Alarm Bells Ring as NASA Scientists Issue Warning that California Will Run Out of Water In Just

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California is running out of water fast, according to NASA senior water scientist. Shockingly, the entire state of California will be out of water in just a year’s time.
Yes, California will run out of water in 12 months, according to Jay Famiglietti, NASA senior water scientist at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
As difficult as it may be to face, the simple fact is that California is running out of water — and the problem started before the current drought. NASA data reveals that total water storage in California has been in steady decline since at least 2002, when satellite-based monitoring began, although groundwater depletion has been going on since the early 20th century.
Right now the state has only about one year of water supply left in its reservoirs, and the strategic backup supply, groundwater, is rapidly disappearing. California has no contingency plan for a persistent drought like this one (let alone a 20-plus-year mega-drought), except, apparently, staying in emergency mode and praying for rain.
The drought means that total water storage in California, which has been in decline since 2002, has been sapped by the need to use the resource for farming, Famiglietti said in the Los Angeles Times.
The use of groundwater for farming in the Central Valley has caused land to sink by one foot a year.
Sprinklers and other landscaping accounts for 70 per cent of urban water use, according to the Sacramento Bee.
Since 2011 the state of California has been losing 12 million acre-feet of water per year and the total amount of water in snow, rivers, groundwater and reservoirs was 34 million acre-feet below normal in 2014.
Famiglietti suggested immediate water-rationing measures, which are being considered in southern California, across the entire state.
Governor Jerry Brown declared a drought emergency at the beginning of last year, though Californians only reduced their water usage by 9 per cent instead of a hoped-for 20 per cent.
The current drought in the western United States, which is entering its fourth year, is the worst in modern American history. Snowpacks in California mountains like the Sierra Nevadas, which the state relies to melt into water, have been near record lows this year.
Scientists from NASA, Cornell University and Columbia University released research in February that said there could be worse droughts to come.
A “Megadrought” that could last several decades and would be worse than any other such phenomenon in 1000 years is expected sometimes between 2050 and 2099, according to their research. The current dryness affects not only the West Coast, but also the rest of the country. California grows the majority of many fruits and vegetables for the US. Their produce makes up 69 per cent of carrots, 71 per cent of spinach, 99 per cent of artichokes and more than 90 per cent of broccoli, according to Slate.
Famiglietti said that “the public remains detached from discussions and decisions” about conserving water and urged them to take ownership of the crisis.
Hopefully this will quickly happen considering that water is our most important, commonly owned resource.
And eerily, California is not alone…the megacity of São Paulo, Brazil is suffering its worst drought in eight decades.
 

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The amount of replies to this thread shows how much of a priority this is to the general public

Pretty alarming considering that without water the human race is extinct
 

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The amount of replies to this thread shows how much of a priority this is to the general public

Pretty alarming considering that without water the human race is extinct


Dude just stfu please
 

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Is this NASA scientist hyping up the water shortage or are there any real merits to his story?

I know that they're in a severe drought on Cali & several nuts & fruits coming from Cali have gone up in price because of the drought.
 

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water shortages are real here, but the misallocation of resources along
with preferential treatment to some due to long standing agreements
has taken the shortage and turned it into a crisis.
 

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I thought you were going to say....... "you thought several nuts & fruits from Cali and come to other states to get married?"
 

schmuck
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the lack of political will whether it comes to fixing social security, balancing
budgets, distributing water, or etc is embarrassing
 

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Is this NASA scientist hyping up the water shortage or are there any real merits to his story?

I know that they're in a severe drought on Cali & several nuts & fruits coming from Cali have gone up in price because of the drought.

There's no merit whatsoever. It's just the global warming/climate change alarmists hard at work. They have to justify their Federal grant money so it benefits them to sound the alarm every time there's an unusual weather pattern (which is everyday of the year, somewhere around the globe. That's why it's called, "weather").
 

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water shortages are real here, but the misallocation of resources along
with preferential treatment to some due to long standing agreements
has taken the shortage and turned it into a crisis.



Is the drought worse than it was in the 70's in Cali?

I remember people weren't allowed to fill their swimming pools or water their garden or wash their cars back then......
 

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Is the drought worse than it was in the 70's in Cali?

I remember people weren't allowed to fill their swimming pools or water their garden or wash their cars back then......

It's worse because there's more people, a lot worse. And you'll get fined for things like washing your car. We have been getting a lot of Rain here in Reno which is good because Cali gets a lot their water from our ice pack. The reservoir levels are higher than they were last year at this time, so they have enough to get through a couple of years now.
 

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Last year, the “snow-water equivalent” in the thin blanket of white covering California’s mountains stood at a shade under 25 percent of its historic average. That beat the record, a hair over 25 percent, set during the severe drought season of 1976-77.
And this year’s snowpack?
The network of electronic sensors sending in reports from highland locations from the Trinity Alps down to the southern Sierra is showing that statewide, the snowpack is at 9 percentof average — not even half of where it was last year, when it was at its record low.
Part of the standard California water lecture is to talk about our “frozen reservoir” in the mountains — a reference to the fact that anywhere between a third and a half of the water we use each year falls as snow, melts gradually as the weather warms, then comes tumbling down to our valleys as clear, cold water.
So, that’s not happening this year. Regardless of what the statistical summaries say about our reservoirs — our big Northern California lakes are still in good shape relative to last year, though far below average for the date — the near-total absence of snow means California, its 38 million people and its giant farm economy are headed into unknown territory.
Unknown, except that it will be very dry.
 

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The desalination plants will help.

Long-term they might have to giveup some of their big agribusiness though. Almonds, Alfalfa.

Moving agriculture to where there is more rainfall will happen. The Northwest seems like an easy solution.
 

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It's mostly the nut farmers

shit I'm trying to chip in. Been using bath water to water plants and lawn!

my buddy in a beach town nearby gets fined 75 a month for going over his allotment

my town just has tiers where your rate goes up based on usage

i put in turf at my last place and it was great but cost a lot more upfront than I had expected
 

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Almonds and pot use a lot of water.
 

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Out of water in 12 months...:pointer:
 

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California was supposed to slide into the ocean 40 years ago, plenty of water there.
 

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