NASA scientist warns that California only has one year of water left.

All of y'all are welcome to come to Texas where we have no issues

Cheap land
Beautiful woman
Excellent food
NBA champions
Americas favorite football team
Great Job market
Open carry
Water :lol:
L0w cost of living
 
All of y'all are welcome to come to Texas where we have no issues

Water
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FAIL

http://www.tceq.texas.gov/response/drought
 
I went and saw my mom who lives in the burbs and everyone's grass was all yellow cause they couldn't water it. Made everyone's home look crazy old.
I have St. Augusta grass.  My grass is green.  The last time I watered my grass was last October. This grass need to be watered maybe once or twice a month. It does well in heat and drought seasons.
 
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Nah brethren, I'd just cop da NF or any of those hideous bubble jackets you hooligans be wearin, with two pairs of sucks under my chucks


Well damb

Hahaga


Fake grass or swap it out for rocks, save money in the long run and 0 maintenence.


I can't play football with my kids on rocks




North Texas is having the wettest intri to spring in recent history

If the drought is indeed serious and Cali folks start leaving....

Will Houston move into 2nd biggest metro... Passing Chicago AND Los angelos??

:nerd:
 
http://www.latimes.com/local/california/la-me-0320-drought-explainer-20150320-story.html

No, California won't run out of water in a year

Lawmakers are proposing emergency legislation, state officials are clamping down on watering lawns and, as California enters a fourth year of drought, some are worried that the state could run out of water.

State water managers and other experts said Thursday that California is in no danger of running out of water in the next two years, even after an extremely dry January and paltry snowpack. Reservoirs will be replenished by additional snow and rainfall between now and the next rainy season, they said. The state can also draw from other sources, including groundwater supplies, while imposing tougher conservation measures.

"We have been in multiyear droughts and extended dry periods a number of times in the past, and we will be in the future," said Ted Thomas, a spokesman for the California Department of Water Resources. "In periods like this there will be shortages, of course, but the state as a whole is not going to run dry in a year or two years."

The headline of a recent Times op-ed article offered a blunt assessment of the situation: "California has about one year of water left. Will you ration now?"

Jay Famiglietti, senior water scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and a professor at UC Irvine, wrote about the state's dwindling water resources in a March 12 column, citing satellite data that have shown sharp declines since 2011 in the total amount of water in snow, rivers, reservoirs, soil and groundwater in California.

In an interview Thursday, Famiglietti said he never claimed that California has only a year of total water supply left.

He explained that the state's reservoirs have only about a one-year supply of water remaining. Reservoirs provide only a portion of the water used in California and are designed to store only a few years' supply. But the online headline generated great interest. Famiglietti said it gave some the false impression that California is at risk of exhausting its water supplies.

The satellite data he cited, which measure a wide variety of water resources, show "we are way worse off this year than last year," he said. "But we're not going to run out of water in 2016," because decades worth of groundwater remain.

Still, the state's abysmal snowpack and below-average reservoir levels could exacerbate the overpumping of already depleted groundwater reserves — a problem detailed in an in-depth Los Angeles Times article Wednesday.

There's little debate that the state's water situation is troubling, but there is some improvement from last year. Water levels in some of the state's largest reservoirs in Northern California are higher than last year at this time, largely because of big December storms. But some smaller Southern California reservoirs aren't doing so well and have lower reserves than a year ago.

The Department of Water Resources did not have a readily available estimate of the total water supply in California or the amount expected to be used over the next year.

Just because California is not exhausting its water supply "doesn't mean we're not in a crisis," said Leon Szeptycki, executive director of the Water in the West program at Stanford University, who called the state's snowpack, at 12% of average, "both bad for this year but also a troubling sign for the future."

State officials said stricter conservation measures, including watering restrictions for cities and big cuts in water deliveries to San Joaquin Valley farmers, will help reduce the drain on reservoirs.

Madelyn Glickfeld, director of the UCLA Water Resources Group at the Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, said the drought is so serious that stricter conservation measures are urgently needed. "But I'm confident California's government will not let this get to the point where water is not coming out of peoples' faucets."
 
San Diego has a desalination plant that's just about finished building. They take the water from the ocean and pump it into the city. It's up in Carlsbad. This will most likely be what will save California's future, and what seems to be what others will adapt in the near future. Interesting concept actually

:pimp: :pimp:
 
Car wash stations should either shut down completely or have their water usage heavily regulated. How many gallons of water do they use up on a daily basis? Do all of them recycle their water?
 
I don't understand
We live right next to the ******* ocean
Get them salt companies to come pump ocean water take the salt out
Then water companies clean the water
Wasn't norcal sending water down to socal like a few years ago
What happened to our water
 
I don't understand
We live right next to the ******* ocean
Get them salt companies to come pump ocean water take the salt out
Then water companies clean the water
Wasn't norcal sending water down to socal like a few years ago
What happened to our water
Because local governments don't want to pay more for more water and see the projects as being too energy intensive and inefficient
But they don't see in the long term that if we don't build these plants, water is just going to be more expensive and we are going to have less water instead of having a decent supply being pumped out by these desalination plants
Also environmental laws have been diverting some of the fresh water up north to protect the delta smelt :lol:
 
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