How To Fix The Water Crisis | CNBC Marathon

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@nathancochran4694
@nathancochran4694 Жыл бұрын
This speaks to a larger problem within the US. Everybody wants the benefits of publicly funded infrastructure, but nobody wants to pay for it, and nobody wants to pay for it while it is getting built and cannot be immediately used. So our infrastructure ages and decays past the point of being unusable, then the same people complain about that too.
@chinguunerdenebadrakh7022
@chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 Жыл бұрын
There's a joke that goes like: "The problems of a private electric grid is so large it must be heavily regulated. The problems of a heavily regulated electric gtid is so large it must be nationalized. The problems of a nationalized grid are so large it must be privatized."
@HTV-2_Hypersonic_Glide_Vehicle
@HTV-2_Hypersonic_Glide_Vehicle Жыл бұрын
It's not true that nobody wants to pay for it. The boomers and the rich people that have all of the influence on legislation don't want to pay for it but largely the people that want to use the services want it and will be willing to pay for it.
@twostop6895
@twostop6895 Жыл бұрын
tax cuts don't pay for anything but greed
@jasonnugent963
@jasonnugent963 Жыл бұрын
As someone who has spent the past 20yrs or so working in a small city Gov,.. this is very very true. Everyone seems to want the BMW lifestyle for the Toyota Corolla price. But it dont work like that.
@DawryMike
@DawryMike Жыл бұрын
How do we pay for our military budget?
@MusikCassette
@MusikCassette Жыл бұрын
desalination comes together, when you have a lot of Renewable energy, and you use the desalination, to balance the production variations.
@easyrider3112
@easyrider3112 Жыл бұрын
I live in a high humidity location. I have looked at building a solar powered dehumidifier pulling water from the air into a water tower. It would require adding minerals for drinkability, but could provide 100+ gallons of water daily. Water solutions will end up being location specific as we get more and more efficient with water management.
@madbug1965
@madbug1965 Жыл бұрын
So you would be a moisture farmer like Luke Skywalker!
@dasalekhya
@dasalekhya Жыл бұрын
I do that on a small scale ! My portable indoor air conditioner has condensation duct, and it drips out almost 10 litres of water each day. I just collect that in a bucket & wash dishes with that water :-)
@andrewradford3953
@andrewradford3953 Жыл бұрын
Be cautious with Airconditioner water as it may contain pathogens as it forms in a moist environment inside your home that reaches room temperature when the unit is off.
@johna.4334
@johna.4334 Жыл бұрын
@@dasalekhya Or use this water to take a shower...eh hem.
@dasalekhya
@dasalekhya Жыл бұрын
@@johna.4334 😀
@b22chris
@b22chris Жыл бұрын
Here’s an idea. Stop moving to deserts
@Motor19853
@Motor19853 Жыл бұрын
The states by the oceans are needed to ship goods out. Most states on the coast also have larger economies than the other states.
@Ziqver
@Ziqver Жыл бұрын
Maybe time to treat water with respect and NOT let greedy corporations poison our waters.
@randallbermudez9021
@randallbermudez9021 Жыл бұрын
All farmers in the world should have drip irrigation.
@anthonyarcher7268
@anthonyarcher7268 Жыл бұрын
"All should" I bet you're popular at parties.
@MusikCassette
@MusikCassette Жыл бұрын
not all farmers need irrigation.
@mech-E
@mech-E Жыл бұрын
Better use of water resources is essential. We need to be better at maintaining the natural systems which support a healthy and balanced water cycle to keep aquifers charged and local climates stable. We need to reverse the damage done by centuries of poor water and forest management too.
@longbeach225
@longbeach225 Жыл бұрын
Population is an issue with more people consuming more water. Also water bottle companies are hogging up water so they can profit off your basic need.
@VeryIntellijent
@VeryIntellijent Жыл бұрын
Not just water bottle companies, but all major drinks companies. In 2021, Coca Cola used 1.94 L of water for every 1 L of Coke they produced.
@Ronin.97
@Ronin.97 Жыл бұрын
most of the problem is agriculture and some of that agriculture is low key very useless or very specific needs.
@hurrdurrmurrgurr
@hurrdurrmurrgurr Жыл бұрын
@@Ronin.97 Yep, alfalfa for Saudi Arabia and growing cotton and almonds in arid regions needs to stop.
@Ronin.97
@Ronin.97 Жыл бұрын
@@hurrdurrmurrgurr exactly i feel like these nuts farms for example in california (nuts are one of calis biggest agriculture export) use way to much water than necessary most of these farms dont even have drip irrigation meanwhile cali has been in a drought for the past 10 years.
@JanBruunAndersen
@JanBruunAndersen Жыл бұрын
Water bottle companies helps making the real value/cost of water visible. Only when the value is visible will people start to value water correctly and take steps to bring down costs and usage.
@joejoey7272
@joejoey7272 Жыл бұрын
Water desalination is incredibly cheap but has a high initial cost , private companies aren’t willing to pay the upfront costs to establish the facilities for a low return on investment
@louisebarnes1181
@louisebarnes1181 Жыл бұрын
Condensation of the humidity was practiced by the Incas of Peru. They built circular terraces which condensed the humidity as it swirled downward, getting colder, then condensing and therefore watering the crops. Also, circular terraces were used for collecting water in a basin at the bottom of the terrace, then having it flow through a canal for drinking water. Today, there are newer ways to condense humidity into water for agriculture and drinking water. The humidity cannot be seen, just like oxygen and CO2, but it is there for everyone. Growing desert grass 40” x 40” grids would anchor sand, gets watered by morning dew, could help trees to grow within it, and may eventually help rain to occur. Also, solar-powered refrigeration units could cool tanks of water that flows through pipes, causing drip irrigation by condensing humidity.
@jimanderson2518
@jimanderson2518 Жыл бұрын
You are 100% correct Only problem that would be nearly free process how are the Bill Gates going to make money??? Ya know that's really self centered thinking 😅😅😅
@Drachnon
@Drachnon 11 ай бұрын
The problem here is that Peru has pretty high base humidity. Humidity is measured relative to its temprature and condensation happens when the air temprature drops and humidity would go above 100%. The air can't hold it so it becomes water. According to a quick google search the capital of Peru, Lima, has an average 84% humidity. Compare this New Mexico with 44% and the problem becomes pretty clear. Let's say you lower the temprature so the air can only hold half the water it previously could. In Peru that would bring you to 168% humidity so the air has to release that exes 68% as water. Which is about 40% of the water originally in the air. In New Mexico you'd have 88% humidity and zero water. Now these humidity levels are averages, the real kicker here is that during the driest seasons when you'd want to generate water the most condesantion is at it least usefull. Which is why outside of a few exceptions water from air solutions are generally not considered feasable.
@frederickkearney7798
@frederickkearney7798 Жыл бұрын
As long as we provide public fund subsidies to build or insure in either flood or fire prone areas, we will encourage continuing growth in them. As is the case with earthquake insurance, the premium cost must be risk based such that the insureds, not the public at large, pay the full cost of building in vulnerable areas. The government's job is to identify at risk locations and educate the public where the high risks are, allowing people to avoid purchasing homes and businesses in those locations. If they choose to purchase high risk properties, they should bear the risk and socialize it with unsubsidized private insurance.
@JanBruunAndersen
@JanBruunAndersen Жыл бұрын
It's the government's job? How about the government did nothing? Within a generation or two people would learn to avoid flood-prone areas (and Darwin would take care of those who is unable to learn).
@frederickkearney7798
@frederickkearney7798 Жыл бұрын
@@JanBruunAndersen Did/can you read what I wrote? I said that the government should NOT provide funds that encourage people to build in flood prone areas. If you bother to read the last sentence, I specifically say that if people want to build in a flood plane they should do it at their OWN RISK. I didn't say that they government should protect property owners from their own stupidity; indeed, I don't think it should. Seems to me you are trying to pick an argument by not bothering to read what the other person is saying and leaping to unfounded conclusions based on your twisted confirmation bias.
@buildingdreams2279
@buildingdreams2279 Жыл бұрын
​🤑Say"EH WAS NAILED TO THE CROSS WITH A CROWN OF THORNS! OH WAS TO THE LEFT AND UH RIGHT. OH YOH FROM ANOTHER PLANET IS TRYING TO TAKE OVER EARTH WITH CIRCUMCISION AND EARRINGS! GOD WAS CIRCUMCISED"
@frederickkearney7798
@frederickkearney7798 Жыл бұрын
@@buildingdreams2279 WTF are you saying? Lay off the hallucinogens.
@JanBruunAndersen
@JanBruunAndersen Жыл бұрын
@@frederickkearney7798 - oh, I can read. In 4-5 different languages to boot. You wrote that government's job is to identify at risk locations and educate the public about high risk areas. And I wrote that government should do as little as possible.
@jexter22
@jexter22 Жыл бұрын
Save water
@bluetocop
@bluetocop Жыл бұрын
canada has a lot of water , just take it , they let it run into the ocean
@johnhays5863
@johnhays5863 Ай бұрын
We at Pure Water For All Foundation have been working on this problem for decades in over 50 countries. We have fantastic results.
@harishrv
@harishrv 11 ай бұрын
Creating water scarcity versus making water availability (sanatan ideology) will make huge difference and impact in lives around the globe.
@pwu8194
@pwu8194 Жыл бұрын
Desalination costs about 1 cent per gallon. It should be the solution to all cities by the ocean.
@kieranh2005
@kieranh2005 Жыл бұрын
A lot of water is used in total meaning it costs a lot, and what do you do with the brine?
@mfulan7548
@mfulan7548 Жыл бұрын
1 cent per gallon? Sources?
@MusikCassette
@MusikCassette Жыл бұрын
that is highly dependent on the energy costs. luckiely freshwater production is not time critical, so you could use surplus renewable energy.
@piyaliganguly8854
@piyaliganguly8854 4 ай бұрын
Water is life .
@randallbermudez9021
@randallbermudez9021 Жыл бұрын
All coastal countries in the world should have desalination plants.
@amyself6678
@amyself6678 Жыл бұрын
Most places even near coasts have groundwater. Water is nearly everywhere, the earth is so awesome. Just don't try to grow crops or live on the half of the land without cheap water underground. Water costs $0.001 a pound, vs $5.00 for steak or $1 for grain, its a millionth the cost yet still people whine. A person's water bill is about $0.1 a day, to shower, wash clothes, water lawn. We use 3000 pounds of water a month, 30,000 a year, we are so spoiled having to cut back a little like California to just 20,000 pounds a year.
@davidstufflebean3285
@davidstufflebean3285 Жыл бұрын
@@amyself6678 agree totally, don't try and build huge cities in the middle of a goddamn desert, yes looking at you Arizona and Las Vegas, and then wonder why you have a water shortage. Ban grass for lawns in Southern California, and make them use desert plants and rocks for landscape, I know Vegas is already doing that to every place except parks, golf courses and I think one other location, all residential has to use desert-friendly species.
@amyself6678
@amyself6678 Жыл бұрын
@@davidstufflebean3285 ... Even in Vegas our tech is so wonderful water is just $1 for 100 gallons so 800 pounds. Anything else 800 pounds is $1000 dollars.... If use 80 pounds a day for shower and washing it's a dime... The dirty secret is cities overcharge for water past the wholesale rate to gouge to pay for other city stuff like parks and police. Even water trucks from say Columbia river in Oregon would be about $2 for 100 gallons, which ain't awful.... God put so much darn water yet still we complain when it's not massively cheap.... For house electricity is $200 a month, water $20, this is shockingly cheap ..... It shows how people will complain about everything... I expect people to start complaining about the air, how it should be even free-er ..... Ha
@MusikCassette
@MusikCassette Жыл бұрын
to the extant, they build enough renewable energy so they have excess to balance.
@fayebird1808
@fayebird1808 Жыл бұрын
Nova Scotia gets rain between 43 and 78 inches a year . Many homes collect rain water in their cisterns for everyday use. A desalinization plant is not required there. Broad generalities are not the answer. Capture the rain , and allow it to replenish the aquafer . Build swales on hilly terrain . Slow down water on hills and valley streams to promote absorption of groundwater . Build water retention dams. Pipe excess water to a dry area. Protect the soil with mulch to prevent evaporation of soil moisture and provide compost.
@ritaperdue
@ritaperdue Жыл бұрын
Instead of oil pipelines, put in water pipelines from desalination plants to areas that need it. The excess salt can be used to create battery storage.
@andrewradford3953
@andrewradford3953 Жыл бұрын
Only if you have enough lemons. Salt water kills soils. Though there is some lithium that may, or may not be viable to extract from the concentrated brine.
@edwardgreer491
@edwardgreer491 Жыл бұрын
There is plenty of water you just let it flow into the sea instead of recycling it back into the land. Controlled reservoirs could be built along side the rivers path to store water and help generate electricity. In areas of drought you could build underground drip irrigation systems to help regenerate the soil like they do in India. There’s nothing wrong with the amount of water that we have but how we manage it. I bet we waste more water by turning our faucets on full but never use that much water. It’s just a matter of common sense. If you are running out of water why would you let it run into the sea. How much is it going to cost you to recycle your river water? Well how much is it going to cost you if you don’t do it?
@sumsara9255
@sumsara9255 Жыл бұрын
Because the fish need water to survive, so does the wildlife in the riparian areas.
@annking1576
@annking1576 11 ай бұрын
They could also build massive subterranean cisterns
@dinmavric5504
@dinmavric5504 9 ай бұрын
Flow into the sea lol, the sea isn't everywhere pal
@fourthdeconstruction
@fourthdeconstruction Жыл бұрын
I'm for desalination as one type of solution to the water crisis, let's keep the research on it and at the same time let's find other technology.
@kieranh2005
@kieranh2005 Жыл бұрын
What to do with the brine?
@dfinma
@dfinma Жыл бұрын
Since the water crisis is not due to lack of desalination, desalination does not solve the problem.
@fourthdeconstruction
@fourthdeconstruction Жыл бұрын
@@kieranh2005 Well, brine is nowhere near as harmful as nuclear waste. Brine is just the byproduct of the filtration system. It's created by the rejection from the membrane so this brine has always been in the ocean water the only difference is its concentration. there are several options to deal with it, like taking and distributing the brine at different locations within a huge area of the ocean. We could then monitor its effects, but there are at least other 10 solutions. This is why I think that more research is needed.
@fourthdeconstruction
@fourthdeconstruction Жыл бұрын
@@dfinma I don't think that you understand, there is a lack of potable water which is the issue and desalination is only one solution. or what is the problem from your point of view?
@ardentdfender4116
@ardentdfender4116 Жыл бұрын
When a lot of these Desalination Plants are being built, they have an explicit need for the purified water produced from the split stream with RO Water Technology. This also produce a reject stream that is difficult to permeate a hyper membrane. There isn’t always a plan in exact for a separate industrial entity to utilize all the brine reject. For seawater application it’s called Brine because of the salt concentration doubling up to at least four times depending on % recovery of water set forth in process. In other normal application where it’s not Saltwater such as Brackish or less TDS salt water it’s easier to use that reject water for other purposes. Seawater by its salinity present a different problem as it’s quite salty. In many places the Brine produced is used by another different industry as a joint venture next to the water plant property utilizing the brine to make other salt products. Depending on the size of these Seawater RO Plants there are sometime limitations on being able to use as much brine that is produced in their processes. Sometimes there just aren’t any other industrial players willing to build a facility next door to refine or reprocess the brine waste. I don’t know why exactly the financial aspect why not. From seawater brine there are different salts and compounds that can be refined so it isn’t exactly not useful. Lithium for example is in seawater, more in concentrated brine, but it’s still far less mg/l than what can be extracted from an actual land mine. They just need viable industries that can utilize all the brine for other products and it be less of an environmental issue as to how to properly dispose of the reject Brine. At best what many these Desalination Plants do is to run a pipeline out several miles back out to sea and pipe them brine there so it can be dissolved back into the ocean in a wide area. It does have an impact on the immediate local area to which that brine is piped. But that’s why at best most plants if that brine can’t be used by another industry they pump that brine miles back out into the ocean. That vs piping it into the local marina and estuary areas or just off the beach. Still, until there are real complete solutions as to what to do with all the brine, we’ll all keep discussing how to solve the issue.
@tomdonahoe3539
@tomdonahoe3539 Жыл бұрын
Singapore 🇸🇬 is reprocessing waste water 💧 rather than using desalination.
@recer7506
@recer7506 Жыл бұрын
What happens if you put brine inn a desert and let the sunn evaporate it? Culld we colect the salt inn dry form and have a easyer way of storing it?'
@kkirschkk
@kkirschkk Жыл бұрын
the issue is you would still have to find a use for it or otherwise you just get mountiants of it piling up. There is not that much demand for sea salt and the minerals inside of it are not worth enough to try and extract them.
@XOPOIIIO
@XOPOIIIO Жыл бұрын
Why not to use brine in salt plants?
@kkirschkk
@kkirschkk Жыл бұрын
the cost to actually extract any usable minerals is too high and there really isnt that much demand for sea salt to make it worth while.
@chunlee6365
@chunlee6365 Жыл бұрын
One easiest way to save water in southern California is to outlaw lawns, as Las Vegas has done.
@mmtravel9052
@mmtravel9052 Жыл бұрын
Come to Louisiana we have water for u 😂
@narithshan
@narithshan Жыл бұрын
Just did a research that California dumped most of its rain water into the ocean. Why they don’t collect it for use later?
@poodlebarf3787
@poodlebarf3787 Жыл бұрын
Could the brine be utilized in the production of lithium instead of it all being pumped back into the ocean?
@harrysowl1
@harrysowl1 Жыл бұрын
wrong type of brine but it would be interesting if they could take it and create sea salt
@mrm7058
@mrm7058 Жыл бұрын
Actually, there is the idea of brine mining. Extracting useful minerals from the brine. Lithium is one of them. Ocean water has 0.17 mg Lithium per liter. (So I guess more than 0.3 mg per liter in the brine?) Not sure at what price Lithium has to be to make the extraction profitable. On the other hand, sodium batteries now become a thing, and there is more than enough sodium in the brine.
@kkirschkk
@kkirschkk Жыл бұрын
@@mrm7058 so issue with this is that extracting lithium from salt water brine to the level of purity you need is at the current moment possible, but costs about 100x what it costs just to mine it elsewhere [now economies of scale could bring that down a bit, but its still going to be way more costly to do it that way so the price of lithium would have to jump EVEN more than it already has]. Same issue with Sodium for sodium batteries [which are still YEARS out from being commercially around in large amounts and have major issues themselves that will prevent them from being used in a lot of applications] given the fact you need super high purity sodium/lithium for these applications. Most of the issue is simply that there is so much stuff in salt water brine, and that stuff really likes sticking to the other stuff, that getting the purity you need is very very hard [and also requires a lot of hydrogen and energy [which both tend to come from oil in pilot projects].
@MusikCassette
@MusikCassette Жыл бұрын
Will if you have a lithium mine nearby, you can use the brine instead of other water. Or did you mean to use the brine as a source for lithium
@TamagoHead
@TamagoHead Жыл бұрын
States and local municipalities haven’t been protecting ground water assets for decades. Next gen needs to pick up the fight. We’re all just renting our current lives anyway.
@JoelReid
@JoelReid Жыл бұрын
Every house beign sold should have a hazards report. Basically a report that shows how likely a natural disaster will occur to that area.
@tylerwilson2753
@tylerwilson2753 Жыл бұрын
use the brine to make salt?
@user-xq1jx2nd7m
@user-xq1jx2nd7m 14 күн бұрын
It’s very easy to find a business that’s not effected by
@tinaq1376
@tinaq1376 Жыл бұрын
Why not produce salt with the brine?
@Arturo-lapaz
@Arturo-lapaz Жыл бұрын
yes, exactly, put it into the evaporation ponds, cover these ponds with plastic and the evaporation is fresh water, when condensed out of the humid air by cooling. The salt is a bonus, with significant value.
@DC9848
@DC9848 Жыл бұрын
Why not extract salt from the brine and make industrial salt batteries, whereby you would not only eliminate the waste product but turn it into extra profit
@brendahenderson683
@brendahenderson683 Жыл бұрын
Does fraking negatively impact water aquifer recharge? If so, how does this impact safe clean drinking water?
@ingoos
@ingoos Жыл бұрын
There was also the idea of desalination by accelerating evaporation by spraying seawater on a solar-heated rotating drum....
@icedirt9658
@icedirt9658 Жыл бұрын
@@found13while I kind of agree, the green revolution was a thing and stopped a lot of hunger. Through business. And having traveled to just one or two countries, the biggest obstacle to them achieving a thriving economy, is being priced out of world markets. Being excluded. Including people in markets can provide opportunities, make them desperate instead and their governments will make bad deals because it’s the best they can get.
@erx88
@erx88 Жыл бұрын
The truth is we can, the only issue is that large business interests don't want to do it, because it would allow people to recognize water for the grand commodity that it's always been... The best way to do this is going back to distilling it, or boiling it, though using high frequency to generate magnetic resonance around a copper pipe , this creates an immediate reaction and uses a fraction of the energy needed, it can even come from sun light to power the apparatus... #ER_Miele
@ahmedshaharyarejaz9886
@ahmedshaharyarejaz9886 Жыл бұрын
Please Elaborate on this Magnetic Resonance method further.
@erx88
@erx88 Жыл бұрын
@@ahmedshaharyarejaz9886 it's the same technology you would find in an induction cooktop...or furnace ...where there is a copper pipe that is heating and internal pipe it has to be steel, this is how the heat is generated, though it's not quite touching the copper... You just have to make a very well engineered system with one way valves so the water does not expand back through the cool area, continue this till you have steam and then distill or use it for any other type of propulsion... Hope that helps...
@K0wface
@K0wface Жыл бұрын
No because a company would invest millions of dollars into building this facility only to find it’s just simply not profitable and that it’s not a sustainable business (at least in most areas). As a result, they’ve wasted time, money, and energy. It’s not always just “evil corporations” lmao
@diannadima7082
@diannadima7082 Жыл бұрын
It is not the Farmers who are using too much water. They are growing our food. It is the too big homes for two people that is wasteing our water. I'm sorry to be so to the point. But it is the truth. Our farmers are not wasteing the average population is abusing the system. How much square footage of housing does any one person need. I lived in a car for three years. I'm still here.
@asmamabrouk81
@asmamabrouk81 3 ай бұрын
So the best strategy is : aquifer fossil + best water management for irrigation + water cycle + collecting water to have more sources or to recharge them.
@carocuno06
@carocuno06 Жыл бұрын
Two water pipes, one for salty and one for fresh water. Toilets and showers saltwater. One pipe for freshwater to drink and for crops/gardens.Better infrastructure.
@yogitam2372
@yogitam2372 Жыл бұрын
That is done in other countries. Wish we did that here.
@agusfirmansyah35
@agusfirmansyah35 Жыл бұрын
We have a lot of rain, always rain, no summer, come to indonesia
@konstantinhuwa3064
@konstantinhuwa3064 Жыл бұрын
Is it not more in trend, to plant windbrakes? Along roads, rivers, canals, between agricultural cultures and so on? 21:11 22:00 27:36 28:20 Sooo big areas, and no one tree, nothing from windbrakes! I have learned in the school, that first approach against drought and soil erosion are windbrakes, and nobody use it anymore, and crying about problems!
@louisebarnes1181
@louisebarnes1181 21 күн бұрын
I wish that in California there was more agroforestry. Planting rows of fast-growing trees between rows of crops would be beneficial. Trees bring rain through evapotranspiration. Planting fast-growing trees, such as silver maple and the evergreen called giant thugas, among other fast-growing trees would help to bring more rain.
@ritaperdue
@ritaperdue Жыл бұрын
They should be using solar and wind as energy sources.
@MusikCassette
@MusikCassette Жыл бұрын
better yet, they should use surplus energy from those sources.
@rack9458
@rack9458 Жыл бұрын
Water shortage? Stop building in the desert!
@Gsoda35
@Gsoda35 Жыл бұрын
they could grow less water intensive crops in warm climates or do it in temperate climates instead. use less pesticides and plant wildflowers so the pollinators thrive. we may need to learn how to manage pests or use indoor farms. the government should force insurance companies to inform potential buyers of flooding history, risks and other dangers. how come people don't build higher or watertight homes on low lands with a history of flooding?
@DarkPesco
@DarkPesco Жыл бұрын
Ban grass lawns! Every pre-teen and teenage boy will praise us for generations to come for ending the dreaded summer mowing job!
@Globe_Drifter
@Globe_Drifter Жыл бұрын
Plant mangroves, I provide!
@llcooljay66
@llcooljay66 Жыл бұрын
Not any more we hang such a massive snow pack now
@joelwillems4081
@joelwillems4081 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, if this documentary just came out, it didn't age behind the first viewing. "Oh, the scientists who are never right about anything predict that the droughts will just get worse over the years." Reality is it rained and snowed all winter long.
@SamuraiG
@SamuraiG Жыл бұрын
Anyone think of evaporating the high saline water the salt is a commodity after all it is natural sea salt with minerals. Who knows someone could finally unseat that dastardly Morton girl . Oh here is a thought, how about we stop wastng and poluting what we have. Who knows we may not have this problem now if we had hmmm?
@dandavatsdasa8345
@dandavatsdasa8345 11 ай бұрын
Is it possible to make use of the mountains of passive solar power for distilling?
@billybeck8169
@billybeck8169 Жыл бұрын
Reduced snowfall in the Colorado mountains?? There’s hundreds of miles of snow packed several feet deep as far as I can see. I fly over it all the time as flight crew.
@Jc-ms5vv
@Jc-ms5vv Жыл бұрын
One good snow doesn’t change the overall trend
@keylllogdark
@keylllogdark Жыл бұрын
time for humans to clean their f mess
@ronkirk5099
@ronkirk5099 Жыл бұрын
The desert SW needs to start acting like they live in a desert. Golf courses and growing alfalfa and cotton in the desert is the worst kind of folly and completely unsustainable.
@daniel1man
@daniel1man Жыл бұрын
Stop trying to make this harder than it is
@MunnyMunroe
@MunnyMunroe Жыл бұрын
I see one common problem. Too many people
@1ChiMom68
@1ChiMom68 Жыл бұрын
Use the brine for salt to use for snow and ice removal...
@asmamabrouk81
@asmamabrouk81 3 ай бұрын
La meilleure méthode d'irrigation est l'irrigation goutte à goutte.
@harishrv
@harishrv 11 ай бұрын
Are there any NGOs called save colorado river movement in America as i feel that it is the most important river that impacts almost the entire western America
@bvssrsguntur6338
@bvssrsguntur6338 8 ай бұрын
Your title indicated a solution but you talked about problems
@Worldaffairslover
@Worldaffairslover Жыл бұрын
That’s what happens when you build a city in a literal desert. Why is Las Vegas there☠️
@mathisnotforthefaintofheart
@mathisnotforthefaintofheart Жыл бұрын
The gambled they would find water in the ground
@timothykeith1367
@timothykeith1367 Жыл бұрын
It's claimed that Las Vegas recycles more of the water they consume than any other urban area.
@krm2000-DRM
@krm2000-DRM 2 ай бұрын
America and other countries Need to modify the lakes and rivers add barriers to collect rain water to prevent droughts block people from fishing jet ski, boating etc can’t build property near or around them. Rebuild all of them. Add barriers walls that hold water not leak water only way to fix help Mother Nature Like nothing never happens 😊
@narithshan
@narithshan Жыл бұрын
Why they don’t get salt from brine? It’s get more salt than sea water.
@marcoantoniomejiamedina8539
@marcoantoniomejiamedina8539 4 ай бұрын
Wouldn’t it be much better to irrigate at night to reduce evaporated water from the sun and charge the system during the day. I’m just saying this since every image I saw of irrigated fields were done during the daytime. It seems like an obvious thing to do yet we still see this being done during the daytime. It’s just mind boggling how in this department we still see images like these. I’d like to see just one image of irrigation being done at night. Or maybe I’m just wrong all around.
@pratikbhaumik2748
@pratikbhaumik2748 Жыл бұрын
Maybe plants may help us in desalination
@pavelsmith2267
@pavelsmith2267 Ай бұрын
Generally, as in most cases; each nation has a sustainable region, district or locale. These areas are of utmost importance. This is where the most devastating war tactics will take place. Survival is what the focus should be. Now we have a dual facetted point of mutual survival interests. Technology (which causes pollution) and how to survive with it. It is an emotionally violent cycle of activities. Water is safe. Dry air is dangerous. -Commish
@Tribipentium325
@Tribipentium325 23 күн бұрын
Put solar panels on top to prevent vaporizing.
@rmf9567
@rmf9567 Жыл бұрын
The title of the show should’ve been a water issue for California and the southwest. The majority of the United States you can’t walk 100 feet without bumping into a river
@FirstKingPotato
@FirstKingPotato Жыл бұрын
A likely heavily polluted river.
@rmf9567
@rmf9567 Жыл бұрын
@@FirstKingPotato do youI mean out west? Where I live , the rivers flow freely, and are definitely Clean.
@jechuwen
@jechuwen Жыл бұрын
Im alone and sometimes lonely... But i always look for activity that i can enjoy being alone.
@grahamjones5400
@grahamjones5400 Жыл бұрын
Conservation and Desalination. It's not that hard to figure out. The technology and techniques exist right now and are in use worldwide.
@K0wface
@K0wface Жыл бұрын
In use around the world but only useful or realistic in specific scenarios. It’s just not logistically feasible to just set up thousands of these plants everywhere. We have the tech but not the infrastructure.
@bonniesims2229
@bonniesims2229 8 ай бұрын
Background music too loud
@DavisFranklinJohn
@DavisFranklinJohn 9 ай бұрын
Hello from Alaska I'm 49 single
@jaredwoock3478
@jaredwoock3478 Жыл бұрын
Salt Ion batteries could be made from this salt brine.
@MusikCassette
@MusikCassette Жыл бұрын
If you want to use that much salt, better make it grid level batteries. so we are not talking about Sodium ion batteries, bat about High temperature NaS or about ZEBRA if you got the Nickel to spare.
@DarkPesco
@DarkPesco Жыл бұрын
The poles are covered in freshwater ice. If they are melting then why can't the brine be strategically deposited near the poles to compensate for the influx of newly melted freshwater?
@MusikCassette
@MusikCassette Жыл бұрын
the thing is: water has a very low value density. so Transporting it long ways is always a problem.
@piggybaggy242
@piggybaggy242 14 күн бұрын
Big headset go on, fix it.
@gauriprabhu6769
@gauriprabhu6769 Жыл бұрын
Real issues are not addressed,waste,wasteand greed.
@carocuno06
@carocuno06 Жыл бұрын
Design competitions with judges and engineers on city designs. With follow through building infrastructure designs for new cities.
@kerrymartinez4463
@kerrymartinez4463 7 ай бұрын
Add Lithium mining to the equation. Between using millions of gallons of water and the toxicity contamination- what could possibly go wrong
@obsoleteoptics
@obsoleteoptics Жыл бұрын
How to fix the water crisis: Gee, I dunno, maybe stop boiling it all in power plants?
@nathanlewis5682
@nathanlewis5682 Жыл бұрын
Instead of dumping all that water to the pacific ocean. You can reroute the snowpack water to central and southern California, Colorado River, Lake Mead. Start with those bodies of water to start with.
@brendahenderson683
@brendahenderson683 Жыл бұрын
Is the brine safe to ingest? Can it be utilized in food production, preservation or preparation without causing adverse health outcomes?
@MusikCassette
@MusikCassette Жыл бұрын
it is seawater. just with less water.
@brendahenderson683
@brendahenderson683 Жыл бұрын
@@MusikCassette Continuing to put brine back in the water with increasing concentrations of salt is damaging to the ocean's ecosystem and marine life. Think of the Dead Sea. A body of water can have so much salt that nothing can eventually live there. This is not an immediate concern for the ocean as the water is moving and other bodies of water and rain continue to flow into it. However there are those who are dumping more things into it in addition to the oil spills and other things that continue to find the ocean and subsequently our food and water. An ounce of prevention is still worth a pound of cure. It would be prudent to be proactive about preventative measures before the issue can become critical.
@brentfrank7012
@brentfrank7012 28 күн бұрын
Great technology, why don’t we stop dumping our fresh rainwater into the ocean? We have more water in CA dumping into the ocean after one large rain storm than we use as a state in a year. Up and down the coast rivers dump tremendous quantities of rain water into the ocean. Then in early summer the snow melts quickly on the Sierras and again we dump more water than we use in a year down the rivers and into the ocean. It’s freakin crazy.
@bashanti83
@bashanti83 Жыл бұрын
Is anyone else hearing- farming in a desert is very difficult. Dhuuu- America.
@RockFish-uv9vs
@RockFish-uv9vs 24 күн бұрын
Run a pipe like 1,000' in the Ocean to make it a little better.
@6711BC
@6711BC Жыл бұрын
The Feds closed 550 dams so far in the USA each one would have provided a few communities with all the water they could use....
@adrianawinquistvaamonde7889
@adrianawinquistvaamonde7889 Жыл бұрын
Uruguay today is in a big crisis historic . The capital soon will not have water . Could tell or report something . Thank you !!!
@fredc3543
@fredc3543 Жыл бұрын
Greenland was once green, before the climate change to become colder. I swear these people hate humanity.
@Wannabe2023
@Wannabe2023 Жыл бұрын
We can make much salt with byproduct brine, right?
@brendahenderson683
@brendahenderson683 Жыл бұрын
There have been increasing reports of ocean water reachong higher temperatures than ever before. Could these extreame temperatures be the Earth's way protecting itself through natural thermal desalination? Is there a way to measure and determine if this is happening?
@somnambulist6636
@somnambulist6636 Жыл бұрын
That's interesting , where can I read it
@Greg-et2dp
@Greg-et2dp Жыл бұрын
What about Wisconsin farmers 😢😢
@alntr2872
@alntr2872 Жыл бұрын
When will western "civilization" realize it is a failure? The sooner they do the better instead of keep pushing humanity towards that awaiting cliff, indigenous people need to take over. All colonial nations leave Africa and let it recover, please. This is ridiculous.
@RockFish-uv9vs
@RockFish-uv9vs 24 күн бұрын
Where is the water for southern California's water???
@elsonantoniodasilva3352
@elsonantoniodasilva3352 5 ай бұрын
Estamos sen agua a agua das nascentes secaran os rios estão en nivea critico? Reflorestemos e a agua vai voltar con certeza!!!
@sebastianwrites
@sebastianwrites 6 ай бұрын
So firefighters risk their lives, and only get $15 an hour, in the richest country in the world? Pretty pathetic!
@alksjda
@alksjda Жыл бұрын
easy, stop giving water to AZ
@survivalistboards
@survivalistboards Жыл бұрын
Maybe, just maybe, we should stop building cities in deserts.
@charlesjones1588
@charlesjones1588 Ай бұрын
Could desalination brine be dumped into active volcanoes?
@Greg-et2dp
@Greg-et2dp Жыл бұрын
We live in scary times 😢😢
@philborer877
@philborer877 Жыл бұрын
You failed to point out the latest type of desalination that has been developed just recently. It is easily scalable and leaves no salt brine behind to get rid of.
@K0wface
@K0wface Жыл бұрын
So at best it leaves behind the solid salt which still needs to be dealt with
@kieranh2005
@kieranh2005 Жыл бұрын
Is it the one that takes the humid air from just above the surface of the ocean and condenses the water out of it?
@K0wface
@K0wface Жыл бұрын
@@kieranh2005 oh maybe? But in terms of scalability as energy efficiency? Reliability? May as well dig holes for lakes to fork next time it rains. It’s pretty much the same thing lol
@tomhermanson
@tomhermanson Жыл бұрын
What does it do with the salt?
@tomhermanson
@tomhermanson Жыл бұрын
​@@kieranh2005 I see
@xlargetophat
@xlargetophat Жыл бұрын
Insurance isn't real
@lonzo61
@lonzo61 Ай бұрын
And there still are those who insist that human overpopulation is not an issue.
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