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View Full Version : Water Roulette: Wash, Rinse, Repeat



MNeagle
17th August 2011, 11:00 AM
Submitted by ilene (http://www.zerohedge.com/users/ilene) on 08/17/2011 13:14 -0400




Courtesy of Russ Winter of Winter Watch at Wall Street Examiner (http://affiliate.plugnpay.com/affiliate.cgi?url=http://www.wallstreetexaminer.com/blogs/winter&affiliate=ilene&merchant=capitalsto)
This is Part II of a three part series at Actionables (http://affiliate.plugnpay.com/affiliate.cgi?url=http://wallstreetexaminer.com/blogs/winter/?p=1867&affiliate=ilene&merchant=capitalsto) on finite resources.
Good quality water sources in the right locations are the key to basic civilization, let alone even minimal economic growth. Like hydrocarbons, water is now the weak link to the maintenance of 7 billion people on the planet. Once abundant aquifers worldwide are being rapidly depleted, and resolving this is expensive and requires growth controls and sacrifice. Growth at any price strategies such as used in China completely fracture in this kind of environment. There is plenty to write on this topic but I will warm up with a little on two trainwrecks: North China and the American Southwest.
China has 2220 cubic feet of usable water per capita, which is one fourth the world average. They use 2/3 of water consumption for crops and livestock. The North China Plain (home of 42% of China’s population) has seen massive water table drop on the order of 120 billion cubic feet since 1970 [Water Shortage Looms] (http://www.isoh2o.org/cn/news/2011-05-03/137.html). There are now 700,000 powered wells. This year weather conspired to bring about a perfect storm, a severe drought in the south on the Yangtze River, the most important watershed in China supporting 400 million people [China Faces Worst Drought in 50 years] (http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/7d6e4db8-861e-11e0-9e2c-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1V6qNsJdw). In the last few weeks reports are popping up (http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/china/2011-08/12/c_131046202.htm)of large scale drinking water shortages. Central and Southwest China are being blasted by continual heat waves. (http://english.ntdtv.com/ntdtv_en/news_china/2011-08-02/persistent-heat-wave-causes-drought-in-central-southwest-china.html)Here is what grain production looks like when a major aquifer id depleted.
http://k.min.us/if2hof1a.png
Located in the north, Beijing suffers from water shortages [Bejing Suffers from Severe Water Shortages (http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/90001/90776/90882/7384295.html)]. It sits on a plain without large rivers and receives little rain fall. The water supplied by reservoirs isn’t enough to meet demand and much of that is diverted to irrigate farmland and provide water for factories. After another year of drought, Beijing Water Authority revealed that the city’s per capita water resources has declined to 100 cubic meters, far lower than the international warning line for water shortage — 1,000 cubic meters. Incredibly the plutocrats and goons that run the country respond (like the Romans) by putting on luxurious snow entertainment performances. Government has tried expensive engineering projects such as canal diversion of water from the south, but now admits that will fall far short. Only recently have they even bother with wide scale well monitoring.
Think the US is much better? The handwriting is on the wall although for the winter 2010-2011 Lake Mead dodged the serious bullet because of decent mountain snow run off and water from Lake Powell which is now down to 57% full versus 43% for Mead. The Lake Mead roulette wheel can be tracked here. (http://www.arachnoid.com/NaturalResources/)The last time the lake reached low drought levels was 1965 when ten million people depended on this water source versus 28 million now. As Lake Mead’s level drops, Hoover Dam’s capacity to generate electricity, which, like the Colorado River water, is sent around the Southwest, diminishes. If Lake Mead levels fall to 1,050 feet, it may be impossible to use the dam’s turbines, and the flow of electricity could cease. The American Southwest is one dry winter away ( La Nina) from an epic water crisis.
Yes, there is water desalination, and that is being developed in Australia and the Middle East. This process is very expensive and requires large energy inputs.
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2010/09/28/us/28mead-graphic/28mead-graphic-popup.jpg

Lake Mead 1985 and 2011
http://media.bonnint.net/slc/2489/248967/24896771.jpg
Natural gas fracking is often touted as the answer to US energy. The Texas Water Development Board estimates the total amount of water used for fracking statewide in 2010 was 13.5 billion gallons. That’s likely to more than double by 2020, wash, rinse, repeat.
http://k.min.us/idtYZAG0.png

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MNeagle
17th August 2011, 11:03 AM
I know Ponce recommends water stock. Am curious if he's actually in the market, and if so, which stocks he recommends.

Would be nice to find an ethical company that encourages sustainable water management.

chad
17th August 2011, 11:06 AM
what i don't understand is why can't they just make great, big, huge dehumidifiers that suck moisture out of the air and make water? make them the size of a house or something.

MNeagle
17th August 2011, 11:07 AM
What do they do in the Middle East?

chad
17th August 2011, 11:11 AM
they use droids that understand the binary language of moisture vaporators.

iOWNme
17th August 2011, 01:20 PM
what i don't understand is why can't they just make great, big, huge dehumidifiers that suck moisture out of the air and make water? make them the size of a house or something.

They do make these. They are used in Commercial drying of buildings. Think about a 100,000+ sq/ft building that gets flooded. I have used them before and they pull a MASSIVE amount of moisture from the air.

Not sure how well they would work in a very dry area, like the southwest though. Im sure they would still do ok.

gunDriller
17th August 2011, 02:51 PM
what i don't understand is why can't they just make great, big, huge dehumidifiers that suck moisture out of the air and make water? make them the size of a house or something.

the technology does exist.

"Dew pond" is one example.

why it's not implemented more widely.

i also wonder why the US is unable to make better use of canals - so that drought-stricken areas can get water from flooded areas. Texas didn't have enough water this last summer, and many parts of the country were REALLY flooded. e.g. that nuclear plant near Fort Calhoun in the Midwest - not even too far from Texas.

i also read that New York City got 8 inches of rain in one day, in the last few days.


maybe it's more profitable for some people if the US behaves stupidly about water.

ximmy
17th August 2011, 03:01 PM
Why can't they make great big Monster-Size air conditioners to cool the outside on hot days??.. then the condensation could be siphoned off for water
...nice weather and water too... :)

FreeEnergy
17th August 2011, 03:05 PM
The darn "alien" trade tribe cannibalizes the area with their "business" and move on.

Look at the birthplace of civilization (no, not Africa, dumbarse) - Yemen. Expansion, build-up, cannibalization of resources, THE DESERT. Heck, they even moved secretly all the rest of their people out so you can't possibly trace them to Yemen.

The water is the next oil - big, BIG business. See how many "non-profit" NGOs (non tax paying non governmental organizations) now promote water deals for Africa. What they do is actually they put even the poorest people of african on loans and build wells, and instead of providing people with free water which is a right they actually charge them for it. Fracking rip-offs they are, bastards know that when these people are thirsty and dying they'll give up everything for fresh water. Type "africa water ngo" and "africa water" in google to see how many rip-offs already popped up.

Technologies to desalinate exist, they are just to expensive. Water should be right, not a profit center.

AFAIK the dehumidifiers or water producing machines only work in moist climates, in deserts they require way too much energy.