Canadians wintering in Arizona. There are extra golf courses kept green for them as well as their extra consumption.

  • @landerhendrickx3522
    @landerhendrickx3522 Год назад

    Growing hay in New Mexico :D

  • @raphlvlogs271
    @raphlvlogs271 Год назад

    Thats how the Colorado river became the Colorado wadi

  • @SeanOCallaghan0106
    @SeanOCallaghan0106 Год назад

    I would love to see a video on how to fix candida. Is it true that we ought to avoid all carbs?

    • @user-lu6cy7hm2t
      @user-lu6cy7hm2t Год назад

      no its not since you need carbs..your brain needs energy fe..theres plenty of videos on this topic..fats also trigger candida..especially oils..whole foods is the key..but its much more complex you really need to read and look up candida and how to control it..its always in your body just the amount your body produces is important

  • @libertadvalerio870
    @libertadvalerio870 Год назад +3

    It’s so frustrating. Vegan food is delicious. There are replacements for everything now a days! We are going to lose so much and for what?!

  • @cornstar1253
    @cornstar1253 Год назад

    They are probably draining it into an underground aquifer.

  • @PBandJames1
    @PBandJames1 Год назад

    11:43 is an interesting chart. I wonder whether the dollar value output of a crop is really relevant to us as vegans from a big picture perspective.
    I also wonder if the alfalfa and corn listed here being assigned the rate the are sold as feed skews what the industry really values them for- the end result animal product.

  • @robinpetersson3081
    @robinpetersson3081 Год назад +2

    No one ever mentions this anywhere. Sad and scary!

    • @Thinker7217
      @Thinker7217 Год назад +1

      That's what I was thinking!😢

  • @matwinner9708
    @matwinner9708 Год назад

    Whoever thought millions of surplus humans living large in a desert would cause any problems. Fascinating.

  • @steveberkson3873
    @steveberkson3873 Год назад

    Its like the great un-said,nobody notices until their taps run dry. JW Powell told us 150yrs ago that you can’t use the SW desert the same as other parts of the country.

  • @Solarprofessional
    @Solarprofessional Год назад

    Key word DESERT!

  • @byronmurphy1977
    @byronmurphy1977 Год назад +5

    Hey Mic, I enjoyed the holiday vlogs.

  • @harxmoond
    @harxmoond Год назад +1

    The Mississippi river is also drying up.

  • @RiDankulous
    @RiDankulous Год назад

    An interesting fact about Arizona water usage is that wells are used for agriculture by large segments of the industry. I spoke to the mother of a rancher southeast of Phoenix who said that water is available to those farmers from the river but it is too expensive. They don't have to pay for it.
    Interestingly, where I stayed I could see the water pump building for our use. There's a lot of well water in Arizona.

  • @veganfortheanimals6994
    @veganfortheanimals6994 Год назад +2

    Guess my comment got deleted. Now I know the boundaries...

  • @mieliav
    @mieliav Год назад +1

    no way to measure the flow to different places??? haven't they heard of meters? (there's one in my yard; they're actually pretty common.)

  • @Spyrit2011
    @Spyrit2011 Год назад

    You do realize vertical farming can be used for livestock, there is a dairy farm in Utah that has this. The cows are fed nutrient dense grasses, and it is 95% more efficient on water than agriculture.

  • @kevintewey1157
    @kevintewey1157 Год назад

    Cartoon app to wait 15 minutes for your argument
    it's arrogant to conceive that somebody has this time to wait

  • @troygoss6400
    @troygoss6400 Год назад

    The collective is suffering from insanity

  • @Thinker7217
    @Thinker7217 Год назад +2

    Human greed and selfishness are destroying the Earth.

  • @DK-cp2en
    @DK-cp2en Год назад

    Cattle

  • @NeneChan203
    @NeneChan203 Год назад +2

    This is disheartening. This kind of information should be aired everyday on TV. People need to know, but they don't want to know, because truth is inconvenient and most people don't want to give up their animal corpses and animal bodily fluids addiction. We only have one beautiful planet and we're killing it because of greed and selfishness.

  • @rev.donkbonkers3244
    @rev.donkbonkers3244 Год назад

    I'm not concerned, if you want some water...move.

  • @jaenmartens5697
    @jaenmartens5697 Год назад +1

    Water is going to Big Ag (not sustainable of course) The rains are controlled. THAT’s the big prob.

  • @jeffevans2242
    @jeffevans2242 Год назад

    The Tamarisk Tree has on water and salt levels in tributaries to the Colorado River.

  • @goosenotmaverick1156
    @goosenotmaverick1156 Год назад +1

    I just came across this channel on accident via this video. I've been telling people for years we eat too much darn meat. I don't eat much red meat, but I do consume other animal protiens, but slowly working on comverting my family to our own version of vegetarian, or at least highly limit our meat intake. I feel like growing something to feed to something, then eat that thing, seems like too many extra steps. It's innefficient.

  • @michaelspano4067
    @michaelspano4067 Год назад +1

    i understand that the walmart conglomerate has invested over 2 billion dollars into the scheme to privatize the water from the colorado river. i gather no moves have been made yet to privatize the rainfall but once this privatization occurs and water prices skyrocket we will no doubt need to increase the taxpayer funded subsidies to the animal agriculture industry so we can continue to use animals for our dining pleasure.

    • @The_Savage_Wombat
      @The_Savage_Wombat Год назад

      I don't understand how you can privatize the Colorado River when it has an overarching agreement which controls all of it.

  • @kathivy
    @kathivy Год назад +1

    This is an amazing breakdown of what is happening to the Colorado River. Thank you for digging into the details. I would have thought that human direct use would have had a larger percentage of the impact, but I guess it shouldn’t be a surprise that our obsession with hamburgers is the biggest single culprit.

    • @MictheVegan
      @MictheVegan  Год назад +1

      That was always the impression I was given!

    • @AndrewLoui
      @AndrewLoui Год назад

      They should limit the amount of hay they can export to other countries.

  • @unlimitedoutdoors3307
    @unlimitedoutdoors3307 Год назад

    I find it astonishing that no one is talking about the construction of a semiconductor factory being built in Arizona; a facility that’s production is 90%+ reliant upon water.

    • @jpe1
      @jpe1 Год назад

      The percentage that is used is much less important than the total gallons used. How many gallons does that semiconductor factory use, compared to the many millions of gallons used for animal agriculture?

  • @bAa-xj3ut
    @bAa-xj3ut 7 месяцев назад

    👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @cutemartinj
    @cutemartinj Год назад

    How about drilling for water? Or they only drill for oil over there?

  • @chick-a-labstudent7982
    @chick-a-labstudent7982 Год назад

    I live in Las Vegas. My family and I are making serious plans to relocate because the water end is near. What makes me angry is seeing the greed. Have we stopped growing and building. Absolutely fucking not. We see new neighborhoods pop up every month. I don’t even use my tap to boil water anymore. We’re into the sludge in Lake Mead.

  • @BillBrinkop
    @BillBrinkop Год назад +1

    Thanks for some real data on almond water use. The propaganda against almonds in California has been crazy as it uses 20% the water as beef and dairy production pound per pound of production. You never hear about the water use for those industries but “evil” almond farmers are maligned daily in California as the main cause of our water shortage. Think of this: if you replace one pound of beef with a pound of almonds you just saved 1500 gallons of water. That’s based on UC Davis and Yale data, not magazine hit pieces.

  • @johnpurser2798
    @johnpurser2798 Год назад

    Shared along with your Great Salt Lake video. I'm trying to influence some very intelligent but meat eating friends that we must rid ourselves of animal agriculture.

  • @MrMountain777
    @MrMountain777 Год назад

    Current state of colorado snow pack is 131% of normal.

  • @paularatadba5835
    @paularatadba5835 Год назад

    Cattle ranches

  • @ThePapawhisky
    @ThePapawhisky Год назад

    Great video. Thanks for the info. The southwest is rapidly becoming Easter Island.