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LEFT WING LOONS
See other LEFT WING LOONS Articles

Title: An Engineered Drought
Source: [None]
URL Source: [None]
Published: Apr 6, 2015
Author: Victor Davis Hanson
Post Date: 2015-04-06 19:21:17 by tpaine
Keywords: None
Views: 13573
Comments: 27

www.city-journal.org

An Engineered Drought

California governor Jerry Brown had little choice but to issue a belated, state- wide mandate to reduce water usage by 25 percent. How such restrictions will affect Californians remains to be seen, given the Golden State’s wide diversity in geography, climate, water supply, and demography.

We do know two things. First, Brown and other Democratic leaders will never concede that their own opposition in the 1970s (when California had about half its present population) to the completion of state and federal water projects, along with their more recent allowance of massive water diversions for fish and river enhancement, left no margin for error in a state now home to 40 million people. Second, the mandated restrictions will bring home another truth as lawns die, pools empty, and boutique gardens shrivel in the coastal corridor from La Jolla to Berkeley: the very idea of a 20-million-person corridor along the narrow, scenic Pacific Ocean and adjoining foothills is just as unnatural as “big” agriculture’s Westside farming. The weather, climate, lifestyle, views, and culture of coastal living may all be spectacular, but the arid Los Angeles and San Francisco Bay-area megalopolises must rely on massive water transfers from the Sierra Nevada, Northern California, or out-of-state sources to support their unnatural ecosystems.

Now that no more reservoir water remains to divert to the Pacific Ocean, the exasperated Left is damning “corporate” agriculture (“Big Ag”) for “wasting” water on things like hundreds of thousands of acres of almonds and non-wine grapes. But the truth is that corporate giants like “Big Apple,” “Big Google,” and “Big Facebook” assume that their multimillion-person landscapes sit atop an aquifer. They don’t—at least, not one large enough to service their growing populations. Our California ancestors understood this; they saw, after the 1906 earthquake, that the dry hills of San Francisco and the adjoining peninsula could never rebuild without grabbing all the water possible from the distant Hetch Hetchy watershed. I have never met a Bay Area environmentalist or Silicon Valley grandee who didn’t drink or shower with water imported from a far distant water project.

The Bay Area remains almost completely reliant on ancient Hetch Hetchy water supplies from the distant Sierra Nevada, given the inability of groundwater pumping to service the Bay Area’s huge industrial and consumer demand for water. But after four years of drought, even Hetch Hetchy’s huge Sierra supplies have only about a year left, at best. Again, the California paradox: those who did the most to cancel water projects and divert reservoir water to pursue their reactionary nineteenth-century dreams of a scenic, depopulated, and fish-friendly environment enjoy lifestyles predicated entirely on the fragile early twentieth- century water projects of the sort they now condemn.

It’s now popular to deride California agriculture in cost-benefit terms, given that its share of state GNP (anywhere from 4 percent to 8 percent, depending on how one counts related industries) supposedly does not justify its huge allotted consumption of state water (anywhere from 65 percent to 80 percent). But note the irony: California supplies a staggering percentage of the nation’s fresh vegetables and fruits; it’s among the most efficient producers in the world of beef, dairy, and staple crops. One can purchase an iPhone 6 or a neat new Apple watch, but he still must eat old-fashioned, pre-tech food. There are no calories in Facebook, and even Google can’t supply protein. On the other hand, I can live without an iPad. Who is to say which industry is essential and which isn’t? Insulin and antibiotic production constitute a micro-percentage of GDP, but is their water usage less important than Twitter’s? Is a biologist who studies bait- fish populations in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta really more important than a master tractor driver whose skill gives broccoli to thousands?

We’re suffering the ramifications of the “small is beautiful,” “spaceship earth” ideology of our cocooned elites. Californians have adopted the ancient peasant mentality of a limited good, in which various interests must fight it out for the always scarce scraps. Long ago we jettisoned the can-do visions of our agrarian forebears, who knew California far better than we do and trusted nature far less. Now, like good peasants, we are at one another’s throats for the last drops of a finite supply.

Victor Davis Hanson is a City Journal contributing editor.


Poster Comment:

Gotta love Hanson for his ability to see clearly through the progressive bullshit put forth by the greenies of this world..

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 11.

#3. To: tpaine (#0)

And there they sit, with unlimited sunshine and long, arid, unpopulated coasts in some areas. Solar power and desalination can provide immense amounts of water.

Or, if the Mexicans are enterprising, they can build desalination plants all along that dry dusty and most empty Baja California coast, both sides, and then sell the water to the thirsty Californians.

Vicomte13  posted on  2015-04-06   23:07:37 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Vicomte13 (#3)

Solar power and desalination can provide immense amounts of water.

Only at 'immense' costs. --- Desalination is not yet viable for the amount of water needed.

tpaine  posted on  2015-04-07   5:36:50 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: tpaine (#4)

Only at 'immense' costs. --- Desalination is not yet viable for the amount of water needed.

They said that about extracting oil from shale too. It's false.

On the Baja Coast, there is sun every day. It's hot and dry, and has very long, very empty seashores. It's the perfect place for dedicated solar power that doesn't have to be stored or transmitted any distance. Solar power requires batteries to maintain a grid, but there's no grid to maintain with on site generation. Hell, you don't even need to go through the intermediate step of making electricity: light collectors can put solar heat directly to the task of boiling the water.

You don't have to make enough water to solve all of California's drought problems. Every bit you make reduces the problem somewhat.

What is more, once the industry starts to go, technology improves.

Consider: there are 5000 people on cruise ships and aircraft carriers, and they make their own water, and do it at a price that is no so prohibitive that cruise lines can still make money on ticket packages that are affordable to middle class people.

Turning sunlight into fresh water from seawater is 19th Century technology.

It does not have to be super efficient. You don't even have to use computers.

Coal gasification is also said to be impossibly expensive. That isn't true either. Germany powered their war machine for two years on it, and that was in the 1940s. The Chinese provide a huge portion of their fuel needs through gasification.

The technology is dirty, but it is not backbreakingly expensive.

Neither are simple on-site solar collectors.

Obviously such an infrastructure has large up front costs that will have to be borne by the government. That was true of the railroads too. They were also all financed by the government in their set-up phases. Only later was it possible for them to operate as for-profit businesses.

So, desalination would have to be a massive government program.

Vicomte13  posted on  2015-04-07   8:32:52 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: Vicomte13 (#6)

On the Baja Coast, there is sun every day. It's hot and dry, and has very long, very empty seashores.

But the failures of the huge new solar plants in CA is not encouraging. Even in a best case outcome where they manage to resolve or mitigate some of the current problems, they will still fall well short of their planned power output.

So, desalination would have to be a massive government program.

But it isn't. San Diego County has the biggest new plant. They're using the latest Israeli desalination tech.

CBS: California hopes to ease drought woes with ocean water

"There is no more cheap water available," said Sandy Kerl, who currently runs the San Diego Water Authority.

The company currently imports a majority of its water from drought-ravaged parts of California and the Colorado River Basin. San Diego will buy all of the water the Carlsbad plant will produce starting next year. Water bills will increase about $5 to $7 per month to cover the cost.

"It will represent 7 percent of our total water supply," Kerl said. "It's a significant chunk of water that, in the event of a drought, will be 100 percent reliable for this region."

Carlsbad Desalination Project

I know you love da Big Gov but obviously cities and counties can address their own problems.

Tooconservative  posted on  2015-04-07   10:28:31 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: TooConservative (#9)

I know you love da Big Gov but obviously cities and counties can address their own problems.

Cities and counties ARE government. They are not for-profit enterprises.

Vicomte13  posted on  2015-04-07   11:10:41 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 11.

#14. To: Vicomte13 (#11)

Cities and counties ARE government. They are not for-profit enterprises.

Well, you sounded like you were pining for FDR or something.

Tooconservative  posted on  2015-04-07 11:46:38 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 11.

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