Slashdot Mirror


William Shatner Proposes $30 Billion Water Pipeline To California

Taco Cowboy writes The 84-year-old Star Trek star wants to build a water pipeline to California. All it'll cost, according to Mr. Shatner, is $30 billion, and he wants to KickStarter the funding campaign. According to Mr. Shatner, if the KickStarter campaign doesn't raise enough money then he will donate whatever that has been collected to a politician who promise to build that water pipe. Where does he wants to get the water? Seattle, "A place where there's a lot of water. There's too much water," says Mr. Shatner.

678 comments

  1. Why not? by LWATCDR · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Southern California has a long history of stealing water from other places...
    Time to just jack up the water rates so people move out.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    1. Re: Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      ...so the poorer people will move out. Nice plan. How about putting water meters on farm consumption, most have no meters at all. Most ag water users pay zero, or close to that. How about letting the market decide where almonds and lettuce should be grown, instead of giving CA farmers a massive subsidy while cities go dry?

    2. Re: Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Not sure where you got the idea that agricultural water users pay nothing for water use. If anything, they're currently paying more and more (Source.). Also, the market doesn't decide where almonds and lettuce should be grown. Soil and climate determines that and, for the past century, California's had both the soil and the climate.

    3. Re:Why not? by cshotton · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There are better ways to get water in California than raping the rest of the country for it. For $30B, you can build a LOT of desalination plants. Maybe the environmentalist contingent in CA should advocate for some clean, solar powered tech to advance this technology instead of just transferring California's problems to neighbors to its east.

      --

      Shut up and eat your vegetables!!!
    4. Re: Why not? by jeffmeden · · Score: 2

      ...so the poorer people will move out. Nice plan. How about putting water meters on farm consumption, most have no meters at all. Most ag water users pay zero, or close to that. How about letting the market decide where almonds and lettuce should be grown, instead of giving CA farmers a massive subsidy while cities go dry?

      The market decides by way of water rights on certain parcels (that drives up/down land value). The landowners then get to decide which crops (i.e. ones that are the most valuable per gallon) to grow with their water. If water were truly scarce the farmers would be just bottling the water and selling it (some already are, but most are just growing almonds like always). The market is working nicely, thanks. And if poor people can't afford to live in SoCal? (its already really really hard unless you are OK being a homeless bum) Let them move to a cheaper place to live and maybe they will enjoy their minimum wage a little. Then, prices on everything in SoCal will go up (even more) and the market will kick in and force some of the rich people to move out too. This is Adam Smith's plan at work, why disrupt it?

    5. Re:Why not? by cdrudge · · Score: 1

      You could get almost everyone to move out and you'd still have a major water supply issue. Most of the water that gets used is for agricultural purposes, something that isn't going to change even with a major population decline.

    6. Re: Why not? by LWATCDR · · Score: 2

      Because that would drive up food prices which would impact the poorest people the most.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    7. Re:Why not? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      In this case it would be to the north.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    8. Re:Why not? by tranquilidad · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Los Angeles gets enough water to be self-sufficient. The problem is that Los Angeles spent their money building infrastructure based on getting too much water in the form of rain and they very efficiently send their fresh water directly into the Pacific. California has spent more money in the past few decades on flood control projects that send fresh water directly into the ocean rather than in new water treatment plants.

    9. Re: Why not? by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not sure where you got the idea that agricultural water users pay nothing for water use.

      Agricultural users pay a wide range of prices, from nothing to market prices. What they should be paying is the same price as everybody else.

      Soil and climate determines that and, for the past century, California's had both the soil and the climate.

      California doesn't have the climate; if it did, we wouldn't be having this discussion. In particular, California lacks the rain necessary to support its current agricultural output.

      There are plenty of places that do have the climate and the rain and that would desperately like to export produce to the US, but the US agricultural lobby is keeping that from happening.

    10. Re: Why not? by currently_awake · · Score: 1

      Your link says some of the farmers sell their water for twice what they pay for it, meaning they get water for less than half what the cities pay for it. That sounds like a subsidy to me. There are 3 ways to fight the drought: 1-rainwater cisterns to catch rainwater instead of dumping it in the ocean. 2-wastewater treatment plants are cheaper than desalination, and work fine for agricultural use. 3-have farmers pay fair market rates for water. This will stop them wasting it by dumping it on the desert to grow almonds/rice/alfalfa.

    11. Re:Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Make that nuclear powered plants - no wait CA - right - never mind!

    12. Re:Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For $30B, you can build a LOT of desalination plants.

      Ah, but can you then afford to power them? The ongoing power demands, plus maintenance, are the reason we don't see more desalination plants in use.

    13. Re: Why not? by AGMW · · Score: 1
      Well, a mixture of all of the above, plus desalination and perhaps even a supply pipe from the northern states - after all, if they've a surplus of water and California has a surplus of money, well sell 'em some water!

      If the desalination is solar powered, well there's certainly some synergies being leveraged there!

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
    14. Re:Why not? by bobbied · · Score: 1

      For $30B, you can build a LOT of desalination plants.

      Ah, but can you then afford to power them? The ongoing power demands, plus maintenance, are the reason we don't see more desalination plants in use.

      And a $30B pipe is cheaper to run? Maybe, but it still takes power to run the pumps.

      I vote for the desalination plants myself. Yea, you might need to build a few power plants to run those pumps too, but if you go with some modern nuclear plants and collocate them along the coast you get two birds with one set of stones. Water AND power, both things sorely needed in Cali bout now...

      This plan is *cheaper* and less environmentally costly than running pipes from Washington state... Plus, when you don't need the water (like after it starts raining someday again) you will still have the power plants to use...

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    15. Re:Why not? by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 3, Informative

      Indeed. Cadillac Desert is a fantastic documentary about Mulhollands Dream, aka the rape and pillage of Owen's Lake.

      In 9 parts

      * https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
      * https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
      * https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
      * https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
      * https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
      * https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
      * https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
      * https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
      * https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

      --
      First Contact is coming 2024. Are you ready for a new perspective?

    16. Re:Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, California wastes millions of gallons, diverted to benefit the allegedly endangered smelt, as well as for sea bass which is a PREDATOR of smelt.

    17. Re: Why not? by magarity · · Score: 1

      1-rainwater cisterns to catch rainwater instead of dumping it in the ocean.

      You must be from the east coast. A lot of western states make rainwater cisterns illegal.

    18. Re:Why not? by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      No. I want more people to move into California. Go talk to people out in those mountainous red states and one of their biggest complaints is people from California bring all that California crazy with them. Best example I have is one of my wife's uncles. He lives out in the mountains of Colorado outside of Golden on 80 acres that has been in the family for 3 generations now. He is what most would consider a mountain man who hunts, fishes, and keeps horses. He has had run-ins with the recently moved in Californians who don't like that he will hunt on his property, or ride out on his horse with a firearm, and has had the police called a number of times in the last 10 years.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    19. Re:Why not? by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      The GP is probably a product of the CA public schools.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    20. Re:Why not? by ImprovOmega · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Desalination plants are NOT clean. The pollute the heck out of the ocean around them. It's not like you just produce pure salt and water out of those things. You produce clean water and as a byproduct you get a slurry of super salty brine mixed with all kinds of chemicals that speed up the desalination process and then you dump that slurry back out into the ocean because that's the most economical way to do it.

    21. Re:Why not? by adisakp · · Score: 1

      For $30B, you can build a LOT of desalination plants.

      Define "a LOT"??? My calculations are that you could build maybe 4-5 plants or actually build and operate 2 plants going on costs from other similar plants in the world.

      Australia built a desalination plant with an intial estimated construction cost of $3-4B AUS. Final construction was $6-7B AUS -- however, the total costs including operation of the plant at $1.8M a day over the 27yr contract will be around $19B Australian or roughly $15B US.

      Assuming the US could operate as efficiently cost-wise (and we rarely do on large public works projects), we could afford to build and run 2 Desalination plants for $30B US.

    22. Re: Why not? by ttucker · · Score: 1

      Soil and climate and water determines that and,...

      There, I fixed that for you.

    23. Re:Why not? by ttucker · · Score: 1

      Desalination also uses energy.

    24. Re: Why not? by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      I prefer the farmers move out. Those assholes use 60% of the water.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    25. Re: Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agricultural users bought the water rights, most of them a long, long time ago,. and have been getting nothing from most of them for the last decade, so have been buying what already got stolen at market rates. What you're proposing is stealing the remaining water rights.

    26. Re: Why not? by sjames · · Score: 2

      What market? The farmers pump water from wells on their property.

    27. Re: Why not? by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      1-rainwater cisterns to catch rainwater instead of dumping it in the ocean.

      You must be from the east coast. A lot of western states make rainwater cisterns illegal.

      We were talking about you stealing water from Seattle. Rain cisterns are legal in Seattle.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    28. Re:Why not? by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Yes....

      Reverse osmosis plants use pressure to remove the salt by forcing it though membranes. Pressure requires pumps, which require power... What I'm reading says 3KWH pre cubic meter of water...

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    29. Re:Why not? by gregben · · Score: 1

      Care to list some of the "all kinds of chemicals" you are talking about?

    30. Re:Why not? by gregben · · Score: 1

      The new desalination plant nearing completion in Carlsbad, CA is priced at about $1B and has an expected output of 50 million gallons per day. This is about 7-8% of San Diego County's usage.

    31. Re:Why not? by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      And a $30B pipe is cheaper to run? Maybe, but it still takes power to run the pumps.

      Pumps? Look at a map! Oregon and Washington are above California, and we all know that water flows down...

      No pumps necessary!

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    32. Re: Why not? by MrBigInThePants · · Score: 1

      I just love how you live in a world where precipitation is not part of climate.

      I would ask if I could visit but I hear you have no water so bugger that...

    33. Re: Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Water rights are a complex orgy of historical regulations that vary by community. Allocations are based on historical use, and if you less water you get less allocated to you the next time. There are wells and the right to those wells but you can just dig a well deeper if it runs low or dry. There are networks competing reservoirs canals and pipes and management companies. Water price and availability can vary by zip code from cheap and plentiful to none at any price
      Water is life in the desert, people have KILLED over missing a water turn.
      People, livestock and crops are the first things we think about but industry, food processing and packaging, and even data centers require vast amounts of water.
      Desalination requires a piss ton of fuel and leaves a huge mess, the only peoples who actively use it have more/cheaper oil than water.

      alfalfa is $15 a bale for a horse, so alfalfa is being trucked in interstate and people are abandoning their horses in the desert.

    34. Re:Why not? by MouseR · · Score: 1

      Dr. Flamand: Do you mean what this could mean to California residents?
      Nick: Wow! They'd have enough salt to last forever!!

    35. Re:Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All the plans I have seen don't use "chemicals" just high pressure sea water against membranes. So what is pumped back into the sea is sea water with 50% more sea water crap in it. Can you provide some sources on chemicals and whatever else you see as a problem with desal?

    36. Re:Why not? by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      Yes, but there are different types of desalination plants. Modern tech has hybrid micropore with solar/wind assist for pumping, and uses the old technique of glass windows to collect clean water. Do a search for solar desalination in any reputable energy journal.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    37. Re:Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You produce clean water and as a byproduct you get a slurry of super salty brine mixed with all kinds of chemicals that speed up the desalination process

      And how about not adding chemicals? An organic desalination plant, if you will.

      Solar thermal could be used to super heat some liquid salt which can in turn create steam to condense into pure water during both day and night. The only question is: Will there be enough water production from the process for the cost? And could electricity be generated as a byproduct to help subsidize the water cost.

    38. Re:Why not? by ttucker · · Score: 1

      Yes, but there are different types of desalination plants. Modern tech has hybrid micropore with solar/wind assist for pumping, and uses the old technique of glass windows to collect clean water. Do a search for solar desalination in any reputable energy journal.

      Note that I said energy, to which you responded with several sources of alternative energy that might be employed. At the end of the day, the hypothetical pipeline might be driven by wind or solar energy as well. The wind or solar energy generated at the desalination plant could alternatively be sold, and so has monetary value that must be used to desalinate water.

    39. Re:Why not? by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      External input energy has a cost that process energy doesn't.

      Water ain't free, and Cali farmers think it should be.

      There's your problem.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    40. Re:Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you seen this? http://www.salttech.com/

    41. Re:Why not? by ttucker · · Score: 1

      Water ain't free, and Cali farmers think it should be.

      There's your problem.

      There is something that we agree upon vigorously. Not letting all users of water bid on available water is a subsidy.

      I was reading interesting stuff about using forward osmosis to recover energy from desalination effluent, or even as a pre-treatment step before final desalination.

    42. Re:Why not? by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      Actually, though, bidding is artificially constrained by money supply, so that those with wealth have more assets to bid for water than those with less.

      This means that you get swimming pools and grass lawns that the ecosystem can't support.

      A better method is to cap the usage per capita and let people decide what they want with it. If they really want a pool, then make them pay a lot more for the extra water wasted. As in ten times as much.

      Our Seattle water supply works this way. Even rich people pay a lot more per water use above a certain amount than someone at median water use.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    43. Re:Why not? by ttucker · · Score: 1

      Tiered residental water pricing is fairly normal where I live as well (like $0.50-$20/CCF), is it not in CA?

    44. Re:Why not? by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      Agricultural water supply isn't tiered in some respects. They have three basic supplies. One - well water - which takes it from the aquifer. Two - historical first right water - which takes it before the rest use it. Three -state water - which pays a subsidized rate for water (and why you see all those signs on I5 in Cali) - where it's going from 1/2 the cost to 80 pct the cost currently.

      Non-ag water supply is fairly similar, except most people don't have wells and pay the commercial city rate. Some places use tiered, many don't.

      But they don't have as large up-end surcharges like we in the water areas like Seattle do. We charge two arms and two legs and your hair for excessive use, they charge a left foot or maybe a leg for excessive use.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    45. Re:Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man, I've been trying to get tis on video for years. One of the best documentaries ever.

    46. Re:Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not get it from the east or south where its snowing or flooding. They pump oil all over the US why not water

    47. Re:Why not? by Sabriel · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is, we COULD have clean desalination plants if it weren't for the profiteers cutting corners on them like they do on everything else?

      Just like nuclear power, the problem isn't the tech. The problem is human greed.

    48. Re:Why not? by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Maybe California could just use less water. Something has to give. Alfalfa, Cattle, Almonds, whatever, something is going to have to be sacrificed. There just isn't enough water and if it doesn't rain more something has to go. 30 billion in desalination plants and you'll have a few more drops of prohibitively expensive water and all kinds of ecological problems.

    49. Re:Why not? by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the links. That's a fabulous documentary. I wish I had mod points.

    50. Re:Why not? by budgenator · · Score: 1

      I hope you realise that Shatner is an idiot, Detroit gets a significant portion of it's water from lake Huron through a 120 inch pipe and sells a portion to Flint, additionally Flint is putting in another pipeline north of the DWSD pipeline, an 80 inch pipeline; Shanter's 48 inch pipe is meaningless.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    51. Re:Why not? by adisakp · · Score: 1

      Ah, the Australian plant has 3X the output. I'm not sure if there is higher efficiency (operation cost) for larger plants, but typically, desalinization is a process which has some efficiency scaling. Anyhow, 7-8% of one very metropolitan/urban county isn't going to put a dent in overall CA water consumption when the vast majority of it is going to agricultural uses.

    52. Re:Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And they use up a LOT of power that is produced by burning fossil fuels.

    53. Re: Why not? by siliconsmiley · · Score: 1

      Most California farmers are getting their water out of wells they paid to drill.

    54. Re: Why not? by doccus · · Score: 1

      These "assholes" supply half of the food on your supper table. And your breakfast table. They don't just grow almonds. How about fruits, veggies, other nuts, and god knows what else. If Calif goes under, you'll be back on bread and potatos for breakfast lunch and dinner, thank you..

    55. Re:Why not? by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

      Residential water use is down in the noise, so getting people to move out will have little effect. Most of the water use in California is agricultural. California is a big source of food (50% of the vegetables eaten in the US, as well as fruit, nuts, and meat) so the effects of California running out water will be huge. Increasing prices to farmers would create incentives for more efficient use which would help somewhat, but the basic truth remains: growing food needs a lot of water.

    56. Re: Why not? by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

      Rainwater cisterns are only effective if you have rain. That will work in some places like the Bay Area, but it would do little good in places like the Central Valley that are near-deserts in terms of rainfall.

    57. Re:Why not? by doccus · · Score: 1

      An absolutely wonderful documentary. Thank you..

    58. Re:Why not? by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Reverse osmosis desalination plants, the most efficient kind run at about 25% efficiency and as such the waste water simply has a 25% higher salt content and this waste water can be discharged at depth to have less impact. This outfall would simply diffuse into surrounding water in low habitation zones.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    59. Re: Why not? by ancientmyth · · Score: 1

      I prefer the farmers move out. Those assholes use 60% of the water.

      Where the fuck do you think your food comes from? The grocery just uses a magic hat to make it appear? Are you THAT fucking stupid??!!

    60. Re:Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not true

      http://www.ide-tech.com/progreen-main/chemical-free-desalination-technology-2/

      http://lmgtfy.com/?q=chemical+free+desalination

      always put byproducts to good use, they are the products afterall. salt seems handy being farmed from seawater.

    61. Re: Why not? by ai4px · · Score: 1

      You want the farmers to move out? OK.... what will you eat? Eventually, you'll move where the food is. sheesh.

    62. Re: Why not? by ai4px · · Score: 1

      I've heard Utah is one of those states where water cisterns are illegal. I can't understand that at all. They are worried (as I understand it) that if everyone collected water there'd be no water in the wells. OK, but what about the ratio of my roof to all the land around my house? How many square feet of roof vs square miles of land does rain fall on? Would it even make a difference in the ground water? Did I miss something?

    63. Re: Why not? by ai4px · · Score: 1

      Also, in some areas there is ground water contamination and it is illegal to drill a well.... so rainwater is much cleaner.

    64. Re: Why not? by magarity · · Score: 1

      No, they're not worried about your roof. it's just a blanket policy that also keeps someone with a ranch from damming up a river on their own and trapping heckalot of water from the users downstream.

    65. Re:Why not? by toddestan · · Score: 1

      That's why the GP suggested using solar. It's actually a good use for something like solar and wind, since you can make extra fresh water when you have the power to do so, and store it in a reservoir to be used for when you don't.

    66. Re:Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      California could reprocess their waste water and recycle it rather than dumping it into the ocean.

    67. Re:Why not? by ImprovOmega · · Score: 1

      There are ways to do it chemical-free, though concentrating the salt and whatever else in the water before dumping it out into the ocean again will still be of some minor environmental impact. A lot of desalination plants still do use chemicals, and there's a breakdown of some of the impacts here

    68. Re:Why not? by ImprovOmega · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately this is very much not cost efficient nor scalable. To give you an idea, there's a desalination plant recently built in Carlsbad, CA that is designed to produce 50,000 acre-feet of potable water a year. This is enough to supply roughly 200,000 homes with water. This means that plant is pushing out 44.6 *million* gallons of water each day to keep up.

      If you personally had a reasonably sized beachfront house you could probably produce enough organic desalinated water for your family, but on a large scale it's not feasible as a municipal water source.

  2. Not worst idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not worst idea I ever heard. However, why would we do that without changing the current water-hungry ways of CA? You will have the same problem within 20 years.

    1. Re:Not worst idea by TWX · · Score: 1

      I'd rather a pipeline delivering a product essential to life be constructed, than a pipeline delivering a product essential to corporate profits...

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    2. Re:Not worst idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not do both?

    3. Re:Not worst idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "than a pipeline delivering a product essential to corporate profits"

      So you're against the water pipeline then? You did know that corporate intrests in almond farming especially, to fill the demand in China is one of the big water hogs. And those corporations have no interest in trying to reduce water usage.

    4. Re:Not worst idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and which pipeline are you referring to? oil? As if energy's only value is corporate profits.

    5. Re:Not worst idea by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Please ask the residents of Washington and Oregon what they think of this 1500 mile water pipe before you start throwing money at Kickstarter.

      There's exactly zero chance this thing gets built.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    6. Re:Not worst idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your comment is foolish, naive, and dangerous.

      Foolish: You assume that the demand for oil is driven by corporate greed.
      Naive: You assume a water pipeline would not be owned or run by corporations.
      Dangerous: You assume oil is not necessary to sustain the present population of California.

      Millions of people in California would die from starvation if farmers didn't have the oil to run the equipment.

  3. Sweet Jesus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He's right, there is plenty of water. It's in the Pacific Ocean. If there's 30 billion to spend (and there isn't), use it to improve desalination methods. Don't rob other cities of their water.

    1. Re:Sweet Jesus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like the other cities are pushing back?

      The other cities want to sell their water--easy revenue. It is all about money folks. If the other cities pushed back, then CA has the tradition of doing it 'their own way', hence with tech or innovative means. But the other cities are giving them deals.

    2. Re:Sweet Jesus by Paleolibertarian · · Score: 1

      I think both ideas have merit. I have no idea what desalination costs but I't wouldn't be cheap given the amount needed. Moving water from where it's plentiful especially if it's in excess, to where it isn't is a good idea if it can be done economically.

      Of course political considerations come into play via such groups as the EPA and the Sierra club. We would probably have plenty of water if the EPA didn't prevent it's diversion to preserve the habitat of a stupid fish.

      One thing is certain though is that the problem could be solved with enough engineering and a free market in water. Politics prevents the free market from operating so we have shortages. What else is new.

  4. A great way to transport it... by danbert8 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Seattle's water is all going into the ocean. How about using the ocean to transport all that water to southern California instead of building a pipeline? All you have to do is remove a little bit of salt it picked up along the way! I'm guessing 30B bucks would build quite a few desalination plants.

    --
    Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    1. Re:A great way to transport it... by rmdingler · · Score: 2

      Seattle's water is all going into the ocean. How about using the ocean to transport all that water to southern California instead of building a pipeline? All you have to do is remove a little bit of salt it picked up along the way! I'm guessing 30B bucks would build quite a few desalination plants.

      How about taking the fresh river water as it is about to dump into the Pacific, and pipe it through the ocean in poly blend pipes that are easy to install and repair... a leak would do no damage, there would be no trouble obtaining land rights, and Southern Cal could tax the almond growers (et al) to pay their Northern brothers for water they don't even use.

      Win, win, winner.

      --
      Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

      Ernest Hemingway

    2. Re:A great way to transport it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Seattle doesn't get that much water, it just rains more days per year. Actually, we have a drought quite often, which is quite problematic.

    3. Re:A great way to transport it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Alternatively just invent transparent aluminium, kit out an old alien spacecraft with a big water tank, and transport it via this method.

    4. Re:A great way to transport it... by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Yeah there you go. A solar desalinization plant would cost a shitload less than $30bn, and would work better.

    5. Re:A great way to transport it... by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 4, Funny

      I already have it. My watch crystal is made of transparent aluminum. The stuff is pretty fucking hard; bangs, dents, and scratches on the steel case, but the crystal hasn't chipped or scratched at all.

    6. Re:A great way to transport it... by The+Cisco+Kid · · Score: 1

      I suspect that the recurring/operating costs of a pipeline, once built will be FAR less than the recurring/operating costs of a desal plant.

    7. Re:A great way to transport it... by timere969 · · Score: 1

      The cost for desalination is not in the price of the plant, it is in the cost of operation. Reverse osmosis chews through a lot of electricity.

    8. Re:A great way to transport it... by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Yeah there you go. A solar desalinization plant would cost a shitload less than $30bn, and would work better.

      It would also create a boat load of shade and only work during the day.... I'm not so sure that's a viable path n Cali...

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    9. Re:A great way to transport it... by bobbied · · Score: 1

      That's what the co-located Nuke plant is for... OR if you don't like that, how about a Natural Gas one?

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    10. Re:A great way to transport it... by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

      While Portland gets fewer days, but big, blatty raindrops when it does rain and more water overall. It's one state closer to CA as well. However Oregon isn't about to hand the water over to California. I don't see electoral success in the future of the politician who inks that deal with CA.

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    11. Re:A great way to transport it... by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      They're usually coastal, columnar, and don't create all that much shade. You could conceivably use off-shore reflectors and a salt tower, as well as a vacuum-depressurized boiler (use the away pump or a siphon mechanism as a vacuum system to depressurize the main boiler). The tower doesn't have to be high; and it doubles its output when using a vacuum-depressurized boiler, which isn't common.

    12. Re:A great way to transport it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. $30B would build some awesome desalination plants. A lot of places in the middle-east do this for potable water, and water for agriculture. Why can't we? Well, until now, it was cheaper to suck it out of the ground and rivers. Now? Things change, and if we cannot change with them, then we are doomed as a species!

    13. Re:A great way to transport it... by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      just invent transparent aluminium, kit out an old alien spacecraft with a big water tank, and transport it...

      We tried that. Random whales kept clogging the lines.

    14. Re:A great way to transport it... by meerling · · Score: 2

      It was about time for California to try and tell Oregon to divert one of it's rivers again. They attempt that on a regular basis. It's never going to happen, that water flow is important where it is even if nobody is drinking it.
      Nobody is going to let California take their water resources, period. They need to find another solution, like reduce water needs, or build some desalination plants.
      Besides, if a kickstarter doesn't reach funding, you don't get any of the money, and even if you did, wasting it on a politician would be really stupid.

    15. Re:A great way to transport it... by meerling · · Score: 1

      Transparent aluminum was invented about a decade ago. The government has been looking in to using it for various things, including replacing the viewports in tanks with it as it's far more efficient for that kind of thing than glass.

    16. Re:A great way to transport it... by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

      He's not a politician. He's a star captain. Military seniority doesn't carry much capital with us hippy dippy Oregonians.

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    17. Re:A great way to transport it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seattle (and Washington state) already spent millions on huge aquaduct projects to send Ca water (some examples in sidebars here http://www.water-technology.net/projects/grand-coulee-dam-washington-us/ ) If California wanted to pay market rates for water, this problem would probably solve itself. But in terms of packaging up excess Washington rain on the theory that we just don't know what to do with it all... no thanks. BoydK425

    18. Re:A great way to transport it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah there you go. A solar desalinization plant would cost a shitload less than $30bn, and would work better.

      And just where do you think they're going to find the real estate on the coastline to put enough solar panels to run an entire desalination plant? Carlsbad is getting around this by building the plant right next to the Encina Power Station.

    19. Re:A great way to transport it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +5 Funny or +5 Insightful?

      The Dutch have just build a /salination/ plant - put in salt water and fresh water, get out a mixed stream and electricity. Put that in Seattle, use the grid to send the power to LA, and put a desalination plant there. Sure, it's far from 100% efficient, but electricity transport is far easier than moving water. Water is heavy.

      Of course, solar power is the more logical choice to power the desalination plant in SoCal, but if Seattle does have that much excess fresh water then it's still a good idea to build a plant there.

    20. Re:A great way to transport it... by nightcats · · Score: 1

      I don't know, this sounds a lot like a Korbomite Maneuver.

      --
      Development is programmable; Discovery is not programmable. (Fuller)
    21. Re:A great way to transport it... by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      Actually, our salmon and other fish use that. And so do our sailboats and super yachts that our billionaires own.

      So, go steal it from some place that doesn't have fusion power and giant lasers, would you?

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    22. Re:A great way to transport it... by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      A lot of people have been migrating to Oregon from California, to escape the drought.

      So I'm guessing you'll get just as much resistance from them as you will from Seattle.

      Except we in Seattle have a fusion reactor and some wicked giant lasers.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    23. Re:A great way to transport it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem I've always had with that movie (ok, _one_ of the many problems) was the ridiculous requirement that part of the tank be transparent. Just rip out some other bulkheads and weld them together into an opaque tank wall. Why would you need transparent aluminum or plexiglass, or glass, or anything clear? If you need to see into the tank, use a video camera, or a periscope, or have Spock swim in the tank, or use a tricorder or ships internal sensors which have been established in the Star Trek universe as being able to see through pretty much everything.
      For that matter, why trade information for plexiglass when you have a teleporter. Just find a nice piece and teleport it onto the ship. Worried about the moral implications of theft, or how it will change the time stream... Sure. So much worse than everything else they did.

    24. Re:A great way to transport it... by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      They had to give him the information on the transparent aluminum to make the piece they needed. That being said, it's highly unlikely they would have been able to produce it immediately with their existing fabrication equipment. But regardless, I agree. The only reason for it to be transparent was because it was in a movie...

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    25. Re:A great way to transport it... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      One big problem is elevation. If we take water as it runs into the sea, it's at sea level. Pumping a trillion gallons to the almond groves (which I suspect are significantly above sea level) is going to take a LOT of power.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  5. Ummm, no. Just no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Governor Inslee expands drought emergency to include more of Washington

    This seems like a bad idea. It doesn't solve the issue of them wanting to grow crops in a dessert. And they have the audacity to suggest building a pipeline to an area that is currently suffering from a drought? Sure, Washington state won't be drought-stricken forever, but what will they do when both states are in a drought?

    How about build a desalination plant with use of nuclear power in California?

    1. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to clarify, yes, the article I mentioned does mention:

      Statewide, public water systems have not reported any problems with water supplies. Large municipal water providers in Seattle, Tacoma and Everett have adequate reservoir storage and do not expect problems this year.

      Still, I don't think it's a good idea to tap Seattle for water.

    2. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "How about build a desalination plant with use of nuclear power in California?"

      California won't generate any sort of power without thirty years of court fighting. We will gladly add more reactors in Arizona for the needed energy.

    3. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by khallow · · Score: 1

      It doesn't solve the issue of them wanting to grow crops in a dessert.

      First, most of California agriculture is not in desert. Those areas tend to be rather low on rainfall, but not low enough to qualify as a desert. Second, presence of water is not the only reason to grow something in a particular region. Southern California happens to be famous for a pleasant climate and a lot of sunny days. It's also easy to ship to the global market from there. They're already in the middle of a large market, the US rail system and several of the better ports in the world.

    4. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 4, Funny

      It doesn't solve the issue of them wanting to grow crops in a dessert.

      Other than the problem that few desserts are big enough, what's the problem there? I mean, a good peach cobbler has plenty of water to grow crops in, assuming it was big enough....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    5. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by asylumx · · Score: 1

      My thought is: More than half of Washington is desert (or semi-desert) and they want to pipe water from that state to another state to water a different desert...? How ridiculous. Although, I was pretty sure he was going to suggest diverting from the great lakes and nearby rivers, so at least we aren't going THERE again.

      Quick read if you think all of WA is as rainy as the coast: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E...

    6. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by ckatko · · Score: 2

      Emergencies are the best time to pass significant legislation. If we can pass the Patriot Act from a single attack on US soil, why not use "thousands of dead people from lack of water" to get some nuke plants up and running?

    7. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Desalination plants located on offshore platforms with pipes to carry the fresh water inland.

      Floating solar platforms to provide energy to the desalination plant.

      Tidal power platforms to provide energy to the desalination plant.

      Kelp farms to provide biomass that can be converted to biofuels (biodiesel and alcohol).

      Excess energy from the solar and tidal platforms can be sold to the onshore power grid or used to crack seawater to free O2 and H2 for use in industrial concerns.

    8. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Never let a good crisis go to political waste.. That's what I always say.... (sarcasm off)

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    9. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      I was about to say much the same thing... Just because we [residents of the Puget Sound Basin] don't live in a dried brown wasteland like California, that doesn't mean we don't have problems of our own. We've had a series of drier than normal summers (low groundwater recharge), and last winter was (as your link shows) extraordinarily dry (less water coming into the rivers and resevoirs).

      Here's a picture I took roughly two years ago showing the normal snowpack on the Olympics around this time of year. (That snow normally persists well into May or June.) But, if you look at this webcam, you can see the much smaller pack we have this year. If you look at The Brothers (just left of center in my picture, almost to the left hand side of the webcam), the difference is particularly stark.

    10. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing like a desert for building commercial reactors which, for all current designs, require massive amounts of fresh water to operate, and even more nearby to dilute radioactive water to a safe level in case of an emergency. The only thing in the region with enough water is the Colorado River -- which flows to California, and provides much of its water.

      One of the saving graces of Fukushima is that the leaking radioactive water is almost literally a drop in the ocean, and is diluted to background levels very quickly. In contrast, the Colorado River is much, much less able to dilute contaminated water, has many millions of people drinking its water downstream, and countless square miles of crops.

      Can you imagine the shitstorm that would happen if the greater Los Angeles area, San Diego, and everywhere in between's water supply is contaminated with radioactive reactor coolant? It doesn't even matter what level of radiation would be involved - even if it is at background levels. These people bought gas masks and iodine tablets to protect themselves from 'radiation' released from Fukushima daiichi..

    11. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by volmtech · · Score: 1

      Deserts are ideal places to grow most crops. Abundant sunlight and low humidity prevents molds and blight. Few plants outside the watered areas to harbor insects. No excess rainfall to leach away your expensive fertilizers and drown your plants.

      I have farmed spring potatoes in Florida. Seed pieces washed out of the ground by heavy rainfall. Seed pieces rotting in water soaked soil. Trying to harvest the crop from a muddy field is akin to being sent to Devil's Island.

    12. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As an AZ resident, this sounds very good to me. We should build a few reactors in the no-man's land between AZ and CA and sell expensive power to CA. Structure it so we get like 25% of the power for free, sell it cheap in AZ.

      NIMBY can be profitable.

    13. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by hjf · · Score: 1

      How about you try local crops?

    14. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      That's exactly why we use a design that doesn't require a large-water heat sink. All reactors use water as a coolant, but what you're talking about is the medium to which the heat is dumped.

    15. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you understand the concept of hyperbole?
      It doesn't matter how sunny it is, how ideal for transport, or whatever if you don't have the water for the plants to grow.

    16. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aaand where do you get the water to cool them nucular plants?

    17. Re:Ummm, no. Just no. by khallow · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter how sunny it is, how ideal for transport, or whatever if you don't have the water for the plants to grow.

      And it does, when you do have enough water. There is no point to your argument. Lack of water has already been demonstrated to be something that can be overcome.

  6. Fuck no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Just comping up here isn't enough, now they want to take our water too?

    1. Re:Fuck no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh? What difference might there be between a California libtard and a Seattle libtard that you might care or be capable of detecting?

  7. Re:Here's a better idea by gatkinso · · Score: 2

    Or, we east coasters could stop eat so much lettuce.

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  8. Columbia River by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I had the same thought. Last time I saw the outlet of the Columbia River into the ocean it was immense. I can't imagine Oregon or Washington complaining about running a pipe from there to California.

    1. Re:Columbia River by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "subsidize too many humans living where the resources can't support it"

      To be fair I think that the water resources can support Californias human population, the problem they seem to be running into is the fact that they're continuing irrigated crop production in the midst of a significant drought. Don't get me wrong, its not completely unreasonable to farm in the middle of an semi-arid area when you've got the water and infrastructure to spare, but at the moment they don't. All areas should have some system in place to idle such irrigation and support farmers (reduced taxes, land management rebates, etc) through the drought period. If you look at some of the specifics of the situation in California you see an eclectic mix of foolish policies, in some areas farmers are using tones of water based on archaic water right system but being taxed the same/less and others who are idling their usage are being taxed more.

  9. Cheaper to desalinate I bet by gatkinso · · Score: 1

    Lots of micro desalination plants powered by solar perhaps?

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  10. Another Hollywood Socialist by MarkRichman · · Score: 1

    “If I don’t make 30 billion, I’ll give the money to a politician who says, ‘I’ll build it.’"

    1. Re:Another Hollywood Socialist by EdwardFurlong · · Score: 1

      So pretty much the money is just going to a politician.

    2. Re:Another Hollywood Socialist by camperdave · · Score: 2

      A politician opens up a large pipeline project for bids. The first guy comes and says he can build it for 20 billion dollars. The second guy comes in and says he can build it for 10 billion dollars. The third guy comes in an says "I can build it for 30 billion dollars."
      "30 billion?!?", exclaimed the politician. "We've got bids that are far less expensive. Explain yourself!"
      "Certainly", oozed the third guy. "Ten billion for you. Ten billion for me, and ten billion to hire the second guy to do the actual work".

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    3. Re:Another Hollywood Socialist by operagost · · Score: 1

      It's not like an entrepreneur is going to want to do it anyway. Once they finish, they'll be told they didn't build that.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  11. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tell us how you really feel.

  12. Re:Here's a better idea by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1, Insightful

    If the people in Liberalwood want to do something constructive, they wold stop opposing desalination and let that $30 billion be spent getting California its own water supply. Putting the best minds in Silicon Valley to work on the problem would benefit all the other parts of the world where drought is a problem.

  13. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How about California stops growing almonds. Water crisis averted.

  14. Open-top pipeline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, I have an idea that could transport water and help with transportation/leisure: make it a big ass canal*

    *read 'canal' in 'big ass' context if you like that better

    1. Re:Open-top pipeline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bet Kim Kardashian has a big ass canal.

  15. *shakes*...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Khaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaan!

  16. enabling by another name? by argStyopa · · Score: 2

    Wouldn't this pretty much just kick the can down the road a little, encouraging MORE people to move to what's essentially a water-starved area?

    --
    -Styopa
    1. Re:enabling by another name? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, imagine that. With our amazing aqueduct technology, humans can actually move to a place with clear and sunny weather, and still have enough water to drink, bathe and grow food.

  17. $30 billion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where did that number come from and why is it crazy to do this, when half this country wants to build a tar sands pipeline no matter the environmental risks? And I doubt the Keystone XL pipeline would cost $30 billion.

    While they are building pipelines and canals, removing some water from the Mississippi and engineering a structure to keep the gulf's salt water from going upstream would be a better route across Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and Southern CA. All of them need that water. And the terrain is more favorable to pipelines.

    And working with Mexico to build a salt water pipeline between the Gulf of California and the Salton Sea to get the salt level of that lake under control would also be a good thing.

    1. Re: $30 billion? by AgNO3 · · Score: 1

      Because there isnt enough water to do it. The enviromental impact study would take years. Look at what happened to the colorado river

      --
      OMG Ponies!!! with Glitter!!!! I miss Pink :-(
  18. Stop bottling it then... by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Well, someone will bring this up

    Nestlé bottling water in California

    But the first thing I thought when I saw the story (in a campaign email) was "I bet it's a small fraction of the total water usage".

    I can't believe that it takes over a gallon of water to grow a single almond. Maybe they should look at ways of improving that.

    And of legislating that people should be given a sound thwack around the head for buying bottled water. It's a wasteful, stupid, con.

    1. Re: Stop bottling it then... by DrLang21 · · Score: 2

      I imagine that much of the water used to grow anything out here us lost through evaporation. This is why I stopped trying to go a patio garden. I just could not justify the level of wasted water that was going into it when we have such a short supply.

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    2. Re:Stop bottling it then... by gnasher719 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I can't believe that it takes over a gallon of water to grow a single almond. Maybe they should look at ways of improving that.

      If they don't, terrorists will start buying almonds to destroy California.

    3. Re:Stop bottling it then... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Well, someone will bring this up

      Nestlé bottling water in California

      First thing I thought of when I read this was "How much are they actually bottling every year?

      The answer turned out to be about 80 million gallons per year.

      Out of the seven billion gallons used for one thing or another in CA every year. So, 1.15% is used by Nestle? Some of which is drunk in CA, so the amount lost to CA is less than that...

      If CA is short a percent or two in its water supply, Nestle might be a big deal. Otherwise, it's meaningless....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    4. Re:Stop bottling it then... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1.15% actually is a huge percentage for a problem this large.

    5. Re:Stop bottling it then... by CaptainLard · · Score: 1

      The answer turned out to be about 80 million gallons per year.

      Yeah I had that same question but the article cites "The company claims 700m gallons a year". Where did you get your number that could be off by an order of magnitude? And this article http://www.desertsun.com/story... says anywhere from 200M to 450M gallons....

    6. Re:Stop bottling it then... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While Nestle deserves to be whipped for their folly I can't help but think that the same kind of entitled attitude is in place from a people who've decided to make multiple cities housing multiple millions of people in the middle of a semi-arid landmass only to turn around and cry to everyone else that they need their water.
       
      California should burn.

    7. Re:Stop bottling it then... by bobbied · · Score: 1

      1.15% actually is a huge percentage for a problem this large.

      Well, only if you are not bypassing some OTHER water use that is more easily curbed. Why not start filling in all those private swimming pools in Southern Cali? Can you image how many billions of gallons go into evaporation alone for pools that might be used once a month?

      What about watering lawns, leaking toilets, dripping faucets, leaking pipes and kids playing in the hydrants opened in the street? I'm sure ALL of these are orders of magnitude bigger issues than what is "wasted" by bottling it for drinking.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    8. Re:Stop bottling it then... by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      How much water does it take to grow a single human?

    9. Re:Stop bottling it then... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Further proof that either the terrorist threat is not real, or economist stupidity is a bull market.

    10. Re:Stop bottling it then... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1.00 x 10^0 soylents.

    11. Re:Stop bottling it then... by Rich.Miller.6 · · Score: 1

      Water usage in California is a bit higher than 7 billion gallons per year. Per the USGS, usage was 38 billion gallons per day (i.e., nearly 13 trillion gallons per year) in 2010. Nestle's usage appears to be a drop in the bucket.

    12. Re:Stop bottling it then... by Vegan+Cyclist · · Score: 1

      Bottled water...watering lawns...even almonds...they're not the problem. It's livestock. They consume around 50% of all water use in CA.

      Here, let's just compare dairy products: http://www.motherjones.com/environment/2014/03/california-water-suck

      Keep in mind that around 80% of people regularly consume these, and the non-dairy products are a tiny portion of sales..

      Here's a collection of articles and stats for those really interested in learning about what's using up California's water: veganstart.org/almonds

    13. Re:Stop bottling it then... by LinuxLuver · · Score: 1

      Water used to be free in all restaurants, even McDonalds. Then Coca-Cola worked out you could charge for it as long as you refused to provide it for free. Terrorists.

      --
      Only boring people are ever bored.
  19. Interstate Water Sharing system by MatthiasF · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    I hope this raises awareness that the country should have an interstate water sharing system, so that reservoirs can be built in wet areas and pipelines can send excess to states that need it.

    It's the key 21st century project that needs to get done to keep the US safe from droughts, aquifer depletion and powerful storms.

    1. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by PvtVoid · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Worst. Idea. Ever.

      What this would amount to in practice is tapping the Great Lakes to enable unsustainable development in the Southwest. This would be an ecological disaster for both the Great Lakes, which are already losing volume due to climate change, and the Southwest, which has been unsustainably developed for decades.

      How about, instead of massive engineering projects, we just don't build cities where there aren't enough natural resources to sustain them?

    2. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's the key 21st century project that needs to get done to keep the US safe from droughts, aquifer depletion and powerful storms.

      Silly boy. Under what scenario do you figure that the western states won't simply use all the water we have back east, then demand more? The west coast of California is seeing the dream of living where it hardly ever rains, yet taking other people's water, come to an end.

      Get your water where the Colorado river reaches the sea.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    3. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by AcidPenguin9873 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How about, instead of massive engineering projects, we just don't build cities where there aren't enough natural resources to sustain them?

      So then, we should avoid building cities in the Great Lakes region, where it gets really cold in winter and people have to use natural gas that was mined in Texas and the Dakotas?

      There's this thing called comparitive advantage. The southwest has tons of potential for producing solar energy, let's not shut down development there yet.

    4. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope this raises awareness that the country should have an interstate water sharing system, so that reservoirs can be built in wet areas and pipelines can send excess to states that need it.

      As a resident of the Midwest, I'm telling you to fuck off. Bill Richardson talked about it and it got torpedoed quickly, and for good reason: once you start using the water in our states you'll deplete it too. Having lived out west for a decade I've seen the utter inability of those states to regulate water consumption, but they can somehow regulate everything else and tax the hell out of you while doing it. Somebody also mentioned the Great Lakes; it's a non-starter as they belong to Canada as well.

      You can either a) move here, b) buy water from Canada, or maybe c) desalinization plants.

    5. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you make the claim that the Great Lakes are losing volume due to climate change? Where did you get this notion. It is complete BS according to NOAA.

      Check this out:http://www.glerl.noaa.gov/data/dashboard/GLWLD.html

    6. Re: Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot D) charge everyone in the state, farmer and miner and resident alike, the same for water and let the market regulate water use. The prices of alfalfa, beef and almonds would increase until it became more profitable to grow them elsewhere (Florida?).

    7. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by The+Cisco+Kid · · Score: 1

      "other people's water"

      Really? You claim ownership of *rain*?

    8. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by asylumx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The southwest has tons of potential for producing solar energy, let's not shut down development there yet.

      So maybe we should develop solar plants there and not almond farms. Just sayin'

    9. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It depends.. where is it collecting? In your state? Fine. In my state (unless you live in my state) then it is not yours.

    10. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by operagost · · Score: 1

      It's an interesting concept, isn't it? Funny how governments treat the same water. When water flows through my property, the government tells me what I can and can't do with it-- even if it ends up in a lake with no outlet. In some areas, you can't even collect the rain, which is pretty much an anti-green, anti-science policy. So the government owns the water-- until it's flooding your basement, causing toxic mold to grow. Then that's YOUR problem.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    11. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ownership may be a bit much, but it seems to me, if you live where it falls, you should have right of first use, no?

    12. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Nukenbar · · Score: 1

      Get your water where the Colorado river reaches the sea

      This is an interesting idea. What would happen if we diverted most of the Colorado river to a piping system to southern California?

      I'm sure Mexico would be pissed, but so what?

    13. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So then, we should avoid building cities in the Great Lakes region, where it gets really cold in winter and people have to use natural gas that was mined in Texas and the Dakotas?

      There's this thing called comparitive advantage. The southwest has tons of potential for producing solar energy, let's not shut down development there yet.

      Your brush is too broad. Michigan, Ohio and Indiana have large petroleum fields and more than enough natural gas. In fact, Michigan and Ohio export natural gas - not sure about Indiana

    14. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Greyfox · · Score: 1

      Also funnily there have been lawsuits over cloud seeding by people claiming exactly that.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    15. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      No, thanks. We in the east will keep our water. People in the west can stop trying to build cities and farms in the desert.

    16. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      The Supreme Court has long ruled any federal plan to siphon from the Great Lakes requires the permission of the states on them, not to mention Canada by way of treaty.

      I doubt they could do it without their permission, for that matter, as California is seen as a folly of its own making -- go let them hang. The Great Lake states vote, too, and are larger. May we assemble a multi billion dollar debt package payment for you, too? /sarcasm-this-is-about-as-likely-to-pass

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    17. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by shapano · · Score: 1

      How about we replenish the Great Lakes with new natural fresh water. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G...

    18. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hate to burst your bubble, but that's a horrible idea.

      The southwest US is a net loss on water for the foreseeable future. It's returning to a prolonged desert environment, moreso than it was before. These things are cyclical. Look it up!

      You want to suppliment civilization there with outside resources that, of themselves, have limited lifespans for the areas they already support? This is like adding gasoline to a fire. A resource that had 200-300 years worth of water reserves, now has half that time frame or less, presumably. You can't support 20-30 Million people on external water reserves and expect it not to have a local source impact in the long term.

      Oh, and 'a solution will come along', or 'we can build desal plants', or, 'people may have to relocate' aren't viable alternatives. They either attack the issue now, with effective measure, and yes there are effective measures out there, or you're going to start seeing civilization get pretty ugly with water scarcity.

    19. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep. A couple of centuries of western states water rights laws and customs (some of which involved some pretty violent fights) dictates who owns which water. In many places, land owners do not own the water rights thereto. In many parts of Denver, for example, if you capture the rain water falling on your property rather than let it soak into the ground or run off into the drains, you're violating Denver Water's rights and can be fined.

      California happens to "own" rights to some percentage of the water in the Colorado River, a case where they own rights to water that has fallen hundreds of miles upstream of them. But the upstream states aren't obligated to release any more than that.

    20. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      > What would happen if we diverted most of the Colorado river to a piping system to southern California?

      The worlds longest garden hose? California already tried that.

      See the fantastic documentary Cadillac Desert . Details Mulholland's Dream, aka the rape and pillage of Owen's Lake and then tried to do the same with other river systems.

      Thankfully the other states told California to fuck off before they destroyed their ecosystem.

      --
      First Contact is coming ~2024. Are you ready for a new perspective?

    21. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The idea has merit, being able to redirect EXCESS water from one region to another with a shortage would be a good thing. However the costs would be extreme and in the current climate of lies, deceit, "creative" legal interpretation I agree it would result in far more harm than good. Though it should be noted that the only real issue with the Great Lakes level wise from what I understand isn't ecological, its man-made. The biggest issue is A canal near Chicago that was created in 1900 drain a little water from the great lakes into the Mississippi River watershed (for the purposes of sewage removal and eventually transit), it was considerably enlarged and dredged despite legal restrictions on its discharge rate. I think in recent years the Army Corps of Engineers has tried to decrease the discharge rate but it is still far in excess of historical rates.

    22. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Z80xxc! · · Score: 3, Informative

      Are you being sarcastic or serious? Because that is exactly what happens right now. Read this for starters. California already gets a larger portion of water from the Colorado River than any other entity - including Mexico. Mexico gets less than 10%.

    23. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except the Colorado doesn't reach the sea anymore because we're pumping too much water out of it.

      http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/the-colorado-river-runs-dry-61427169/?page=1

    24. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the current system. The Colorado runs dry in Mexico long before reaching the Pacific.

    25. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 1

      How about, instead of massive engineering projects, we just don't build cities where there aren't enough natural resources to sustain them?

      Cities are, by their very definition, massive engineering projects that do not have sufficient natural resources to sustain themselves. Name one city that could function on a daily basis without regular imports from hundreds of miles away.

      --

      Obliteracy: Words with explosions

    26. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Sir_Eptishous · · Score: 1
      --
      We play the game with the bravery of being out of range
    27. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rainfall is a fairly common managed water right in the southwest. In addition to the obvious things like aquifer rights, people have ...what amounts to water and irrigation rights. Basically it amounts to things like "the first X inches or X feet" or the second/third X inches (peoples rights have precedence in times of scarcity). It can get more complicated, with things like the right to open a "dam" for X days a year, or during X season...

      I believe some of them even have cultural rights, such that certain ethnic groups are permitted to use horrifically inefficient forms of open ditch irrigation that largely loses water to evaporation.

      To further clarify -- caching water is unlawful in many places in the southwest. Installing barrels on your gutters, or a cistern directly contends with those rights -- many of which date back to eras and treaties before the founding of the Americas. Spanish kings and all that. You definitely can't dig a ditch in your backyward and capture any channel or runoff you feel like.

      So yes-- there are places where ownership of rain is claimed, and it's a big fucking deal -- with lawsuits that have ran over 50 years and past the lifetimes of the original claimants.

    28. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      "other people's water"

      Really? You claim ownership of *rain*?

      What an odd statement, These other states might seem to have more rights to the water that falls on than than California does.

      Seems to me like California should live within the amount of rain that falls in California.

      And perhaps we don't want California to do this to our rivers:

      http://voices.nationalgeograph...

      The once mighty Colorado river

      And the last time I checked, individual states do own their rivers.

      Sorry Californians - get fitted for your still suits.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    29. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, when it rains on MY land.

    30. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Also funnily there have been lawsuits over cloud seeding by people claiming exactly that.

      I don't doubt it. Water you force to fall in one place isn't going to fall in the places it normally would.

      All these water problems are probably going to be the cause of the next civil war if there is one. You can see in this very thread where peopole believe they own the water that falls on and flows through other people's states. It's crazy logic, of course, essentially saying " No one owns that water, and you certainly don't, but we need that water so you have to give it to us".

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    31. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Different Colorado River -- the river in Texas (with that name) begins & ends in Texas (goes through Austin) -- it has nothing to do with the State of Colorado, and nowhere near Mexico.

      You are thinking of the "Rio Grande" river on the Texas/Mexico border, which does source water from the state of Colorado.

    32. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 2

      Get your water where the Colorado river reaches the sea

      This is an interesting idea. What would happen if we diverted most of the Colorado river to a piping system to southern California?

      I'm sure Mexico would be pissed, but so what?

      You do realize that is exactly what happened, and the Colorado River doesn't reach the ocean most of the time now?

      My remark was sort of a sarcastic trap.

      http://voices.nationalgeograph...

      Regardless, it's a been there/done that issue, that water is already gone.

      Good luck convincing the PNW that you have the same future planned for the Columbia River.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    33. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by radl33t · · Score: 1

      No, we should have (and still can) built intelligently. It is perfectly feasible and has lower lifetime costs (often lower capital costs by eliminating mechanical systems) to just build insulated buildings, with heating loads low enough so that 1 or 2 space heaters are needed 20 days a year. But our failure to build good buildings in the Midwest is matched my our bretheren in the desert southwest. Unfortunately their challenges are multiplied by developing an inhabitable wasteland.

    34. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      Hey, close the barn door willya! The horses have left!

    35. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by MatthiasF · · Score: 1

      No, using the Great Lakes was not suggested. More like setting up reservoirs along Mississippi tributary flood plains, giving the river breathing room for flooding and holding onto the fresh water to be used on land instead of letting it slip into the sea. The water would not be cheap, so I do not see this as enabling bad behavior at all and by no means will the water from the Midwest made it across the Rocky's to California. I suspect most of the water would go to Prairie states and Texas (or hell, help the Great Lakes eventually too).

      But I take real offense to the protectionist tone that you and others responding to me have taken on. Should Pennsylvania start deciding on the temperature in people's homes in Michigan because they supply the natural gas? Should Texas tell Iowa they can't use their fertilizer or gas products without their approval? That's not how things should work nor how they do work. We all chip in to supply need and protect a common living standard. To force others into squalor because you don't want to sell them your resource (at fair cost), is not just immoral but unethical as well.

      Honestly, this is suppose to be a UNITED STATES. You already take advantage of a massive amount of resources and labor from other states to survive (this goes for any state), why the hell do you think you can take such a position is beyond me.

      All you selfish twits need to pull your heads out of your asses and look at the life you live. You are not independent, you need the rest of us and some of those people need the water to give you what you want.

    36. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by AttillaTheNun · · Score: 1

      No problem - California can ship all of its desert sand to New Orleans to sustain their levees against the rising ocean tides.
      Fingers, meet dike.

    37. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Great Lakes region is an exporter of natural gas and coal. It is far more self-reliant than you think. Notice how they never whine about not getting anything while others talk of power, water, flood relief, snow removal funds, and so on.

    38. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by PvtVoid · · Score: 1

      To force others into squalor because you don't want to sell them your resource (at fair cost), is not just immoral but unethical as well.
      [...]
      All you selfish twits need to pull your heads out of your asses and look at the life you live. You are not independent, you need the rest of us and some of those people need the water to give you what you want.

      So, instead, you believe you're entitled expect the Great Lakes states (not to mention Canada) to destroy their local ecosystems because you want to have a bunch of golf courses and almond farms in the middle of a fucking desert?

      Good luck with that.

    39. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Agent0013 · · Score: 1

      The states around the Great Lakes have made an agreement of some sort where none of the Great Lakes water can be sent out for use away from the states directly around the lakes. So I don't think the exact example you gave would happen very soon.

      --

      -- ssoorrrryy,, dduupplleexx sswwiittcchh oonn.. -Quote found on actual fortune cookie.
    40. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Greyfox · · Score: 1

      Yeah, water in 30 years will be where gasoline is today. If it were 50 years ago, the country would just embark on a mega-scale water engineering project to move water between places where there is too much of it to places where there isn't enough of it. Don't see that happening in the current political climate, though. There's some sort of political warming process going on, in which the rhetoric is getting much too heated and causing all potential progress to grind to a halt...

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    41. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "other people's water"

      Really? You claim ownership of *rain*?

      Do you?

      If it rains on me, you won't be getting it for free.

    42. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about @#*$ no. It's called the Great Lakes compact and the Great Lakes Charter. You won't get a drop from us. Nor will you get anything from the mid-west basin. It's not our problem you built a city in a desert and didn't manage the water properly. You created the problem. Now deal with it. Get rid of the lawns, stop growing crops that need more water than the environment can provide sustainably, build better mass transit to cut back on pollution, stop expanding outward, retrofit existing infrastructure (mandatory water conserving shower heads...make it illegal to sell any that aren't and make it illegal to ship them to california and attach a big fine to companies that do, turn off park fountains, recycle wastewater back into the aquifer, etc), etc. There's plenty you can do now to stop the problem. Bottom line. You won't get a drop from the great lakes. The residents here surrounding the great lakes will tell you to take a hike.

    43. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seems more reasonable than CA somehow trying to stake a claim on it.

    44. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? You claim ownership of *rain*?

      Frankly, yes. Or did you not know there are laws in place which forbid you from catching rainwater.

      (Apologies for the survivalist conspiracy language.)
      http://offgridsurvival.com/rainwaterillegal/
      http://www.naturalnews.com/029286_rainwater_collection_water.html

      Let's look at this another way. Do you think Germany wouldn't mind if France started systematically seeding the clouds to capture more rain and measurably lowering the amount of water reaching Germany? It may not be as easy as "this car belongs to me," but there are absolutely some form ownership of rain.

      Whether or not you agree with the particular stance, Ol Olsoc has a very legitimate complaint which should be addressed or refuted, not just dismissed in a Disney-esque fake fantasy of arcadia.

    45. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Seems like a reasonable claim to me! Resource supply is one of the key determiners of land value, and always has been. If it rains on my land, and I catch that rain before it wanders onto somebody else's land, how is that not my water?

      I mean, there's lots of arguments for (and against) communal ownership of natural resources, but the current (and, for as far back as I'm aware, historical) rule is that they are part of the land value. You're going to have a hell of a time overturning that view. Some things, like rivers, tend to get a bit complicated - it's really awkward if your upstream neighbor feels like using his water (immediately before it ceases to be his) as an arsenic dump - but taking ownership of the water falling from the sky or coming up through the ground has never, so far as I know, *not* been part of land property rights.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    46. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That IS the law in California...

    47. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I claim ownership over rain that falls in my state.

    48. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Great Lakes Compact already prevents diverting water from the Great Lakes Watershed to other areas.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Lakes_Compact

    49. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny that you don't seem to mind when this logic is applied to farming. We grow food in one area (countryside) and ship it to the cities-- Even though the population in the cities would not be able to sustain itself without food from farms.

      Besides, we need more people to move to Arizona to help vote out McCain.

    50. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Silly boy, Not only does the Colorado rarely reach the sea, most of the water from the Colorado used by California is used by agriculture.

      That was my actual point. Sarcasm or hidden irony doesn't translate well to the web.

      As soon as someone who didn't know that California already sucked that river dry, and checked my statement out, they might start to understand just why other states might not care to give all of their own water to California.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    51. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about, instead of massive engineering projects, we just don't build cities where there aren't enough natural resources to sustain them?

      So then, we should avoid building cities in the Great Lakes region, where it gets really cold in winter and people have to use natural gas that was mined in Texas and the Dakotas?

      There's this thing called comparitive advantage. The southwest has tons of potential for producing solar energy, let's not shut down development there yet.

      Actually, exporting water from the great lakes watershed in meaningful quantity is illegal, by treaty to Canada, neither of us is allowed to screw with the water there. A pipeline from Michigan was floated, and Canada among others, shot it down quickly. Besides, if we didn't have a few nutjobs stopping us from using the best technology(nuclear) to generate power, and others stopping us from tapping various other reserves, Michigan produces about 150 million cubic feet of natural gas, and we could produce more if more permits were issued.

    52. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This comment of yours just proves why you chose your moniker. The void, private, is between your ears.

    53. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Xenx · · Score: 1

      But, can you really expect China to produce Stillsuits even remotely as well as the Fremen?

    54. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      But, can you really expect China to produce Stillsuits even remotely as well as the Fremen?

      I'm just hoping we can find the melange!

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    55. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by unimacs · · Score: 1

      Pennsylvania exports natural gas because it's worthwhile for Pennsylvania to do so. If they were to decided that the ecological price for extracting it is no longer worth it, that is their right. Whoever is getting natural gas from them will have to get it from somewhere else or do without.

      The Great Lakes aren't some vast untapped resource waiting to be exploited. They are used for shipping, recreation, commercial fishing, tourism, fresh water supplies, etc. They are home to an important ecosystem. All would suffer if any significant amount of water were diverted someplace else. In many ways, the Lakes are already being exploited at a level that can't be sustained.

      And it goes deeper than that. The lakes are treasured part of the region just like the Grand Canyon is to Arizona. Would they be OK with us filling in part of the Grand Canyon with some of the garbage we don't have room for? They'd give us the finger and we'd deserve it.

      No one is forcing anyone to live in squalor but people may be forced to live in a more sustainable fashion. It's not just a lesson for California but everywhere else.

    56. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by unimacs · · Score: 1

      Here's another way to look at it. There are lots of small towns and even cities in the Midwest that would welcome an influx of people, industry, and agriculture. Instead of making herculean efforts to get water out of the Midwest to the Southwest at huge expense, let's make it easy for the people and industries that need the water to move to where the water is.

      Frankly, I do not trust that redirecting any significant amount of water halfway across the country can be done without high ecological costs, unintended or not.

    57. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good thing trees only require water and not sunlight!

    58. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      I know this is one country, but from the point of view of a Great Lakes "flyover" state this looks like somebody wanting to grab whatever they can get from the Great Lakes without regard to the consequences there. Lake Superior doesn't get that much new water in it each year, so any plan that involves large numbers of almonds is going to start draining the lake. It will take a while, since there's about three quadrillion gallons in there, but we're already concerned about the lowering water level.

      This also smells like heavy-handed government intervention. I pay for the natural gas I use, so it's being shipped to me as part of a market transaction. Nobody I've seen is talking about buying Midwestern water and shipping it in very large quantities as a commercial transaction*. The net result would be that the water in my area would be arbitrarily removed to be wasted in a desert, providing massive subsidies to California farmers at our expense.

      I'd suggest that, if we're going to have the government intervene, we start with the screwy water rationing system out West. Force the farmers to pay for their water at market rates. Maybe they'll find ways to waste less water. At that point, it may or may not make commercial sense to ship water cross-country, and I'm cool with whichever way that turns out.

      *Has there been any consideration of commercial water transfer from the Mississippi or Great Lakes areas to California? If so, I'd love to hear about it.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    59. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well... one thing I do have to say for this idea is that it might actually STOP Cali people from moving up here to the Pacific Northwest. STAY HOME AND STOP MOVING TO PORTLAND!!! Real estate costs are more than high enough right now!!!! STOP IT!! Or we'll... I don't know... leave little passive-aggressive notes lying around the new condo complexes. :P

    60. Re:Interstate Water Sharing system by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      Most of the crops need the strong sun. That is the entire reason people started growing there.....

      The Yakima Valley in Washington is identical: hot and dry climate, fed by mountain reservoirs.

      Lets say you did move the farms to a wetter area, like Seattle. Now what? You think it will be cost effective to hang lights over all the fields to mimic the amount of sunlight that most modern crops require?

      Right now, water is still far cheaper to move around (or engineer projects to produce more) than creating artificial sunlight. Desert farming isn't going anywhere soon.

  20. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Not going to happen since the Chinese are their primary market. It's like Michigan cherries. The Chinese buy them all up and its difficult to get local ones except during the cherry festival.

  21. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What does California have lots of?
    A: Coast-line.
    B: Sunshine!

    I wonder why they can't use these together to create a water supply, and natural sea salt without minerals removed, or adding anti-caking agents? Who knows? Perhaps the solar arrays to run this would over-produce, and can add to the national grid?

    But hey. I'm obviously mad for thinking such things.
     

  22. water? by beefoot · · Score: 1

    I hope the "water" from the "water" pipeline is not coming from Alberta, Canada.

    1. Re:water? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you know that Canada is a very water-rich country, but that most of its water drains to the north?
      That's clearly an economic conspiracy to undermine the US. Send in the troops!

    2. Re:water? by beefoot · · Score: 1

      Of course I know that Canada is a very water-rich country. The "water" might not in the form of liquid though for ease of transportation.

      I don't think you got my sarcasm -- let's say the water pipe is built and the drought problem in California is gone, the "water" pipe could be converted to oil pipe without much hassle especially. That explains why the water pipe is going to cost $30B -- it needs to withstand anything we throw at it in case it leaks. Water leakage is likely not a problem, oil spill is.

  23. That's what they thought about the Colorado, too by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    There's no way you could use all of that water. It's unpossible.

    http://www.smithsonianmag.com/...

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  24. Re:Here's a better idea by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

    If the people in Liberalwood want to do something constructive, they wold stop opposing desalination and let that $30 billion be spent getting California its own water supply.

    Two problems with that scenario:

    Sheer amount of water "needed"

    Nookz!

    If you were simply using water for say the people and farmers of California to live on, maybe. But even then those nuclear power plants would never be accepted.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  25. Re:Another Hollywood Capitalist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Fixed it for you. Shatner has lost it, but wanting to use money to get someone to do something, that isn't socialism, you clueless fucking dittohead.

  26. Desalination plants cost a lot to operate by PeterM+from+Berkeley · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And $30B will get you 30 desal plants like Carlsbad's, which cost $1B, and which will provide 7% of what San Diego area residents need.

    But the $30B won't get you the power it takes to run them (new power plants?) Or the energy required to power the power plants.

    Also, CA's agriculture depends upon cheap water, not expensive desalinated water.

    That said, would a $30B pipeline bring in the same amount of water as desal plants? Or more? Operating expenses are sure to be lower, but there'd need to be a detailed economic and engineering case made for one solution over the other.

    --PM

    1. Re:Desalination plants cost a lot to operate by jeffmeden · · Score: 0

      And $30B will get you 30 desal plants like Carlsbad's, which cost $1B, and which will provide 7% of what San Diego area residents need.

      But the $30B won't get you the power it takes to run them (new power plants?) Or the energy required to power the power plants.

      Also, CA's agriculture depends upon cheap water, not expensive desalinated water.

      That said, would a $30B pipeline bring in the same amount of water as desal plants? Or more? Operating expenses are sure to be lower, but there'd need to be a detailed economic and engineering case made for one solution over the other.

      --PM

      Desalinated water is ready to drink, so you would effectively be taking all the normal purification plants offline and freeing up all the water that went through them for agri use. That being said, SoCal could solve the "water crisis" today if they stopped watering all their fucking lawns.

    2. Re:Desalination plants cost a lot to operate by feepness · · Score: 2

      SoCal could solve the "water crisis" today if they stopped watering all their fucking lawns.

      I'm surprised that after all this time people still have this misconception. Lawn watering is just part of that little 4% sliver at the bottom. Farming uses the vast majority of water.

    3. Re:Desalination plants cost a lot to operate by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      Also, CA's agriculture depends upon cheap water, not expensive desalinated water.

      Sooner or later, CA's agriculture is going to have to learn that cheap water cannot be sustainably provided in the southwestern desert. Sooner would be better. Later is likely to be...painful.

    4. Re:Desalination plants cost a lot to operate by jeffmeden · · Score: 1

      SoCal could solve the "water crisis" today if they stopped watering all their fucking lawns.

      I'm surprised that after all this time people still have this misconception. Lawn watering is just part of that little 4% sliver at the bottom. Farming uses the vast majority of water.

      And farmers indeed are the ones cutting usage by the most. The point isn't that they use more of it, it's that the difference between water at the tap in LA or SD costing the same during the drought is everyone just not wasting it on green grass. No one is dying of thirst but prices are going to get pretty ridiculous here soon, as some munis run out of water entirely (having not managed to get price hikes through) and all the residents rely on bottled water which is far more expensive.

    5. Re:Desalination plants cost a lot to operate by fseminario · · Score: 1

      That being said, SoCal could solve the "water crisis" today if they stopped watering all their fucking lawns.

      Urban only accounts for less than 11%. Next time try learning the facts before accusing a large group of citizens of doing something completely irrelevant to your argument. People can water their lawns if they bloody want to.

  27. Re:Here's a better idea by gatkinso · · Score: 4, Informative

    I, for one, will NEVER stop sprinkling shaved almonds on my Romaine lettuce!

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  28. Forget it, Jake. by CodeArtisan · · Score: 1

    It's Chinatown

    1. Re:Forget it, Jake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this should be +6 insightful

    2. Re:Forget it, Jake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wondered when someone would mention that.

  29. Recycled Water by voss · · Score: 1

    The water thats going out into the ocean would provide enough extra water to solve the problem, at the very least mandate all lawn irrigation use recycled water.

  30. just try to take my water by slashmydots · · Score: 0

    I'm from the Great Lakes area and sorry, California can't have our water. Our water table is too low as it is. None of the other states are going to agree to send their own water to that tax and spend, giant deficit-having, liberal disaster over there.

    1. Re:just try to take my water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what if they take your water? You gonna shoot em? Fucking redneck.

    2. Re:just try to take my water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps we could sell them our raw sewage instead.

    3. Re:just try to take my water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure any financially strapped state (which is nearly all of them) would love to sell surplus water to California. It would be in their own interest as well as the price of food in their state depends quite a bit on California production.

    4. Re:just try to take my water by Hartree · · Score: 1

      No, we'll just do what everyone else does with pipelines. Tie it up in congress and the courts for several decades.

      Just think. It can be the next Keystone. Politicians on both sides can ride the outrage to re-election.

    5. Re:just try to take my water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not in Michigan. We grow most of our own shit. You can find basic staple foods grown in our state on almost every store shelf. Same with natural gas, oil, etc. We're pretty self-sustaining. So take a hike.

  31. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You FREAKS in liberalwood stop using up water like it's going outta style and learn a little MODERATION.

    moderated to -1. There you go. Happy now?

  32. You had me going there by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

    According to Mr. Shatner, if the KickStarter campaign doesn't raise enough money then he will donate whatever that has been collected...

    ...to a politician who promise to build that water pipe.

    Haha! He almost had me going there, right up until that last bit. Well played, Shatner, well played.

    What?

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  33. Water Rights by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Like many western states CA has a systems of water rights that gives rights to water to whomever got there first. It also means you get all of yours before the next person gets any, and so on down the line. That was fine until CA started to outgrow the available supply, and as a result some are left at the end of the pipe so to speak, with little or no water. Add in a desire by farmers to protect their access at the expense of others, and little demand to limit losses along the way to evaporation, etc, and you have a big problem. If farmers had to pay market rates for water they'd change their use habits, just as other users will as prices rise. As for desalination plants, they would be a good solution but no doubt would face NIMBY battles even as the same people want water; like power, they want it from a tap but don't want a plant next door producing it. The bottom line is souther CA can't continue to grow like it is and keep the same water use habits.

    --
    I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    1. Re:Water Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sir, you make me wish I had signed up for a Slashdot account back in the '90s, because your summary is accurate and worthy of being modded up.

    2. Re:Water Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like many western states CA has a systems of water rights that gives rights to water to whomever got there first. It also means you get all of yours before the next person gets any, and so on down the line. That was fine until CA started to outgrow the available supply, and as a result some are left at the end of the pipe so to speak, with little or no water. Add in a desire by farmers to protect their access at the expense of others, and little demand to limit losses along the way to evaporation, etc, and you have a big problem. If farmers had to pay market rates for water they'd change their use habits, just as other users will as prices rise. As for desalination plants, they would be a good solution but no doubt would face NIMBY battles even as the same people want water; like power, they want it from a tap but don't want a plant next door producing it. The bottom line is souther CA can't continue to grow like it is and keep the same water use habits.

      Are you prepared to pay market rates for produce that was grown by farmers that had to pay market rates for the water to grow it?

      If California politicians really cared about this problem they would put on the ballot a question of "Shall the bullet train be canceled and in place a large scale water infrastructure program be created?"

    3. Re:Water Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, just as long as "the market" remembers that If prices get to high, I can grow lettuce, beans, corn, carrots, tomatoes, and a variety of other fruits and vegetables in my back yard.

    4. Re:Water Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Little demand to limit losses? Are you fucking stupid or just repeating the bullshit from the leftists? Water is extremely valuable, and the farmers conserve aggressively so that they can sell what they don't use. In fact, many have just given up on farming and find that selling water to SoCal is more valuable than feeding people.

  34. I was about to come here and bitch... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I'm quite tired of the rich, specifically celebrities, telling us how to fix the problems of the world. Meanwhile it's born on the backs of the middle class. I like the idea however to use Kickstarter to "fix" these problems. People voting with their wallets. Seems like a great idea to me.

    Of course politics will dip its fingers into this mix and decide to tax this program to hell to pay for their goals and make this project outprice itself, particularly once you have to start involving permitting and zoning and politicians want their palms greased or nix the pipeline come through their backyards.

  35. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Asking them to be CONSERVATIVE? Are you high?

  36. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are moving forward with desalination plants.

    Who da' thunk.

  37. Re:Here's a better idea by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or, we east coasters could stop eat so much lettuce.

    Or we could start growing our own again.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  38. KickStarter cut will be way to big and will they b by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    KickStarter cut will be way to big and will they be able to take a cut of the kickback and any overages?

  39. Re:Here's a better idea by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If the people in Liberalwood want to do something constructive, they wold stop opposing desalination and let that $30 billion be spent getting California its own water supply.

    This is exactly the wrong approach. The last thing California needs is more idiotic "top down" solutions that ignore basic economics. Desalination is a way to exchange expensive and scarce electricity for cheap and plentiful water. It only makes sense because of the artificially inflated cost of water in urban areas. Meanwhile, farmers are using massive amounts of cheap subsidized water to grow rice and cotton in the desert. End the subsidies. Set a market price for water. Problem solved.

  40. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Guys, people plant in California because it's one of the most fertile soils in the USA.

  41. Hey geniuses by benjfowler · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ... how about charging those rural parasites fair market value for the water they use, reflecting the scarce/non-renewable nature of fossil water??

    Asking greedy/short-sighted primary producers to take some of that personal responsibility they vote for and foist onto the urban poor is only fair. If the shoe fits, wear it.

  42. california does need more infrastructure... or by Karmashock · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... fewer people.

    That is the big issue here. Even while they talk about water conservation they're still zoning more land for development. Still building more apartments. Still building more office parks. Still building stuff they can't provide water or power or transport for...

    So why are we doing that?

    Here is how we fix this issue. Link development to existing infrastructure. Lock California's development to the resources it can actually provide to residents. Then if people want to build something new, they FIRST have to get the infrastructure expanded.

    The issue will solve itself quite quickly.

    And LA didn't steal the water. It bought it. Yes, I know the people of Owens valley were very sad that the water all went away. It was bought and paid for. Get over it.

    The old city fathers of Los Angeles wouldn't have let this happen to them. They took care of business. The existing leadership have their heads so far up their own asses they don't know what is going on anymore. It is sad watching them. They try to do good. They really do. But they can't. Too much corruption. Too many special interests. Too many people milking the system. They can't do anything. All the money and political will goes to graft. Nothing left for visionary urban planning. Nothing left to keep the city vibrant.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    1. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

      Here is how we fix this issue.

      No need to do anything. California is already losing residents due to high taxes, political corruption, and decaying infrastructure, and it's only going to get worse as its fiscal situation deteriorates further and further. People used to move to California because it was a nice place to live; now they move to California because they have to.

    2. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the standard solution to hard problems of the GOP and my 6 year old, ignore the problem and it will go away.

    3. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      They're actually replacing most of those people fleeing with "undocumented" people.

      The fiscal issue should be interesting. Also the politics should get funny at some point. The democrats think rampant immigration is good for them... they don't seem to grasp that if they lean too hard on the that demographic it will require first that they only put that demographic's candidates on the ballot. So all the old political families in California are going to be out on their ear.

      And then the other issue is that the people from south of the border have very different sensibilities about a lot of things. They're very serious Catholics typically. That means they don't respond well to issues of homosexuality, the whole gay marriage thing, and other various issues. Also... because they're not white, they don't have white guilt. Which means you can't play identity politics against them if they don't do what you want them to do. And that is something the left relies upon very heavily to bolster any argument that isn't going well for them.

      It will be interesting. I hope Cali pulls through. But it has to get a lot worse before it can get better.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    4. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Nah, the reps have solutions. You just veto them all leaving the reps with two options... your way or nothing.

      They choose nothing because they don't believe in your solutions any more than you believe in theirs.

      We have no common ground and statements like yours merely underscore the issue. You don't want to find places of compromise and common action. You just want to try and dominate HALF the fucking country and pretend like that is your right.

      And yeah, there are people on both sides that do that. They're both assholes. But what is accomplished by pretending like the opposition isn't actually offering solutions? That's just a confession of ignorance at best and a fucking lie at worst.

      Which is it? Are you ignorant of the solutions being offered by your political opposition or lying that they don't have any?

      Those are the only options. They have them. I can quote them if you like. I rather suspect you know that.

      Tell you what, you can honestly come to the table looking for substantive compromise or you can go fuck yourself. :-)

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    5. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 'old city fathers' took care of business using corruption, special interest, and graft. They milked the system for everything, then threw money at it to get even more.

      THAT is how they got the water they have. Just because you pay for something doesn't mean it wasn't stolen.

    6. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      >You just veto them all leaving the reps with two options... your way or nothing.

      Wow. I have veto power. Who knew.

      What solutions are you referring to? Fuck the poor and elderly or they bankrupt the government? Sound like a bunch of bloodsucking assholes to me. You can argue minutia all you want, but the GOP are the ones who had their finger on the trigger, not the Dems. Death panels, death tax, all bullshit cons to fuck Joe everybody. I used to buy into their bullshit. It's all bullshit. They can't run a war, they can't balance a checkbook, and they sure as shit love big government when it suits them.

      Don't get me wrong, the Dems have plenty shit stink on them, but the GOP just takes the cake when it comes to fucking over the poor, wealth subsidies and spending like a drunk teenager with daddy's credit card, all the while criticizing the Dems for doing it. Most of them are nothing but bullshit used car salesmen.

    7. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately as quickly as California looses one legal resident, 10 illegals come in.

    8. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i would bet that california is quite a ways away from your parents' basement. but go ahead, tell them what they need to do in order to make it better even though you've never been there or met anyone who has lived there.

    9. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      They got things done though and it profited the city. The current crop gets nothing done and the city suffers. I'll accept a certain amount of graft from my leaders if they at least get SOMETHING done and ACTUALLY look after the interests of the city. If they do neither then fuck them and fuck anyone that supports the useless shitheads.

      We don't need anymore useless shitheads. The world is crammed full of the fucks.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    10. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      As to your veto power, you have a president in office who literally vetos anything the republicans put through the congress.

      As to our plans... be specific. What would you like to talk about. We have a million and one different ideas and I don't really know where to begin.

      As to our intentions, are you really so small minded that you think your opposition wants to hurt people? How unbelievably petty.

      In any case... you can either get serious and have an adult conversation with me or I'll just go to my default position and treat you like a child. *yawn*

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    11. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As to your veto power, you have a president in office who literally vetos anything the republicans put through the congress.

      of what president are you speaking? some school board president or something? because if you're talking about president obama, he has issued only FOUR vetoes to date as POTUS. Being as he is over 3/4 of the way through his 8 years, and yet has issued 1/3 of the total number of vetoes of his predecessor, it is highly unlikely he will leave with an outstanding number of vetoed bills. in fact the first president bush issued over 10 times this many vetoes in a four-year term.

      granted, obama is facing the least productive and least popular congress ever observed, so there haven't been many chances for him to sign or veto anything. but if the republicans have only managed to get four bills to his desk in 6 years, that is abysmal.

    12. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      You're right, I conflated all the effective vetos via the senate where given bills were not permitted a to be even voted upon.

      So my mistake. However, the point remains that the democrats have a great deal power and pretending that they don't is asinine.

      On topic, do you ACTUALLY have any interest in a REAL dialog about ANYTHING or is the basis of your position little more than the typical ad hominem and evasion I have come to expect from people on these topics?

      As you saw at the beginning of this post, I admitted my mistake when you pointed it out. That is the least that should be expected of a legitimate participant of a discussion. So I am not asking for you to be impressed. However, I am expecting you to acknowledge that as a gesture of good faith. Were I another of the trolls, I wouldn't ever admit any error no matter how blatant or obvious.

      So. Let us start over... you have a complaint or issue you wish to discuss? Let us discuss it like intelligent well adjusted people. :)

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    13. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On topic, do you ACTUALLY have any interest in a REAL dialog about ANYTHING or is the basis of your position little more than the typical ad hominem and evasion I have come to expect from people on these topics?

      why are you suddenly so angry? was there not just a discussion of fact? there was no ad hominem in the previous ac post. the ac demonstrated that indeed president obama has vetoed almost nothing to date. you admitted that indeed that is true, based on the factual source provided.

      what else is it that you want to discuss? you didn't state anything else in your reply.
       
       

      Were I another of the trolls, I wouldn't ever admit any error no matter how blatant or obvious

      i did not see you accused of being a troll. you were merely shown to have made a statement on vetoes that was disconnected from factual reality. that does not immediately imply trolling as plenty of factual errors are made on slashdot by people with good intentions.

    14. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      I didn't see you bring up any issue you wanted to discuss. Tell me if you do. Otherwise apparently you don't want to talk anymore?

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    15. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, the previous AC did bring up something to discuss, by asking you, "why are you suddenly so angry?", and then pointing out that you made a baseless accusation that a previous commenter was guilty of ad hominem.

      Since you think that admitting mistakes is so important, I would think you'd want to address that.

    16. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Either ask a question on topic or have your post be treated as something that can be ignored. Your choice.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    17. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by binarstu · · Score: 1

      You, earlier: "I admitted my mistake when you pointed it out. That is the least that should be expected of a legitimate participant of a discussion."

      As AC pointed out, you falsely accused a previous commenter of an ad hominem. Either admit your mistake or accept that you are no longer a legitimate participant of this discussion. Your choice.

    18. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by binarstu · · Score: 1

      Okay, for the record, I'm not really serious about this. I don't actually believe that you cannot be a legitimate participant in the conversation without admitting a previous mistake. I happened to notice your comments in this thread, and after my long earlier comment to you, I meant my reply here as a tongue-in-cheek joke. After rereading it, though, I realized that it was probably not at all obvious that I made my comment in jest. I guess I should have added a smiley or something.

    19. Re:california does need more infrastructure... or by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      using "/s" at the end of a comment helps.

      Otherwise you run the risk of running afoul of Poe's law.
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  43. Re:Here's a better idea by DragonMantis · · Score: 1

    Cost of giant desalination plant: $1 bil. So you could get 30 plants for the cost of the pipeline. http://www.mercurynews.com/sci...

  44. Don't build where there isn't adequate water by sjbe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Or here's an idea. Don't build in areas where there isn't much water. Wipe Las Vegas and Phoenix off the map because there is NO reason there should be large metropolitan areas in the middle of a desert. I've even heard ridiculous ideas like diverting water from the Mississippi basin or the Great Lakes to make sure the idiots in Las Vegas can fill their swimming pools. Those cities are prime examples of doing something because we can without considering whether we should.

    To get back on topic, there is NO way a $30 billion pipeline makes more sense than some very large scale desalination plants. If they need the water that badly then there is literally a whole ocean of it on the coast of California. You can buy a LOT of desalination for that kind of cheddar.

    1. Re:Don't build where there isn't adequate water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The largest reservoir in the U.S. is located just outside of Las Vegas (Hoover Dam). Why do they need water from the Mississippi?

    2. Re:Don't build where there isn't adequate water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Wipe Las Vegas and Phoenix off the map because there is NO reason there should be large metropolitan areas in the middle of a desert."

      Oh, really?

      I live in Tucson, just a stone's throw south of Phoenix, and also a large metropolitan area in the middle of that same desert. It happens to me the longest continuously inhabited community IN THE ENTIRE WESTERN HEMISPHERE. We do just fine here in the desert. It's quite hospitable. There are water supplies here. Yes, Phoenix and Tucson have added to our natural water supplies by diverting some of the Colorado River, which we are legally entitled to under Arizona v. California, but that's only very recently. The communities have existed for a VERY long time.

      I dare say it's far easier to deal with water conservation in the desert here, then the floods, hurricanes, earthquakes, blizzards, frosts, tornados, mudslides and other forms of natural disasters found in other parts of the country that we are quite immune to, thank you very much. Perhaps we should concentrate on removing all inhabitants from locations that suffer from those sorts of disasters instead?

    3. Re:Don't build where there isn't adequate water by sjbe · · Score: 1

      The largest reservoir in the U.S. is located just outside of Las Vegas (Hoover Dam [wikipedia.org]). Why do they need water from the Mississippi?

      Lake Meade is getting rather low and has been dropping since 1983. This is partly due to to climate variability/change and significantly due to human usage.

      The real answer is that we do NOT need to divert water from the Mississippi or Great Lakes. We need to reduce the human demand for water in the middle of a desert to a sustainable level. If that means that Las Vegas become uninhabitable then so be it.

    4. Re:Don't build where there isn't adequate water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean that largest reservoir that keeps losing depth every year?

    5. Re:Don't build where there isn't adequate water by acoustix · · Score: 1

      Or here's an idea. Don't build in areas where there isn't much water. Wipe Las Vegas and Phoenix off the map because there is NO reason there should be large metropolitan areas in the middle of a desert.

      This! For the love of God, this!!!

      I can't believe how stupid people are. They want to populate a desert and then complain that there's no water.

      --
      "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
    6. Re:Don't build where there isn't adequate water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The largest reservoir in the U.S. is located just outside of Las Vegas (Hoover Dam [wikipedia.org]). Why do they need water from the Mississippi?

      Lake Meade is getting rather low and has been dropping since 1983. This is partly due to to climate variability/change and significantly due to human usage.

      The real answer is that we do NOT need to divert water from the Mississippi or Great Lakes. We need to reduce the human demand for water in the middle of a desert to a sustainable level. If that means that Las Vegas become uninhabitable then so be it.

      Lake Mead is a man made lake. There WAS NO LAKE before we created it. Blaming low water levels on global warming using a fake lake as an example is pure bullshit.

    7. Re:Don't build where there isn't adequate water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, really?

      I live in Tucson, just a stone's throw south of Phoenix, and also a large metropolitan area in the middle of that same desert. It happens to me the longest continuously inhabited community IN THE ENTIRE WESTERN HEMISPHERE.

      Hmmm
      I don't think you've quite know what the phrase 'ENTIRE WESTERN HEMISPHERE' really means...

    8. Re: Don't build where there isn't adequate water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do, in fact know what I said, and what it means, and I meant it. I am not certain what you are implying here.

    9. Re:Don't build where there isn't adequate water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here is an idea, know what you are talking about before spewing garbage.

      The last century was very wet and California had plenty of water. There have always been droughts. The one in California is actually affecting the entire SW of the nation. It extends into Colorado and up into Washington. California is feeling the brunt of it. There are droughts all over the country: Texas, Minnesota, Kansas, Nebraska. Are we going to wipe them off the map?

    10. Re:Don't build where there isn't adequate water by Richy_T · · Score: 1

      Course, the only reason Vegas exists is because governments like to interfere in voluntary interactions between individuals (gambling).

    11. Re:Don't build where there isn't adequate water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > You can buy a LOT of desalination for that kind of cheddar.

      Not that much.

      The Carlsbad desalination plant is projected to cost $1 billion, and will provide 7% of the -potable- water for San Diego county.

      The pipeline is expensive, and it comes down to.. are you using pumps to generate the pressure head to get through the pipeline, or to get through the reverse osmosis filters.

    12. Re:Don't build where there isn't adequate water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever been to Las Vegas?

      You do realize they have the Colorado River running into this little place called Lake Mead, and a dam called "Hoover Dam"... it's not a small amount of water.

      Guess where most of that water goes? Southern California.

    13. Re:Don't build where there isn't adequate water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or just live in Phoenix as it is naturally supposed to be. You fly over Arizona, it's all desert, desert, and then Phoenix is all green. Just put it back to being desert and you'll save billions of gallons of water. Then remove that hideous dam on the Colorado, so that the desert can have it's water back. Sure a lot of people will leave because living in the desert sucks, but you know, that's life.

    14. Re:Don't build where there isn't adequate water by Gliscameria · · Score: 1

      Except that Phoenix is literally under 3 cubic miles of water from the reservoirs in the mountains. Arizona has a 100 year water plan that they have to keep up to date so that it doesn't turn into California, not to mention various water recycling systems throughout the valley. There's plenty of reason to have a city where Phoenix is, mainly in that water runs downhill. There's a lot of dumber places to build a city, like say in hurricane/tornado areas, flood plains, below sea level next to the ocean, a swamp next to the ocean, Texas(kidding), some place where for months on end the roads don't work, etc. California wouldn't have a problem if it was just the city. Instead, they decided to build and industry that depends on one thing that they don't have a lot of - water. It takes incredibly huge balls to look at a giant swath of dry nothing and go, "We should totally farm here and make our economy dependent on it. Nothing native though. We should grow expensive stuff that can't exist in this environment without a lot of work."

      --
      X
    15. Re:Don't build where there isn't adequate water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lake Mead is a man made lake. There WAS NO LAKE before we created it. Blaming low water levels on global warming using a fake lake as an example is pure bullshit.

      The reason we got Lake Mead there after building the dam is because we were using less water than what was flowing in. The reason why it's going down is because we're now using more water than is flowing. Could that have anything do with the worst drought the area has seen in centuries? Naw, couldn't be! You're a fucking moron.

  45. Nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It would be the biggest kickstarter ever! 30 Billion

    1. Re:Nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And i promise to do it! (in the year two thousand. in the year two thousaaaaaaand!)

  46. OWWWWW!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    According to Mr. Shatner, if the KickStarter campaign doesn't raise enough money then he will donate whatever that has been collected to a politician who promise to build that water pipe. Where does he wants to get the water?

    Brain hurt froms bad word writings!

  47. stop with the pipes already. by nimbius · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Shatner isnt saying anything new, just regurgitating shit he hears on AM radio and KTLA. As an LA resident, there is a shortage of water and there honestly always has been. Car washes recycle water up to 25 times, fruit aisles with sprayers recycle their water, toilets are already damned efficient, and anyone in DTLA can attest we rarely wash sidewalks. The solutions are dead simple, but ardent vocal minorities oppose them.
    Farms: the northern half of the US is going to need to stop insisting on a seasonless produce aisle. Its unsustainable. Strawberries in january contribute to carbon emissions and water depletion. Stop pumping the avocado market and realize its a fatty fruit that doesnt need to become the staple diet of a population with 60% obesity and leading the world in heart disease. We dont need to be grazing cattle and making rice, a crop that requires a flooded field. The thing we do best is dates, a plant that grows in arid climates anyhow. Rooibos, Honeybush, Drumstick, and other tough-as-nails plants can come play on the farm too.
    The well-to-do.: Stop insisting every gated community and shopping consumatorium in OC needs flushing fountains and gurgling streams. trade in your opulent midwestern lawns for landscape that conforms to the climate. I know, its a step closer to the unwashed masses, but youre doing us a favour.
    Beer: We probably dont need to be making this, or if we need to revisit it. It takes 5 litres of fresh purified water to create 1 litre of beer. Bottled water, while often associated, hasnt been popular in LA for a while. Its mostly filtered and decanted from the restaraunt.
    Works Departments: FIX. THE. LEAKS. I cant tell you how many times ive seen legacy hillside irrigation blasting 20ft jets of clean water near roads on the 101. Hydrants, pipes, water fountains, and the automatic public toilets need regular service or they just waste water.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
    1. Re:stop with the pipes already. by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Beer: We probably dont need to be making this, or if we need to revisit it. It takes 5 litres of fresh purified water to create 1 litre of beer.

      Well, you had me up till this. No BEER??? Might as well be dead....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    2. Re:stop with the pipes already. by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

      Farms: the northern half of the US is going to need to stop insisting on a seasonless produce aisle. Its unsustainable

      It's quite sustainable if we import from South America. The reason we don't is because of powerful agricultural lobbies setting up trade barriers and getting subsidies in the US.

      All the other points you make are lost in the noise.

    3. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Beer: We probably dont need to be making this

      And now you're dead to many of us.

    4. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are an idiot. If everyone ate avocado instead of potatoes we likely wouldn't have the obesity problems we do.

    5. Re:stop with the pipes already. by currently_awake · · Score: 1

      If American farmers can't make a profit without subsidies then export those jobs to the third world. Let Mexico worry about finding enough water for the almond crop.

    6. Re:stop with the pipes already. by gameboyhippo · · Score: 1

      I interpreted him to mean that California should not be making beer. Not that there shouldn't be beer made in the United States.

    7. Re:stop with the pipes already. by operagost · · Score: 2

      Not sure why you have this anti-avocado agenda. You're just regurgitating the 1970s and 1980s "facts" that claimed high fat diets made people fat. That's like claiming that drinking a lot of water makes you retain water. Avocados are 160 calories per 100g. That's not high for a "snack food". Most of their carbs are in dietary fiber, which is good. They have some saturated fat, but that's low in relation to the unsaturated fat so I wouldn't call it a problem unless your doctor is worried about blockages. They're also pretty damn high in several vitamins.

      It's a lot better than dipping your chips in sour cream and onion dip, I'd say.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    8. Re:stop with the pipes already. by MrL0G1C · · Score: 1

      FIX. THE. LEAKS.

      Same thing in London with 'Thames Water' who are owned by some foreign bunch who take a £quarter billion+ in profit from us Londoners every year and amazingly manage to not pay tax on that profit (legalised tax evasion). Thames Water have had many many years to fix the leaks which amount to a quarter of all water being lost - equivalent to nearly 10 litres per person per day lost.

      --
      Waterfox - a Firefox fork with legacy extension support, security updates and better privacy by default.
    9. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Florida has plenty of water and can grow lots more food than they do now but not at the same price as California. If the price of food increases and it's not just a bubble Florida will start growing more food. Just don't expect to get almonds from Florida, they grow best in Mediterranean climates with warm, dry summers and mild, wet winters.

    10. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      "We [by which he presumably means Californians] probably don't need to be making this." doesn't mean "We probably don't need to be drinking this."

    11. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Rambo+Tribble · · Score: 2

      Beer takes about a third as much water to make as milk and about half that of wine.

    12. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shatner isnt saying anything new, just regurgitating shit he hears on AM radio and KTLA. As an LA resident, there is a shortage of water and there honestly always has been. Car washes recycle water up to 25 times, fruit aisles with sprayers recycle their water, toilets are already damned efficient, and anyone in DTLA can attest we rarely wash sidewalks. The solutions are dead simple, but ardent vocal minorities oppose them.

      Farms: the northern half of the US is going to need to stop insisting on a seasonless produce aisle. Its unsustainable. Strawberries in january contribute to carbon emissions and water depletion. Stop pumping the avocado market and realize its a fatty fruit that doesnt need to become the staple diet of a population with 60% obesity and leading the world in heart disease. We dont need to be grazing cattle and making rice, a crop that requires a flooded field. The thing we do best is dates, a plant that grows in arid climates anyhow. Rooibos, Honeybush, Drumstick, and other tough-as-nails plants can come play on the farm too.

      The well-to-do.: Stop insisting every gated community and shopping consumatorium in OC needs flushing fountains and gurgling streams. trade in your opulent midwestern lawns for landscape that conforms to the climate. I know, its a step closer to the unwashed masses, but youre doing us a favour.

      Beer: We probably dont need to be making this, or if we need to revisit it. It takes 5 litres of fresh purified water to create 1 litre of beer. Bottled water, while often associated, hasnt been popular in LA for a while. Its mostly filtered and decanted from the restaraunt.

      Works Departments: FIX. THE. LEAKS. I cant tell you how many times ive seen legacy hillside irrigation blasting 20ft jets of clean water near roads on the 101. Hydrants, pipes, water fountains, and the automatic public toilets need regular service or they just waste water.

      You are wrong about avocados but right in general. I can guarantee you the obese people of 'Murica aren't getting that way from avocados. You need to educate yourself on the role played in the body's biochemistry by dietary "good" and "bad" fats (an oversimplification). Also, an avocado is loaded with potassium, which helps keep your blood supply in balance and protects against getting a stroke or having kidney stones.

    13. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Stop pumping the avocado market and realize its a fatty fruit that doesnt need to become the staple diet of a population with 60% obesity and leading the world in heart disease."

      There is NO evidence that the fat from Avocados makes people fat. In fact, the opposite may be true. Get your facts straight.

    14. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, are you going to point the gun at your neighbors to get your way? Typically progressive. Thinks he knows what is best for others, and will cry to the nanny state to get his way.

    15. Re:stop with the pipes already. by swb · · Score: 1

      I don't know why the north couldn't grow its own fruit and vegetables in those high tech vertical hydroponic gardens that use LED lighting. It might actually be a wash with the cost of shipping perishables and greatly cut what amounts to exporting water in the form of high-water-content agricultural products.

      I think you're off base when it comes to avacados, aren't they supposed to be really good fats? Besides, fat isn't what makes you fat, it's bulk consumption of shit carbohydrates.

    16. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I keep seeing people use the word "progressive" to describe things that are the exact opposite of that word's definition. Am I missing something or is progress a bad thing now?

    17. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shatner isnt saying anything new, just regurgitating shit he hears on AM radio and KTLA. As an LA resident, there is a shortage of water and there honestly always has been. Car washes recycle water up to 25 times, fruit aisles with sprayers recycle their water, toilets are already damned efficient, and anyone in DTLA can attest we rarely wash sidewalks. The solutions are dead simple, but ardent vocal minorities oppose them.

      Farms: the northern half of the US is going to need to stop insisting on a seasonless produce aisle. Its unsustainable. Strawberries in january contribute to carbon emissions and water depletion. Stop pumping the avocado market and realize its a fatty fruit that doesnt need to become the staple diet of a population with 60% obesity and leading the world in heart disease. We dont need to be grazing cattle and making rice, a crop that requires a flooded field. The thing we do best is dates, a plant that grows in arid climates anyhow. Rooibos, Honeybush, Drumstick, and other tough-as-nails plants can come play on the farm too.

      The well-to-do.: Stop insisting every gated community and shopping consumatorium in OC needs flushing fountains and gurgling streams. trade in your opulent midwestern lawns for landscape that conforms to the climate. I know, its a step closer to the unwashed masses, but youre doing us a favour.

      Beer: We probably dont need to be making this, or if we need to revisit it. It takes 5 litres of fresh purified water to create 1 litre of beer. Bottled water, while often associated, hasnt been popular in LA for a while. Its mostly filtered and decanted from the restaraunt.

      Works Departments: FIX. THE. LEAKS. I cant tell you how many times ive seen legacy hillside irrigation blasting 20ft jets of clean water near roads on the 101. Hydrants, pipes, water fountains, and the automatic public toilets need regular service or they just waste water.

      Ring Ring. 1980 just called. Fat was ousted in the 80's and replaced with sugar and sodium. Guess what? It's not the fat. It's the sugar consumption now. Remeber when Gatorade was a sports drink and tasted horrible? Now it's a childrens drink full of sugar.

      You fail to recognize simple market forces of supply and demand. Water features and landscaping create a demand and justify buying $1m+ housing or paying $4000+/mo rent. It's not the consumer, its the billionare developers that do this.

      Beer? You forgot that for every 5 gallons of beer produced approximately 25pounds of co2 is released. We can eliminate global warming by banning beer alone. Or add a Global Warming tax to beer and sparkling wine.

      How about this simple fix. Why not just use Gray water to flush our toilets? Gray water is from our showers and sinks. They go down the same drain line anyways. This way we could bring back our nice 5gpf toilets which would actually flush shit down with 1 flush and not 3.

    18. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Beer: We probably dont need to be making this, or if we need to revisit it. It takes 5 litres of fresh purified water to create 1 litre of beer.

      Lies Lies Lies Yeah! Citation Desperatly Needed. I am a homebrewer and for every 6 gallons of purified water I use I get around 5.75 gallons of beer.

    19. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rooibos? I though that outside of the fynbos it struggled to grow due to a lack of the needed symbiotic microorganisms.

    20. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Beer: We probably dont need to be making this, or if we need to revisit it. It takes 5 litres of fresh purified water to create 1 litre of beer.

      This point is trivial. The average daily household water usage is upwards of 1000 litres/day. Even if California were producing a litre of beer each day for every man, woman and child in the state, it would still be only ~1% of total residential water usage, and even less significant compared to agricultural usage.

      Cutting agricultural use, your first point, is by far the most effective way to save water. Reducing leakage and ceasing ornamental use of water features are comparatively minor. Beer is trivial.

    21. Re:stop with the pipes already. by dAzED1 · · Score: 1

      Re Beer: so, I should be pitching my upcoming meadery as a way to imbibe, without waste? It takes me 1 liter of water to make 1 liter of mead...does beer really waste that much? Are you talking just about the water used during cleaning? If so, why not then suggest changing diets to not include things which need vigorous cleaning? Also, there's a lot of cattle in California - those things need tremendous amounts of water. That should be on your list waaaaay before beer ;)

    22. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it isn't sustainable to import food from South America. I think you need to go look up the definition of sustainable...

    23. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve · · Score: 1

      Farms: the northern half of the US is going to need to stop insisting on a seasonless produce aisle. Its unsustainable. Strawberries in january contribute to carbon emissions and water depletion. Stop pumping the avocado market and realize its a fatty fruit that doesnt need to become the staple diet of a population with 60% obesity and leading the world in heart disease. We dont need to be grazing cattle and making rice, a crop that requires a flooded field. The thing we do best is dates, a plant that grows in arid climates anyhow.

      Pretty ignorant posting for a post currently modded "5, Insightful". Dude, there's no chance avocados are going to become a "staple diet" of the USA. It would be great from a health perspective if they did because they contain heart healthy fats and they can make you feel full in addition to being good sources of various nutrients but I can tell you that actually it seems to me that most people I know don't like them very much. Is there really all that much cattle grazing and rice growing in California? All the US rice I've seen comes from either Texas, Louisiana or Arkansas. I would think that land is too valuable in California to use it for cattle grazing. And sorry man, but I'm not real crazy about dates and neither are most Americans. Date palms don't tolerate cold weather at all, which is why I assume they only grow them much further south than Los Angeles. You can actually get snow there on rare occasions, which is very bad for date palms.

    24. Re:stop with the pipes already. by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      The definitions of particular words get a little murky when people appropriate the terms for a political ideology:

      "http://thinkprogress.org/election/2013/03/22/1761431/what-it-means-to-be-a-progressive-a-manifesto/"

      Yes, "progress" in terms of advancing the "progressive" political agenda is a very bad thing. Contemporary "progressivism" is just reformulated communist nonsense.

    25. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your beer math is a bit off. It takes me between 6 and 7 gallons of "fresh purified" tap water to make 5 gallons of beer.

      There's another 4-5 gallons used during the wort cooling, but that's reclaimed and used later. (mostly watering my hops)

      Add another gallon or two for cleaning and sanitizing, and you're still barely over a 2:1 ratio. None of this 5:1 you claim

      Unless you're also incorporating the water required to grow the barley ... but I can't really speak to the requirements there.

      I can't imagine that full scale professional breweries are any less efficient. If anything, they should be more efficient, simply by scale.

    26. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You shut yer whore mouth with that talk about avocados. From my cold, dead, avocado-stained hands, buddy.

    27. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FYI, date palms are thirsty... I think they're on the order of 18ML/ha (Equivalent to about 70" of rain)

      The benefit of date palms is that they can survive a lack of water and tolerate higher levels of salt than other crops, but like with all permanent plantings you need to pump on a lot more than just the subsistence level of water to produce a crop.

    28. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lots of good points, but I have one minor quibble. Avocados are super-healthy for you. Ask any RD (Registered Dietitian). The fat in avocados won't make you fat. Plus, you need fat in your diet. Your brain can't function without it. In general though, you're right about the ag industry. Big ag in CA is responsible for 80% of the total water consumption, and these new restrictions don't affect them.

    29. Re:stop with the pipes already. by Dripdry · · Score: 1

      it takes a huge amount of water to grow one avocado. Same with broccoli, walnuts, and almonds. I mean, it's like one gallon of water of one almond. It's really that bad.

      --
      -
  48. Re:Here's a better idea by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

    If the people in Liberalwood want to do something constructive,

    If they did, they would stop subsidizing water use by farmers. Let everybody pay market prices for water and let market prices adjust according to demand, and the problem would solve itself. If that means desalination becomes cost effective, all the better.

  49. Re:Here's a better idea by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    Set a market price for water. Problem solved.

    While I agree that this is probably the right thing to do, who gets this money? And how is the government setting some arbitrary price for a commodity to achieve some objective not a "top down" solution?

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  50. Could be a great for a state with water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    imaging being able to tax each gallon of water that is exported! Your state could basically get rid of sales and income taxes because of this!

  51. Re:Here's a better idea by SirGeek · · Score: 4, Informative

    That's a fallacy.

    The 2 "crops" that are taking the water:

    • Alfalfa - going to China to feed THEIR livestock.
    • Bottled Water - Nestle's is buying municipal water at residential rates and selling it back at 100s of times the original cost.

    Shut those 2 things down and water problem solved.

  52. Re:Here's a better idea by SirGeek · · Score: 4, Informative

    Or, we east coasters could stop eat so much lettuce.

    Or we could start growing our own again.

    We do. Find a nice local CSA, Support them. Ours is now doing produce year round thanks to hoop and green houses .

  53. Re:Here's a better idea by SirGeek · · Score: 2, Informative

    Guys, people plant in California because it's one of the most fertile soils in the USA.

    No, they plant there because of the temps. NOT the soil. Its "fertile" because of Monsanto chemicals.

  54. Piping a river elsewhere by sjbe · · Score: 2

    How about taking the fresh river water as it is about to dump into the Pacific, and pipe it through the ocean in poly blend pipes that are easy to install and repair... a leak would do no damage

    You mean except for the salt getting into your freshwater supply when you inevitably spring a leak? (Think osmotic gradient) You mean except for altering the ecosystem of the river delta? You would have to have some pretty huge pipes (or REALLY high pressure) to take a meaningful amount of water to where it is wanted. It is NOT trivial to pipe a significant percentage of the outflow of a river somewhere else.

    I don't mean to be overly harsh because the idea does have some charm to it but there are some pretty serious issues in play with such a scheme. I have a hard time believing that it would make more sense than simply building some large scale desalination plants close to where the water is needed. You would still have to pipe the water across land at some point anyway.

    1. Re:Piping a river elsewhere by rmdingler · · Score: 1

      There is some precedent with sub-oceanic pipeline technology, primarily with the ever valuable hydrocarbons, but as shortages continue the rising value of water delivery to populations may make odd ideas feasible.

      --
      Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

      Ernest Hemingway

    2. Re:Piping a river elsewhere by idontgno · · Score: 0

      On this, the 5th anniversary of the Deepwater Horizon disaster, I don't think citing the glowing success of sub-oceanic pipeline technology is going to be a very compelling argument.

      Still, spilling fresh water into the sea is probably a little more benign than light sweet crude.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    3. Re:Piping a river elsewhere by xfade551 · · Score: 1

      Let's see, the Columbia river discharges around 171x10^9 gallons per day to the Pacific Ocean, I think we could spare California 10x10^6 gallons per day without too much of an issue.

  55. LAKE TAHOE FIRST by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One of the largest lakes in the US.
    Sits smack-dab on the California border.
    It's all downhill to the San Fernando valley- minimal pumping cost.
    But, it will never happen because the Tahoe property owners are rich and powerful.
    Much easier to steal water from poor people.

  56. Floating-yet-submerged pipeline? by sonamchauhan · · Score: 1

    Hmm... How about a floating-yet-submerged pipeline?

    Water flowing through plastic tubes anchored offshore ... (still submerged mind you - but not laying the seabed).

    It could start small -- say two 12 inch pipes, then more, or larger, pipelines added once the concept was proved.

    Why does this work? For one thing, eminent-domain, right-of-way issues pretty much go away. And the problem of structural support turns into keeping pipeline sections from _rising_, rather than falling (caused by the natural bouyancy of the pipeline and its contents)

    1. Re:Floating-yet-submerged pipeline? by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Hmm... How about a floating-yet-submerged pipeline?

      Water flowing through plastic tubes anchored offshore ... (still submerged mind you - but not laying the seabed).

      It could start small -- say two 12 inch pipes, then more, or larger, pipelines added once the concept was proved.

      Why does this work? For one thing, eminent-domain, right-of-way issues pretty much go away. And the problem of structural support turns into keeping pipeline sections from _rising_, rather than falling (caused by the natural bouyancy of the pipeline and its contents)

      2 12 inch pipes? They might as well be pipe cleaners because you are not going to get enough water though them to make *any* kind of difference. I'll be that we loose more water in Torrance CA though dripping faucets than you could get though those pipes.

      Have you seen what they have in New York City? You think 2 12 inch pipes will be of any use? NTMWD where I get my water in North Texas gets 10% of it's supply though ONE 96 inch pipeline from Lake Texoma and where they are not running the pumps flat out, I don't think they could do more than about 40% of our daily need though that with the pumps funning full blast. And that's just for a couple of counties north and east of Dallas.

      No, you are going to need pipelines measured in tens of feet to be of much use...

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    2. Re:Floating-yet-submerged pipeline? by magarity · · Score: 1

      It could start small -- say two 12 inch pipes

      Your sense of scale is quite humorous. Did you see Die Hard 3? The dump trucks rumbling through the NYC water pipeline was not fiction.

  57. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Meanwhile, farmers are using massive amounts of cheap subsidized water to grow rice and cotton in the desert
    They could go a LONG way to using something a bit more modern than 'flood it and it will grow' techniques. Which is pretty much what most of them use in that area. They need to realize they are in a desert and need to treat water as if it is a scarce resource (and it will be every 5-10 years). The govs there should be encouraging more modern irrigation techniques thru subsidies and tax incentives. 60-70% of their water usage is going towards alfalfa and almonds. Of that 70-80% of it is shipped out of state.

    Drought is nothing new to this area of the country. It is however the first one in the 'internet age'. So it seems like a bigger deal than it is as now people can bitch to a wide audience instead of the 2-3 dudes they hang out with at the bar. I watch documentaries and old TV shows. I see how dry it is there years ago even in the 60/70s. I remember visiting in the 70s and 80s and 90s and they were doing water rationing even then. Even as a child I could see they had a problem. I am sure it has not improved much other than finger pointing and posturing.

    Even many of those desalination plants are just old projects that are now getting funding. I think one city even finished building one then turned around and dismantled it.

    You think everyone is worked up about drought. Wait until the flooding starts (and it happens every time too). As now all the plants have died there is nothing holding the dirt in place. You will see flooding in the next few years. The desalination plants will go on the back burner again. The green lawns will be back in style. The aquifers will fill back up and the news stations will have some other stupid thing to whinge on about. There is low long term planing and that is why this happens every 10 years.

  58. Re:Here's a better idea by ranton · · Score: 1

    While I agree that this is probably the right thing to do, who gets this money?

    Its not like California couldn't use the money. Its government is doing better than it was five years ago but it isn't exactly the most solvent state in the union.

    And how is the government setting some arbitrary price for a commodity to achieve some objective not a "top down" solution?

    What is top down about letting the price of water settle at whatever level is necessary to reduce consumption to a manageable level? That is what would happen naturally if the government wasn't involved at all. The government's only role should be (IMHO) to stop abuse such as private companies from profiteering at the state's expense. Perhaps also spending money on water reclamation and desalination programs to lessen the burden of paying for water as well.

    --
    -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
  59. Re:Here's a better idea by funwithBSD · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Silicon Valley *used* to be the most fertile soil in the US, but it has been paved over...

    and that was true before Monsanto was in the GMO business.

    --
    Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
  60. Seattle here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seattle here... Go fuck yourself.

  61. Sustainable water supplies by sjbe · · Score: 1

    First, most of California agriculture is not in desert. Those areas tend to be rather low on rainfall, but not low enough to qualify as a desert.

    If they don't have enough water to the degree that they are thinking about insane schemes like piping it from Washington then it is a distinction without a difference.

    Second, presence of water is not the only reason to grow something in a particular region. Southern California happens to be famous for a pleasant climate and a lot of sunny days.

    You are correct that there are other factors besides water availability in play. Soil composition, climate, location, transportation, etc all matter. But the water IS a critical component. If you have to pipe in more than can be sustained then it is NOT a good idea to do so. This includes times when there is a drought.

    1. Re:Sustainable water supplies by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      By your logic we should only produce anything were all the raw input materials happen to be locally available. If we bought into that theory there are lots of things we simply could not produce.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    2. Re:Sustainable water supplies by sjbe · · Score: 1

      By your logic we should only produce anything were all the raw input materials happen to be locally available.

      I argued nothing of the sort. The key word there is SUSTAINABLE. We already divert massive amounts of water to California and other ludicrous places like Las Vegas and Phoenix and they use much of what they have rather badly. Much of the agriculture that takes place there could be done elsewhere if needed. I think the notion of diverting massive amounts of water from the Pacific northwest or elsewhere is simply stupid because there are alternatives that are much simpler.

      Diverting large amounts of fresh water thousands of miles damages a natural ecosystem to sustain an unnatural one. It's not a sane use of scarce resources. Climates change and beyond a certain point fighting it becomes pointless.

    3. Re:Sustainable water supplies by khallow · · Score: 1

      The key word there is SUSTAINABLE. We already divert massive amounts of water to California and other ludicrous places like Las Vegas and Phoenix

      Water diversion is sustainable. Pumping ground water at well above replacement rate is not.

    4. Re:Sustainable water supplies by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Never mind that there is exactly zero chance that you could build a 10-meter wide pipeline across the State of Oregon without piling up enough legal paperwork to dwarf Mount Shasta.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  62. Re:Here's a better idea by TWX · · Score: 1

    San Diego is quite nice, and there's a lot of cool stuff to do in and around San Francisco too. The Los Angeles area is far too well represented by the SNL skit, "The Californians," though.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  63. Re:Here's a better idea by DrunkenTerror · · Score: 0

    Why do you hate The Free Market?

  64. There is a drought folks by sjbe · · Score: 1

    If CA is short a percent or two in its water supply, Nestle might be a big deal. Otherwise, it's meaningless....

    When you are in the middle of a drought (which California is) it very quickly becomes meaningful. One or two percent is not trivial even in times of plenty. During a drought it becomes even more ludicrously wasteful than bottled water normally is, which is really saying something.

  65. NFMBY by tverbeek · · Score: 1

    I support this idea, for the simple reason that it will help keep Californians from trying to suck the Great Lakes dry instead.

    --
    http://alternatives.rzero.com/
  66. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Middle Eastern countries use nuclear reactors and desalination plants in order to provide arable farmland, and it has worked well in self sustainability.

    The problem is that both of these are not PC enough for California. Just like in the 1990s, the state rather suffered through constant brownouts than lift a finger against companies like Enron.

    On the other hand, it does make sense about water-wasting crops like alfalfa. Get farmers to grow less thirsty crops and that will go a long way in dealing with the drought. One acre foot is 325,851 gallons, so getting farmers to grow crops that require less water will do far more than demanding cities cut their water use by 25%.

    Long term, CA is too paralyzed by NIMBY and "let's do nothing, this is the eco way" to do meaningful solutions. The reason why there are no more rolling blackouts in the state is because Enron collapsed. Water is likely going to be "solved" by the masses having to leave to other states, leaving CA pretty much a wasteland like the area near the Salton Sea/Chocolate Mountains.

  67. Re: Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Opex.

  68. Lessons from Fukushima by camperdave · · Score: 1

    How about build a desalination plant with use of nuclear power in California?

    Did you learn nothing from Fukushima? Don't build nuclear power plants in earthquake zones! Bad idea.

    --
    When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    1. Re:Lessons from Fukushima by Pyrion · · Score: 1

      So that just excludes building in Temecula, central Los Angeles, and the San Francisco bay.

      Honestly the best place to build desal plants would probably be San Diego, because the region sits atop a massive single chunk of bedrock (the southern California batholith), and California doesn't get the kind of offshore vertical displacement quakes that cause tsunamis anyway.

      --
      "There is much pleasure to be gained from useless knowledge." - Bertrand Russell.
    2. Re:Lessons from Fukushima by bobbied · · Score: 1

      How about build a desalination plant with use of nuclear power in California?

      Did you learn nothing from Fukushima? Don't build nuclear power plants in earthquake zones! Bad idea.

      No, actually the earthquake wasn't the problem, the plant survived fairly well with an earthquake that was many orders of magnitude above the designed speciation's. If the emergency power hadn't failed (by being flooded in sea water), the plants wouldn't have been useable and we would have had some leakage of radioactive water but not the mess we have now. What failed was the electrical power at the plant because the giant wave that took out all the backup generators and there was no way to get portable generation on site fast enough to keep the plants from overheating.

      Not to mention that these designs where incredibly OLD technology, having not advanced in nearly 20 years. Much safer designs exist, ones that don't have the problems with needing supplemental cooling pumps when there is an unplanned shutdown, where they fail to an inertly safe state in emergencies. They can be built to withstand just about any earthquake short of total local destruction, and even then fail into a inert state. (but an event like that would likely make the nuclear issue look tame anyway) And although you might have to wait a few thousand years before you can totally decommission the plant after something like that, you won't have the issues Japan saw.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    3. Re:Lessons from Fukushima by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought the lesson from Fukushima was to stop running 1st generation plants and hurry up and replace them with safer designs?

    4. Re:Lessons from Fukushima by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Doesn't San Diego also already have a few floating nuclear reactors?

    5. Re:Lessons from Fukushima by camperdave · · Score: 1

      Why not just build them in an inert state to begin with; like, say, Nebraska or Wyoming?

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    6. Re:Lessons from Fukushima by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      So don't build a 50+ year old design without passive convection cooling in a tsunami zone that doesn't exist in California.

      Thanks for the input, but I'm pretty sure that was off the table already.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    7. Re:Lessons from Fukushima by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you learn nothing from Fukushima? Don't build nuclear power plants in earthquake zones! Bad idea.

      Fukushima Daiichi was 60 years old. Modern reactors wouldn't suffer from the same problems.

    8. Re:Lessons from Fukushima by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "lesson" of Fukushima is not to power down all your reactors when you need power to run the cooling systems.

  69. Re:Here's a better idea by rubycodez · · Score: 4, Insightful

    hahaha, your brain can't grasp rudimentary concepts of scale and magnitude.

    Nestle used 50 million gallons from Sacramento sources last year. California households alone use 360 million gallons PER DAY.

    Does that mean anything to you? Does that make one neuron of common sense fire between your ears?

  70. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Auction off the water sources. Owners of the water sources will set the price. Owners will receive the money. We have our heads so far up the socialist ass, we don't even know how a free market might work anymore.

  71. no common sense by Punko · · Score: 4, Informative

    a four-foot pipeline isn't going to fix bugger all.

    At high water velocity (i.e. not long haul practical) the best a four foot pipeline can do is approximately 4 000 litres per second (about 1000 usgal/s) or about 300,000 cubic meters per day. At this flow rate, the headlosses would require multiple pumping stations to keep the water moving. The electrical costs would be enormous. Additionally, At 0.4 cu.m./cap/day that would support approximately 750,000 people at average North American usage rates. Somehow a generational project like this should serve more than just a portion of L.A.

    How about California spends a whole lot less cash and start recycling a portion of the billions of gallons of water released by Californians into the sea?

    --
    If only we could fall into a woman's arms without falling into her hands
    1. Re:no common sense by pipingguy · · Score: 2

      ...headlosses would require multiple pumping stations...

      Nah. Just angle the pipe downwards towards LA. Probably the water will be coming from the north, and north is up on the map, so gravity will do the job - no pumps required.

    2. Re:no common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, someone actually is considering reality. Anyone care to do the topography of any proposed route? In terms of required pressure to reach altitude of any non coastal route must be taken into consideration. Unlike irrigation ditch siphons, using gravity on the down hill side to pull it up the uphill side won't work as it would reach a vacuum and produce cavitation. You are talking about pumping water uphill a minimum of 4,000 feet and dealing with the pressure. You are talking 433 PSI for every 1,000 feet lift not counting pipe friction loss.

      How much horsepower do you think is required to pump a 4 foot pipe of water to about 3,000 PSI at full flow?
      Not sure what city water pressure they want in the city, in the valley, but on the other end some serious pressure regulation is required,

      As others mentioned, a 4 foot pipe will be way too small.

      If you try to go the coastal scenic route, the NIMBY crowd will eat your lunch. There are issues with trying to cross the Columbia River, or if just off the coast the river bar. Due to the high current this would be difficult to do.

    3. Re:no common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are issues with trying to cross the Columbia River, or if just off the coast the river bar.

      If this were a serious proposal, they'd be taking water from the Columbia, rather than trying to cross it.

  72. Buy from Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have always believed that a pipe line from the Great Lakes, Manitoba, Athabaska, or Great Bear Lake to the American West made sense. California doesn't have a water problem. Deserts are dry. They have an engineering problem. With a pipeline we can make the deserts bloom again.

    1. Re:Buy from Canada by Punko · · Score: 1

      Except those Great Lakes are facing hydrological issues themselves. The lakes are left over puddles, with rainfall not keeping up with the water we force the lakes to continue to provide now. If you need more water, generate it yourself, or better yet, reduce your need. If you charge the correct amount for water, your water use issues will very quickly fix themselves.

      --
      If only we could fall into a woman's arms without falling into her hands
  73. Surely it would cost less... by yakumo.unr · · Score: 1

    ...to just buy Nestle and stop pumping the water out of the area on mass?

    1. Re:Surely it would cost less... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, this wouldn't solve the problem and second, the market cap of Nestle is $240 billion.

  74. Bill's idea by AndyKron · · Score: 1

    Well that was easy.

  75. For the Conservation Crowd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't agree about conservation or banning high water content crops. Looking at history, if America did not come up with creative ideas on how to bring vast amounts of electricity, water, gasoline, etc.. to the places where people wanted to use them, then industry would be a tenth of what it is now, and we would have one tenth of the population, if that.

    I think what we need is creative solutions to bring more water in, and possibly moving towards a more market base cost structure. If I understand correctly the cities use a minuscule amount of water compared to AG, I don't understand the logic of squeezing that part of the pie (city use) to try to 'fix' the problem.

    After reading some ideas here, I think I would start costing out the concept of floating the pipeline in the Pacific or solar desalination and then get to work.

    1. Re:For the Conservation Crowd by hey! · · Score: 1

      Spoken like someone with absolutely no engineering experience. Engineering as a discipline has this impish habit delivering things most people never imagined possible. This misleads them into thinking that engineering can give them anything they can imagine, particularly if the concept seems simple to them.

      Take the suggestion elsewhere in this discussion that water be piped from the Great Lakes to California. Nothing could be simpler in conception -- a 2000 mile long pipe. We've built oil pipelines longer than that. The longest crude oil pipeline in the world is the 2500 mile Druzhba pipeline from Russia to Germany, so a 2000 mile long water pipe should be a cinch, right?

      Here we get to the place where engineering starts being a bitch. You see, it's one thing to imagine a cost-is-no-object project, but the truth is cost is the single most important limitation on water use. It does no good to supply water to California almond farmers if they have to sell their almonds at the same price/weight as gold to pay for it. We use a *lot* more water than oil, and we expect it to be way, way cheaper. The current spot price for crude oil is about $57 per barrel -- roughly $1.36/gallon. Agricultural users in California pay something like 3/10 of a penny a gallon -- roughly speaking they expect water to be about 500x cheaper per gallon than oil. If pumping adds a penny to the price per gallon to the price of crude oil, that's no big deal, less than 1%. Add a penny per gallon to the price of water and you've quadrupled your farmer's water cost.

      A system that delivers water can be expensive to build, but it has to operate cheaply and reliably. That's why water systems engineers avoid pumps and rely on gravity to do most of the work of moving water. The longest water supply pipeline I know of is the Goldfields Water Supply Scheme, which transports water 330 miles with the aid of 20 pump stations. The economic justification for this project? To support gold mining. To give you an idea of how much expense was tolerated when the Goldfields system was built, it replaced a system where water was packed in by camel train. Today users there pay 7x as much per gallon as users in California do for water. Assuming the CA system could be operated for the same price, you could actually dispense with actually building the system. Raising the water price from $0.003 to $0.02 would reduce water consumption in California to sustainable rates -- even under drought conditions. It'd do so by causing agriculture to move out of state. Probably some population too.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  76. Re:Here's a better idea by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    Its not like California couldn't use the money. Its government is doing better than it was five years ago but it isn't exactly the most solvent state in the union.

    So your answer is "the state", which makes it a tax. That's fine - I just want to be clear that we're talking about taxing water to solve a water crisis, which you may understand may not play well in all spheres of the political world.

    What is top down about letting the price of water settle at whatever level is necessary to reduce consumption to a manageable level?

    That is not what he suggested. He suggested "setting" a price for water. Letting the price of water float is a different idea that requires that private people be allowed to own and trade water. This has to be done carefully, and California screwed it up when they tried it with electricity.

    The truth is that water rights are a very complicated issue. Water falls on a combination of private and public land. You obviously can't go full-libertarian and have downstream users at the full mercy of upstream landowners, and things get even dicier when multiple governments (or even nations) are involved. I think a quasi-market based approach (that starts as a tax) is the right way to go, but there are a lot of very complicated issues to slog through. And market based approaches to rationing are rarely kind to the poor.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  77. What was it Shatner once said? by ArhcAngel · · Score: 1

    Aw! Now I remember.

    --
    "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
  78. Re:Another Hollywood Capitalist by operagost · · Score: 1

    Yes, it is. He'd be giving somewhat less than $30 billion to a politician's campaign. I mean, you can't write a check to the government with "FOR WATER PIPELINE PROJECT ONLY" in the memo.

    --

    Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  79. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    California uses 38 billion (with a "b") gallons of water per day. That desalination plant being built will be able to provide at most 50 million gallons a day using 38 MW of power per day to produce. Don't forget to add in the cost of that power generation, infrastructure, new power plants, further degradation of the environment (all that brine has to go somewhere) to your 30 plants.

  80. Re:Here's a better idea by MightyYar · · Score: 2

    What is the water source? The hundred thousand square miles of watershed? How would this work? There are probably thousands of "owners" across multiple states or even nations. You are acting like water rights are some simple issue that hasn't been contentious for the last 10,000 years or so.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  81. Re:Here's a better idea by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 2

    Guys, people plant in California because it's one of the most fertile soils in the USA.

    Too bad it's a semi-arid climate-- that's to say, much of the time it's a desert.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  82. Limited Resources Used Badly by sjbe · · Score: 1

    So then, we should avoid building cities in the Great Lakes region, where it gets really cold in winter and people have to use natural gas that was mined in Texas and the Dakotas?

    Nice bit of absurd reductionism. There's nothing wrong with SOME diversion and trade of a natural resource. But there is something VERY wrong with doing it when you have a limited resource like fresh water that is being used badly. You might have an argument if it weren't for the absurdly stupid uses of water in places like Las Vegas and Phoenix and even in big parts of California.

    There's this thing called comparitive advantage.

    I don't think you understand what comparative advantage actually means. Comparative advantage is why two places can produce the same good and have it be economically beneficial to both even though one has an absolute price advantage. It has little to do with why building large cities in the middle of the desert is bat-shit crazy.

    The southwest has tons of potential for producing solar energy, let's not shut down development there yet.

    A bunch of solar plants do not require a city with the population of Phoenix to exist in the middle of a desert. Rather than diverting water so we can have fountains in front of the Bellagio hotel and lush golf courses in the desert, how about we actually make sane use of the water we have before you start draining the Great Lakes.

    1. Re:Limited Resources Used Badly by AcidPenguin9873 · · Score: 1

      There's nothing wrong with SOME diversion and trade of a natural resource. But there is something VERY wrong with doing it when you have a limited resource like fresh water that is being used badly.

      Who determines what is a bad use and what is a good use? You? I claim that burning gasoline in your car is a bad use of the resources of the Middle East/Texas/Venezuela/Dakotas.

      comparative advantage [snip]

      You're right, it's not comparative advantage, it's absolute advantage, which is even stronger. The Great Lakes has an absolute advantage in water production, but the southwest has a huge absolute advantage in solar power production.

    2. Re:Limited Resources Used Badly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your reaction to the idea of draining the great lakes does bring up a point you should be aware of:

      Imagine living in one of California's eastern neighbors: You're already in a fraking desert, receive even less rainfall than California, yet California has the "right" to most of the water that's collected in your state.

      This because most of the land (and all waterways) in your state is, in fact, Federal property, and Calfornia's 53 congressmen outvote the collective congressional votes of everyone else west of the continental divide.

    3. Re:Limited Resources Used Badly by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      I don't think you understand what comparative advantage actually means. Comparative advantage is why two places can produce the same good and have it be economically beneficial to both even though one has an absolute price advantage. It has little to do with why building large cities in the middle of the desert is bat-shit crazy.

      From the article you linked to, comparative advantage is related to marginal cost, which is a comparison of two goods. The law of comparative advantage says if the costs of production for the two goods are different, it will be advantageous for the two parties to specialize and trade, even if one party produces both goods at a lower absolute cost (money, labor, time, natural resources, any way you want to measure it).

      Suppose the north produces very cheap water and electricity. Further suppose the southwest produces slightly more costly, but still fairly cheap electricity, and very costly water. Even though the southwest is disadvantaged in both markets, it still benefits both parties if the southwest produces only electricity and the north produces only water.

    4. Re:Limited Resources Used Badly by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Do the Great Lakes have an absolute advantage in water production? The watershed of Lake Superior is actually pretty small; I don't know about the other lakes. There is currently a lot of fresh water in the Great Lakes, yes, but I don't think it's being replenished all that fast. Pulling enough water to grow almonds out of the system would likely have some seriously bad effects.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  83. kickstarter fund by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so apparently it's easier to start a kickstarter than propose a state rider to vote on...

  84. Well... by plazman30 · · Score: 1

    You could decide not to build cities on deserts. Isn't most of Southern California a desert that's been terraformed.

    1. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have three deserts and they are all in the SW part of the state. Sure, some people live in them, such as the city of Palm Springs. However, Los Angeles is not a desert and neither is San Diego. Most of the food grown in his state comes from the Central Valley, again not a desert. There is a difference between arid and semi-arid.

  85. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Except is's not the people in LA using all the water. Its all those conservatives up and down the 5. Thanks right wingers for using all our water.

  86. Horribly mistaken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Leftist market manipulation won't solve the problem. Lake Superior levels look healthy to me. Better to use the resource and put Mother Nature to work. If you drew down Great Bear Lake 10m, nobody would possibly no the difference. Lakes differ from puddles in that lakes are defined by contours where ground water level intersect topography, puddles are temporary accumulations of rain water.

    1. Re:Horribly mistaken by Punko · · Score: 1

      The lakes are puddles. The water accumulated there is left over from the melting of the glaciers. If you try to draw down the lakes, the rainflall in the catchment area will not fill them up again. The St. Lawrence river and all the great lakes shipping depend on in>out.

      And to top off all of that, the concept of using non-replaceable materials for operating costs is utterly stupid. Spend the surplus not the capital. Using Great Lakes water is spending capital. Using surplus water from another area is what you need to do.

      Gee, and what about all that water you currently send to the ocean ?

      --
      If only we could fall into a woman's arms without falling into her hands
    2. Re:Horribly mistaken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The water accumulated there is left over from the melting of the glaciers.

      How ridiculous. The lake basins date from the ice age, specifically lake basins that lie at the edge of the Canadian Shield. The entire volume of the Great Lakes is recycled every few years. Freshwater in the Great Lakes and Canadian North or a remarkable resource. Capital you say? Yes, and its time to invest a little in our great Southwest.

  87. What's your Plan B? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's your next best idea? (Your first idea was amazingly unrealistic, almost as though you're an unusually stupid person who has significantly below-average knowledge about politics. And yes, that's significantly below-average for Americans! It's like 99 out of 100 of the amazingly dimwitted ignorant people on the street, happen to be wiser than you.) (I'm not saying that you are that stupid, just that your words suggest you are that stupid. I suppose it's possible that you might have been acting or parodying.)

  88. What a freak by koan · · Score: 2

    There is never too much water, and frankly this is what you get when you build in a desert.

    It won’t be much longer before mountains have no snow, then there will be no rivers, no fish, nothing.

    When the Last Tree Is Cut Down, the Last Fish Eaten, and the Last Stream Poisoned, You Will Realize That You Cannot Eat Money
    -Cree Indian

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  89. Don't do it smarter, do it bigger by userw014 · · Score: 1

    So, instead of fixing the horrible problem that California's (the West's - pretty much all of the US's) archaic system of legacy water rights has created, the solution is to do more of the same, except more expensively? Isn't one definition of insanity doing the same thing over and over again, expecting things to change?

    As for it being a fix for California's immediate drought problem - as I recall, the project he compares this to - the Alaska Oil Pipeline - took 20 years to survey, design, & build. Even if the political and legal environment could work it's way around the idea that this is extremely urgent and absolutely necessary, I don't see a water pipeline taking less than 10 years to build - 5 years at massive cost.

  90. Re:Here's a better idea by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

    And market based approaches to rationing are rarely kind to the poor.

    Most of California's poor are urban. They are the people currently getting screwed by water pricing. The poor would likely benefit by any move to more rational prices.

    But I disagree that market pricing of commodities is bad for the poor. If you want to help the poor, it is better to give them money directly, so they can spend it on something they actually want, rather that giving them an incentive to waste water or electricity or whatever. Subsidies lead to miss-allocation of resources, and are usually co-opted by the non-poor anyway.

  91. Water- we dump it on the ground by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 5, Informative

    Desalination is a plausible solution for water for consumer use--that is, urban and suburban locations.

    It is not a very plausible solution for agricultural use-- too expensive. Do you realize that those people take the water and just dump it on the ground?

    *(well, some of the suburban people just spray it on the ground, too. But they spray millions and millions of gallons on lawns. Sounds like a lot... but agriculture uses trillions of gallons.)

    Water rights are complicated. Since the rule is, whoever grabbed it first owns the rights to the water, the people who own it aren't necessarily the ones who use it most responsibly. http://www.washingtonpost.com/...

    Agriculture is 80% of California's water use (although only 1.5% of California's economy) The big problem is almonds. Who would have thought that such a niche foodstuff would drive agricultural water? https://www.bostonglobe.com/bu...

    Trillions? Yep: http://science.nasa.gov/scienc...

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Water- we dump it on the ground by Orsmo · · Score: 2

      Actually, there are a number of issues with desalination as it presently exists. The cost of plant construction and operations puts the cost of water supply at roughly triple that of traditional methods. They also depend on fossil fuels and thus contribute to greenhouse gasses. They produce brine and boron contaminants that can not easily be disposed of on either land or sea without potentially significant impact of the wildlife exposed to them. They're kind of a mess, really, as a solution for fresh water when compared to a simple pipeline.

      --
      -- Begin thoughtfuly, end insensitively.
      It has more impact that way.
    2. Re:Water- we dump it on the ground by Defenestrar · · Score: 4, Informative

      Sure, but the pipeline has been declined in the past by people in WA for the simple reason that they've already declined to divert water for their own use (The Columbia Basin irrigation project has zones - and there's plenty of farmers who live in zones that aren't guaranteed water that would really like it). The residents of WA have already decided to limit their own consumption for ecological reasons - I don't see them sacrificing their streams, rivers, and ecology just because CA has poorly managed its own resources. If the drought doesn't break and CA doesn't get a handle on it's resources - we're about to see some modern ghost towns.

    3. Re:Water- we dump it on the ground by camg188 · · Score: 1

      Best comment yet, because it's the only one I see that deals specifically with Shatner's idea.
      So, his idea would be blocked at the source? Is there anyplace else they could get water? How much water could a 4 ft pipeline deliver?

    4. Re:Water- we dump it on the ground by david_bonn · · Score: 1

      Actually "declined" is too polite a word.

      This isn't a new idea. The drought just gives it currency. I'd point out that even in the best case it would take years to build, and if CA is going to go dry next year people there are going to have to live without water for years before such a hypothetical pipeline would be built.

    5. Re:Water- we dump it on the ground by dyslexicbunny · · Score: 1

      Almonds do use a ton of water. But that's nothing compared to the estimates I've read for cattle. Even when corrected for weight, cattle still use twice the water as almonds.

      I'd be happy if they cut alfalfa, cattle, and almonds from California though. Everyone argues that they make a ton of our food. So we go without for the time being, prices rise, and someone else comes in because it's profitable for them to do so. And then add meters for all residential and businesses (I hear it's a mixed bag) so people start paying for their usage and not access.

    6. Re:Water- we dump it on the ground by sootman · · Score: 1

      > It is not a very plausible solution for agricultural use-- too
      > expensive. Do you realize that those people take the water
      > and just dump it on the ground?

      HA! I *wish* they would just dump it on the ground. I've driven by farms in the valley where gigantic sprayers are just launching it all high into the air, and a good amount of it evaporates before it even has a chance to hit the ground.

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
  92. Not new by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This idea comes around every once in a while, proposals to divert the Columbia river to California go back as far as the 60's. California needs to stop stealing water from the rest of the world and make their own. It's called a desalination plant and that is how the rest of the world deals with arid deserts. Where is Seattle going to come up with the amount of water that California needs without turning into a desert itself? With $30 billion dollars California could build their own solution.

  93. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am sorry; my neuron is busy right now...

  94. The Drought Dilemma by Marginal+Coward · · Score: 2

    Spock: Dr. McCoy, it appears that the Captain has gone off his nut. Is there anything you can do?
    McCoy: I'm a doctor, not a psychiatrist, you pointy-eared computer!
    Spock: Is a psychiatrist not a type of physician, Dr. McCoy?
    McCoy: Look, Spock - my name's "McCoy", not "Webster." I'm a doctor, not a dictionary!
    Spock: Entomology notwithstanding, Doctor, is there nothing you can do to help the Captain with his fantasy of solving the drought problem via a multi-billion dollar pipeline from Seattle?
    McCoy: I'm doctor, not an engineer, Spock!
    Spock: (Pauses)
    Spock: Captain, it appears that the Doctor has gone off his nut. Is there anything you can do?
    Kirk: It looks like the Californian water crisis will have to wait. We didn't beam down with any "Red Shirts" so we'll have to solve the doctor's problem ourselves. Phasors on stun, Mr. Spock. Fire at will.
    (Spock fires at Dr. McCoy. McCoy drops.)
    Kirk: Spock, scan the Doctor with the Tricorder. Any sign of intelligence?
    Spock: No, Captain. Intelligence readings are unchanged. However, the Doctor has been successfully stunned.
    Kirk: Good work, Spock. Now, back to the drought problem.
    Spock: But Captain, doesn't The Prime Directive prevent you from stepping in to solve Earth's environmental problems?
    Kirk: Precisely, Mr. Spock. But we finally solved the "McCoy" problem - at least for now.
    Spock: I see, Captain...your logic is impeccable...
    Kirk: Scottie, two to beam up.

    1. Re:The Drought Dilemma by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      McCoy: Damn it, Spock, you meant etymologist, not entomologist!
      Spock: (runs away)

  95. Re:Here's a better idea by putaro · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Do the math - bottled water doesn't even move the dial compared to agriculture. Total US consumption of bottle water per year = 10 billion gallons or about 31,000 acre feet. An acre-foot is about what one household uses per year, so it's the equivalent of a small city. In contrast, California uses 38 billion gallons a DAY. Stopping bottled water will not solve the water crisis. Alfalfa would certainly have a bigger impact.

    http://www.latimes.com/busines...

  96. Wrong solution by fulldecent · · Score: 1

    Water scarcity in California is a political problem with a political solution.

    To better understand why a pipeline is a non-starter...

    From the perspective of the cashew farmer: would you rather buy cheap water from the local utility or expensive water from the Great Lakes?

    From the perspective of the pipeline investor: would you invest in a project to send water to CA when the people most likely to buy it will have ever more restrictions on water use?

    And now for the solution to this and many problems...

    Simply remove use restrictions and let the market properly set the price of this scarce product.

    --

    -- I was raised on the command line, bitch

    1. Re:Wrong solution by Punko · · Score: 1

      Simply remove use restrictions and let the market properly set the price of this scarce product.

      Why remove restrictions? Just place the restrictions and let the market properly price this product. When land developers or new business cannot find sufficient water within the regulatory framework, the "price" of water will increase. If it gets high enough, desalination makes sense. If your business depends on cheap water - time to diversify.

      --
      If only we could fall into a woman's arms without falling into her hands
  97. Re:Here's a better idea by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

    The govs there should be encouraging more modern irrigation techniques thru subsidies and tax incentives.

    No. The govt there should be encouraging more modern irrigation techniques thru rational water prices.

  98. Re:Here's a better idea by operagost · · Score: 1

    It's not the free market. Those alfalfa farmers get subsidies. Not sure about Nestle... considering it's a public water company, I'd say it's reasonable to impose consumption limits.

    --

    Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  99. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You could build a Molten Salt Reactor (MSR) to supply process heat
    to drive your water purification system. No expensive electrical stuff
    to get in the way. ahh sorry I forgot again - CA - right - never mind!

  100. Re:Here's a better idea by hey! · · Score: 2

    Right, and for an encore they can figure out how to get the water from that desalination plant to flow uphill.

    People don't realize how much water distribution networks rely on gravity; yes you can pump water to create more head but it raises the operational cost of the system astronomically. It's only practical to supply coastal cities, and then only if there is no water that can feasibly be piped from elsewhere. In California's case that doesn't really solve the problem, which is that their agricultural economy is going to collapse.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  101. Re:Here's a better idea by jythie · · Score: 2

    One of the great ironies.. the east coast has a good watershead and extremely fertile land, but we moved so large chunks of our agriculture to regions with crappy land.

  102. Re:Here's a better idea by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

    Middle Eastern countries use nuclear reactors and desalination plants in order to provide arable farmland, and it has worked well in self sustainability.

    This is a good example of economic insanity. It would be an order of magnitude more cost effective for desert countries to simply buy grain on the world market. Desalinating water, to dump it on the ground in the desert, makes no sense.

  103. Re:Here's a better idea by jythie · · Score: 2

    People plant there because the land is cheap and the agricultural lobby has the local government wrapped around their finger for getting special concessions. It took massive public works (public money, private benefit) projects to produce much of the arable land. Then they had to go annex a bunch of seagull poop islands to fertilize the crap (but now moist) land.

  104. Re:Another Hollywood Capitalist by DarkOx · · Score: 1

    Okay let me paraphrase.

    Hello I am trying to raise $30B to build a pipe line, would you like to contribute? Be advised however if you choose not to contribute and I don't reach my goal I am going to spend the money lobbing instead to get government to force you to contribute via taxation under threat of prison.

    --
    Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
  105. Re:Here's a better idea by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    . If you want to help the poor, it is better to give them money directly, so they can spend it on something they actually want, rather that giving them an incentive to waste water or electricity or whatever.

    Again, I think we largely agree. It's just that - if you take no other action, like your example of giving them money - the commodity price will increase and the poor will suffer a larger percentage of their income than everyone else. And we are talking about water, so there is a relatively inelastic demand here. Even if you don't think it will affect the poor that much, it is a concern that needs to be addressed or the market pricing route is a political dead end.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  106. Re:Here's a better idea by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 2

    Either way California *could* stand to be a little more self sustaining. It doesn't seem California is able to supply their own anything. 25% of their electricity is purchased from Arizona, and even then they still have rolling brownouts because they can't meet the demand.

  107. Re:Here's a better idea by jythie · · Score: 1

    They are good ideas, but have some significant problems. When people talk about the desalination plants, the problem they tend to leave off (or not be aware of) is that even building a whole array of them barely makes a dent in California's water usage. They can help the areas right around them since water can be produced locally rather than piped or shipped in, but they just don't produce that much water and are expensive to construct and maintain.

  108. Re:Here's a better idea by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 1

    Almonds will also become a scarce luxury foodstuff, with California accounting for 80% of the world crop.

    All those hipsters who drink almond milk will have to find another kind of nut.

  109. Re:Here's a better idea by jythie · · Score: 1

    *nod* if california was a video game, desalination plants would be that item no one builds because the cost vs benefit is so terrible, unless they have reached that stage in the game where money is effectively unlimited (because balance is difficult), which does not really happen in the real world.

  110. Good luck with that by alvinrod · · Score: 1

    If they did that then you'll get the usual crowd of yammerheads complaining about gentrification as the prices increase and start driving the less well off out of the state. Since no one wants to tell them to pound sand you just end up continuing the same unsustainable policies again and again.

  111. Re:Here's a better idea by onepoint · · Score: 2

    You forgot to take 1 issue into your factoring ... food security. a country that goes under siege will starve unless they food security.

    I think if we ( as a civilization ) get to that point which we see in the tv show star trek, then your conclusion is much more valid.

    --
    if you see me, smile and say hello.
  112. Shatner's Lawn Is Just Going to Have To Die by Greyfox · · Score: 1

    Perhaps he can install some astroturf to cover the unsightly bare spot where his lush, vibrant lawn used to live.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  113. Re:Here's a better idea by jythie · · Score: 1

    The other danger in a market based solution here is then you have private entities who have the power of life and death over your citizens. One of the classic ways to deal with cities you do not like is to cut off their water and give it to someone more loyal/allied.

  114. so captain kirk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It appears you don't need a pipe, just buy out almond farmers and close the market

  115. Re:Here's a better idea by Luckyo · · Score: 1

    We know how that ends up. Owners jack up the price, poor get weapons, mob up and murder them down as death of thirst starts to threaten them.

    It happened in the past. Many times.

  116. Re:Here's a better idea by Wild_dog! · · Score: 1

    Nobody buys local Michigan Cherries at Cherry Festival in Traverse City. They haven't ripened yet.
    Perhaps one can get dried ones or some preserves made from Michigan Cherries, but the fruit comes from out of state.

  117. I've lived around the Puget Sound all my life... by jlowery · · Score: 1

    A couple of points:
    1) Seattle has less rainfall than NYC. Seattle "rain" is drizzle. Drizzles a lot. Not much water in it, though.
    2) We have droughts. It's because the watersheds are in the mountains, and rely on snowpack. Some year there's lots of rain in the Cascades, but not enough snow.

    --
    If you post it, they will read.
  118. Qualifications by srobert · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm not sure I'm qualified to comment on this. I'm a Professional Engineer in Water Resources in Las Vegas. But, I'm not a Hollywood actor, or famous or anything. Maybe we should just defer to our leaders, like Mr. Shatner, to determine what course of action we should take.

    1. Re:Qualifications by Gazzonyx · · Score: 3, Funny

      I'm not sure I'm qualified to comment on this. I'm a Professional Engineer in Water Resources in Las Vegas. But, I'm not a Hollywood actor, or famous or anything. Maybe we should just defer to our leaders, like Mr. Shatner, to determine what course of action we should take.

      I like you; you understand your place in this world. :)
      Seriously though, reasonable people that are willing to compromise never get anything done when dealing with people that aren't reasonable and won't compromise.

      --

      If I mod you up, it doesn't necessarily mean I agree with what you've said, sorry.

    2. Re:Qualifications by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure I'm qualified to comment on this. I'm a Professional Engineer in Water Resources in Las Vegas. But, I'm not a Hollywood actor, or famous or anything. Maybe we should just defer to our leaders, like Mr. Shatner, to determine what course of action we should take.

      You are correct, public pool cleaning does not qualify you for this discussion, when Mr. Shatner have explored other civilizations.
      /Sincerely the internet.

    3. Re:Qualifications by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fair point! ...would you go ahead and comment on the actual plan, then? I'm curious.

    4. Re:Qualifications by lexman098 · · Score: 1

      So what's your suggestion Mr. Expert?

    5. Re:Qualifications by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same here. I am just a hydrologist in CA. What do I know?
      Shatner the visonary has all the experience we need.
      Make it so.. oh wait. Wrong Captain.

      We are in the worst drought in 1200 years. LA needs to come to terms with the fact that they can't keep extending their "straws" for ever and waste water and energy on their unquenchable demand for water.

  119. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's worse than that. The Tragedy of the Commons.

    "Individuals acting independently and rationally according to each's self-interest behave contrary to the best interests of the whole group by depleting some common resource."

    Or that which nobody owns, nobody cares for.

  120. Re:Here's a better idea by Adriax · · Score: 2

    From my experiences in LA: Clueless was documentary.

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it!
  121. Is the editor illiterate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The editing of this story is a new low for Slashdot. I've highlighted the improper grammar, below.

    The 84-year-old Star Trek star wants to build a water pipeline to California. All it'll cost, according to Mr. Shatner, is $30 billion, and he wants to KickStarter the funding campaign. According to Mr. Shatner, if the KickStarter campaign doesn't raise enough money then he will donate whatever that has been collected to a politician who promise to build that water pipe. Where does he wants to get the water? Seattle, "A place where there's a lot of water. There's too much water," says Mr. Shatner.

    1. Re:Is the editor illiterate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is one more error I forgot to highlight:

      The 84-year-old Star Trek star wants to build a water pipeline to California. All it'll cost, according to Mr. Shatner, is $30 billion, and he wants to KickStarter the funding campaign. According to Mr. Shatner, if the KickStarter campaign doesn't raise enough money then he will donate whatever that has been collected to a politician who promise to build that water pipe. Where does he wants to get the water? Seattle, "A place where there's a lot of water. There's too much water," says Mr. Shatner.

  122. Re:Here's a better idea by SirGeek · · Score: 3, Informative

    From what I've read, The Alfalfa crops are about 1B gallons of water being moved to China.

    This chart http://www.rollingalpha.com/wp... shows what crops are the thirstiest...

    From: http://www.rollingalpha.com/20...

  123. Re:Here's a better idea by ranton · · Score: 1

    That is not what he suggested. He suggested "setting" a price for water. Letting the price of water float is a different idea that requires that private people be allowed to own and trade water.

    He said setting a market rate. Using a market rate clearly implies letting the market set the rate. It does not imply setting an arbitrary rate.

    The truth is that water rights are a very complicated issue. Water falls on a combination of private and public land. You obviously can't go full-libertarian and have downstream users at the full mercy of upstream landowners, and things get even dicier when multiple governments (or even nations) are involved.

    These complications are already being dealth with by the California government. California has a wide range of short term, long term, and permanent contracts to ensure public use of water in the state. Here are some details on the California water market if you are interested. The problem of obtaining the water and paying whoever owns the water is already a solved problem.

    We are only discussing how to divvy the water out. That is a much simpler problem. There would probably be complications as the state's current contracts expire and the land owners want a cut of the extra money, but I'm sure eminent domain could be used to prevent any excessive profiteering.

    --
    -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
  124. Lake Michigan would be smarter by pivot_enabled · · Score: 1

    California could siphon water out of Lake Michigan to Imperial Valley. No need to pump as there is sufficient drop in altitude between the two. Obviously one hell of an engineering and construction projects, but if the Romans could build aqueducts surely we could accomplish this. The real challenge isn't the engineering and construction, it's the politics and the fact that there is no such thing as national water policy.

    1. Re:Lake Michigan would be smarter by Rabbit327 · · Score: 1

      How about @#*$ no. It's called the Great Lakes compact and the Great Lakes Charter. You won't get a drop from us. Nor will you get anything from the mid-west basin. It's not our problem you built a city in a desert and didn't manage the water properly. You created the problem. Now deal with it. Get rid of the lawns, stop growing crops that need more water than the environment can provide sustainably, build better mass transit to cut back on pollution, stop expanding outward, retrofit existing infrastructure (mandatory water conserving shower heads...make it illegal to sell any that aren't and make it illegal to ship them to california and attach a big fine to companies that do, turn off park fountains, recycle wastewater back into the aquifer, etc), etc. There's plenty you can do now to stop the problem. Bottom line. You won't get a drop from the great lakes. The residents here surrounding the great lakes will tell you to take a hike.

      --
      Never trust a bunny
  125. Seattle has too much water? by roc97007 · · Score: 1

    Um, yeah, no.

    --
    Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
  126. Beam it up? by redwraith94 · · Score: 1

    Why don't you just teleport the water? You did it with the whales for cryin out loud!

    --
    I art more snarky, and terse than thou. I art Slashdot!
  127. I have a better idea... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I want to Kickstart a campaign to helicopter in bottled water from the Midwest. We would buy hundreds of thousands of helicopters to fly in one bottle at a time to help out the thirsty Californians. Your dollar contribution can make a world of difference. Please give.

  128. Re:Here's a better idea by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 5, Informative

    Nestle's claims they use 700 million gallons a year bottling. This is the equivalent of what two golf courses use. CA has over 1100 golf courses.

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  129. Re:Here's a better idea by DrXym · · Score: 1

    $80 billion is a lot of almonds.

  130. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Long Beach uses 56m gallons per day of water. It's the 7th largest CA city and 36th largest in the US. A single desal plant would offset nearly all of the usage. Now consider that most cities are much smaller and you can service entire swaths of urban/suburban counties with the addition of a single plant.

  131. Re:Here's a better idea by ranton · · Score: 1

    And we are talking about water, so there is a relatively inelastic demand here.

    Water demand can be very elastic when there are actual economic incentives. For anyone to say demand is inelastic shows just how wasteful we are with water in modern society.

    Even if you don't think it will affect the poor that much, it is a concern that needs to be addressed or the market pricing route is a political dead end.

    Just use subsidies for now, and wait for the next crisis for an excuse to end those subsidies.

    --
    -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
  132. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You would carry a lot more credibility if you didn't indulge in childish name-calling.

    Besides, California brought Saint Reagan to make the USA safe for Conservatism! Your should be proud to support them.

  133. You'll get none of it by Iniamyen · · Score: 1

    You'll get none of my water; I need it for my mawn.

  134. Re:Here's a better idea by PuckSR · · Score: 1

    I disagree on a couple of points. Electricity is no more scarce than water. The Earth is being bombarded with 77 Petrawatts of solar energy every moment. We could harvest a great deal of that energy as solar/wind/hydro energy. We are not harvesting it. Electricity is not a "finite resource". We currently use fossil fuels(a finite resource) to create the majority of of electricity, but there is no concrete reason for electricity to be linked with a finite resource.

    If we desalinate water, it will be sold by the volumetric unit. This creates a market price for water.This will change the water market. This is what you want to accomplish.It might crash and burn rather quickly, but it would accomplish your goal, so why oppose it?

  135. Re:Here's a better idea by MightyMartian · · Score: 3, Informative

    If Washington State is anything like British Columbia (and considering they're right next door to each other, and Washington is south of the 49th), there are looming water problems; an extremely low snow pack which will likely mean water restrictions in some areas. Yes, it's rains a lot in the region, but the way that rain is "captured" is through snowfall.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  136. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Conservative Oprah says hi! http://la.curbed.com/archives/...

  137. Buying into the bogeyman by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The "agriculture uses 80% of California's water" argument has become a thing because there's a concerted effort to steal water rights. That's true, 80% of the water rights in California are used in agriculture. However, unlike the urban uses of water, that water goes back into the ecosystem. Flood stage water used to irrigate rice fields soaks into the ground and recharges aquifers. Water used for irrigation percolates through the soil and back into the Sac/San Joaquin basin. A large fraction of the evaporated water (numbers vary by study) gets dumped on the lower Sierras as rain. This water is recycled and re-used; in a year, the same cc of water can be used 2-3 times for irrigation and then end up in the delta keeping fish alive.

    On the other hand, water pumped to SoCal and used in the Bay Area never re-enters the freshwater ecosystem. Most of it gets treated as sewage and dumped in canals to the ocean (or directly into the ocean) and the large amount that gets used for lawns and pools either percolates to the ocean or evaporates and gets carried out to sea. That water is completely lost to the ecosystem and water cycle until the next winter when it gets deposited as snow. That small 20% is a whole hell of a lot larger in context than the 80% that's used for agriculture.

    But, building a progressive narrative and stealing water rights is a whole lot cheaper if you ignore the whole "poor people need to eat too" thing.

    1. Re:Buying into the bogeyman by hjf · · Score: 1

      I almost never respond to AC. but I'll make an exception:

      YOU'RE NOT GOD. DON'T PLAY GOD.

  138. Re:Here's a better idea by ninjagin · · Score: 1

    I don't know about crappy land, but the climate is more temperate and the growing season is much longer (provided water, of course). If you're a farmer, those are excellent attributes to exploit.

    --
    .. pa-ra-bo-la, pa-ra-bo-la, 2 pi R, 2 pi R, where's your latus rectum, where's your latus rectum, 2 pi R
  139. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Works for me. I don't like almonds anyway. Um, unless they're in marzipan...

  140. Let's put science to work ... by Rambo+Tribble · · Score: 1

    ... and genetically modify Californians' kidneys so that they can consume seawater.

    1. Re:Let's put science to work ... by Rambo+Tribble · · Score: 1

      Oh, and at the same time they can work on modifying Shatner's brain to be capable of rational thought.

  141. Re: Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And it costs nothing to operate and maintain a pipeline?

  142. Rainwater collection by justthinkit · · Score: 2

    You are one of the few mentioning rainwater collection. Well done.

    Average rainfall is California is around 10 inches per year. Google says California has 163,696 square miles of area.

    1 furlong per fortnight = 0.000166309524 m/s. Carry the naught. [This is to appease Europeans, and hillbillies, alike]

    3,800,000,000,000 cubic feet of water fall on California each year. 7.5 US gallons per cubic foot. 28 trillion gallons in total.

    Total water usage, average to a per capita is around 2,000 gallons per person.

    California population is around 37M.

    28 T / (37M * 2K) = 425.

    One year's California rainfall could service the entire state's water needs for 425 years.
    Recovering one-quarter of one percent of the rain that falls on the state each year would provide enough water for everyone for the entire year.

    --
    I come here for the love
    1. Re:Rainwater collection by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      Usage is the major problem. Here in Seattle we use 1/4th as much water per capita as wasteful Californians do.

      One fourth.

      We actually grow plants that are suited for our local environment instead of lawns, we put green roofs on our buildings to slow down water loss and clean up rainwater and retain it, we don't subsidize crop water like California does.

      Adapt. We already did. And growing grass is not adapting.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    2. Re:Rainwater collection by doccus · · Score: 1

      You are one of the few mentioning rainwater collection. Well done. Average rainfall is California is around 10 inches per year. Google says California has 163,696 square miles of area. 1 furlong per fortnight = 0.000166309524 m/s. Carry the naught. [This is to appease Europeans, and hillbillies, alike] 3,800,000,000,000 cubic feet of water fall on California each year. 7.5 US gallons per cubic foot. 28 trillion gallons in total. Total water usage, average to a per capita is around 2,000 gallons per person. California population is around 37M. 28 T / (37M * 2K) = 425. One year's California rainfall could service the entire state's water needs for 425 years. Recovering one-quarter of one percent of the rain that falls on the state each year would provide enough water for everyone for the entire year.

      Your statistics are based on normal weather patterns. California's weather has been anything but normal for the last six or seven years. NO rain has been falling. NONE. The reservior is entirely dry. Just sand. Therefore your hypothesis is entirely useless.

  143. Boycott California almonds. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So maybe we need a boycott California almonds campaign. You know, for their own good.

  144. New York City Water Tunnel by tomhath · · Score: 1

    You could divert a lot of water from the Columbia before it dumps into the ocean. The pipeline would have to be much bigger than 4 feet, but very large underground pipelines are feasible.

    Once you have the pipeline in place it would make sense to continue growing food in the desert: warm, plenty of sunshine, and almost full control over the inputs.

  145. Re:Here's a better idea by TwoEyedJack · · Score: 2, Informative

    That's a fallacy.

    The 2 "crops" that are taking the water:

    • Alfalfa - going to China to feed THEIR livestock.
    • Bottled Water - Nestle's is buying municipal water at residential rates and selling it back at 100s of times the original cost.

    Shut those 2 things down and water problem solved.

    You forgot the delta smelt. Not exactly a crop since you can't harvest them, but a huge sink of water nonetheless.

  146. Re:That's what they thought about the Colorado, to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My serious but dumb question is: what about glaciers?

    Aside from the enormous expense of getting the ice transported one time, once you get it down here couldn't it be stored in huge reservoirs near the desalination plant? Seems like few would own the water rights on that land besides Uncle Sam, and the cost of compensating them would be far less than building a pipeline.

    You just need to get a massive amount of water down to storage tanks ONCE, then make sure that recycling and diverting are done properly to eliminate wasting it.

  147. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sure, it's the liberals that are "FREAKS", and not at all the lunatics that have been brainwashed by hate-radio, wingnut blogs, and Fox News to hate anyone outside the Conservative cult.

  148. Wrong project by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    Better yet, build a telecom that isn't a dick. If it works right, I won't care about my brown lawn, I'd probably never even see it. I'll put up damned cacti to get away from AT & Comcast Warner, who are already prickly.

  149. Almonds really? Alfalfa/Pasture... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes Almonds take a relatively large amount of water. Its only a small amount compared to the vast amount of water Used by the production of Livestock. 1800L per pound of beef isn't at all Sustainable. Want to help the water issues, eat one less burger every once and a while. It will help way more then any low flow showers or low flow toilets.

  150. So, wouldn't this be... by NecroPuppy · · Score: 5, Funny

    a KirkStarter?

    I'll be here all week.

    Because I've got nowhere to go.

    --
    I like you, Stuart. You're not like everyone else, here, at Slashdot.
  151. I've been preaching solar desal for a decade. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    California has plenty of sunshine to power it, and more than enough coastline, best of all it would deprive none of the other nearby states of water they need too. Washington state's ecosystems drinks that stuff, let it be. Salmon got it rough enough already.

  152. Rainwater collection from homes (or roads) by justthinkit · · Score: 1

    Average SF home is over 2,000 sq. ft. Assume a roof size, conservatively, of 1,000 sq. ft.

    10 inches of rain on 1,000 sq. ft. is around 6,000 gallons available per household per year.

    Coastal usage per person is around 145 gallons per day.

    You could provide for 12% of residential water needs just by people not sending their roof water to the sewer system.

    Imagine if we reused the water that lands on roadways...172,000 miles of highway, average width of ~10 feet...68 billion gallons of water wasted each year...almost what the entire state uses in a year.

    --
    I come here for the love
    1. Re:Rainwater collection from homes (or roads) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      68 billion gallons of water wasted each year
      Except even though it's not used, it's not wasted. A lot of it goes into the ground and replenishes aquifers and naturally flowing groundwater that's been depleted by mankind from more than a century of frenzied pumping. The rest gets evaporated and continues in the water cycle. If you want to see a version of Dune come true, start by messing with the natural flow of water on a massive scale.

    2. Re:Rainwater collection from homes (or roads) by hawguy · · Score: 1

      Average SF home is over 2,000 sq. ft. Assume a roof size, conservatively, of 1,000 sq. ft.

      Most new housing in SF is not single family -- when I lived in SF, my share of roof for my 1000 sq ft apartment was around 100 sq feet.

      10 inches of rain on 1,000 sq. ft. is around 6,000 gallons available per household per year.

      Even if I could capture 6000 gallons of water, where would I find a place to store a 10 x 10 x 8 foot container that weighs 24 tons?

      You could provide for 12% of residential water needs just by people not sending their roof water to the sewer system.

      Why shift billions of dollars of costs to consumers to build home water capture and treatment systems when cutting just 3% of agricultural usage would free up the same amount of water? You know what's easier than capturing residential roof runoff? Not planting water-heavy crops in the desert and shipping them overseas.

      Imagine if we reused the water that lands on roadways...172,000 miles of highway, average width of ~10 feet...68 billion gallons of water wasted each year...almost what the entire state uses in a year.

      I don't think you understand just how much water california uses -- residential use along is 6 - 8 million acre feet, 68B gallons is only around 200,000 acre feet. It would cost billions to build 172,000 miles of highway water reclamation and treatment plants.

    3. Re:Rainwater collection from homes (or roads) by justthinkit · · Score: 1

      The Colorado river is almost totally used by man. Google says the Colorado flow rate is 17,660 cubic feet per second. This works out to about 4 trillion gallons a year...entirely controlled by man. That works out to over 60 times the amount of water that lands on California roads each year. So if road water harvesting is a Dune, the Colorado river system alone is 60 Dunes. We seem to be surviving...

      Also, if you recycled roof or road water, the cheapest way to use it -- i.e. zero processing required -- would be to water things. So the same water would end up back in the environment. There is no bank account accumulating funds here.

      --
      I come here for the love
    4. Re:Rainwater collection from homes (or roads) by justthinkit · · Score: 1

      To properly handle something like rainwater takes upfront design. Some kind of roof tank that can gravity-feed all house toilets, and outdoor hoses would be nice.

      As to crops, why don't they put down thick black plastic over the entire field. Then capture that water to a swimming pool sized holding tank, and pump it back out via drip/sprinkler systems to water their plants as needed.

      As to thinking the consumer should pay for water recycling costs, I'm not suggesting that. But water use reduction and recycling does have to be forced, one way or another -- whether that is a cost per gallon causing prudent use, or even/odd watering days, or "no lawns allowed in AZ". So you offer incentives to those who capture...much like the solar energy people are doing today. The point is we all pay, whether the cost is direct or indirect.

      As to road water usage, I found my error -- 68B gallons is the amount used daily, road water amount was for the year. Mea culpa.

      --
      I come here for the love
    5. Re:Rainwater collection from homes (or roads) by Ravaldy · · Score: 1

      I didn't read all comments but suggesting to use the water that dropped on our roofs for drinking is silly to say the least. What I've seen new home owners do is have plastic reservoirs placed underground in their backyard. All gutters are redirected to this container which has an overflow to allow the excess to go back to the street. This allows the user to water his garden and lawn at no cost and it reduces the load on the network.

      I personally only have a 50 gallon barrel that is hidden from view and it collects rain water. An electric pump (with filter) is used to water my lawn and garden. I also use it to wash the cars and bring up the water level of the pool. The cost of the setup paid for itself within less that 5 years. In my case I have about 1200 sqft of roof. The only disadvantage of the setup is that I have to stay on top of it before winter (drain and seal the barrel)

    6. Re:Rainwater collection from homes (or roads) by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "To properly handle something like rainwater takes upfront design. Some kind of roof tank that can gravity-feed all house toilets, and outdoor hoses would be nice."

      Until it springs a leak. It'd be great for construction companies repairing water damage. Insurance companies typically have rules against upstairs waterbeds just imagine what they'd think of a rooftop tank.

      "As to crops, why don't they put down thick black plastic over the entire field. Then capture that water to a swimming pool sized holding tank, and pump it back out via drip/sprinkler systems to water their plants as needed. "

      Because the sky provides a drip/sprinkler system already. All this would do is increase the energy consumption. The natural rainfall reduces the need for watering. If there were enough water landing on the field for the crops they wouldn't need to water them at all.

    7. Re:Rainwater collection from homes (or roads) by hawguy · · Score: 1

      To properly handle something like rainwater takes upfront design. Some kind of roof tank that can gravity-feed all house toilets, and outdoor hoses would be nice.

      As to thinking the consumer should pay for water recycling costs, I'm not suggesting that.

      You just suggested building rainwater collection and 6,000 gallon holding tanks into new construction, if consumers don't pay for it, who will? Putting the 24 ton tank on top of buildings sounds like it's going to drive up building costs substantially (especially in an earthquake zone). Seems like it would be better to bury the tank and pump water to where it's needed.

      But water use reduction and recycling does have to be forced, one way or another -- whether that is a cost per gallon causing prudent use, or even/odd watering days, or "no lawns allowed in AZ". So you offer incentives to those who capture...much like the solar energy people are doing today. The point is we all pay, whether the cost is direct or indirect.

      But what's the cost/benefit between small scale rainwater collection and large scale municipal water collection? For most people, water only costs a penny or two per gallon (including sewage costs), is it really worth $60 - $100/year to build a 6000 gallon water collection system into your home? Greywater recycling might be more affordable since it doesn't need a huge tank.

      As to crops, why don't they put down thick black plastic over the entire field. Then capture that water to a swimming pool sized holding tank, and pump it back out via drip/sprinkler systems to water their plants as needed.

      I don't know if such a system is workable -- each acre would collect 27,000 gallons of water from one inch of rain, that's a lot of water to store. So collecting 10 inches of winter rain to use for summer irrigation is going to take a 270,000 gallon tank for each acre (which is a 100x100x4' tank)

      Plus, preventing rainwater from seeping into the ground is just going to increase the amount of water that needs to be added through irrigation.

      In any case, the answer for why it's not done is "It's expensive -- more expensive than the subsidized water" it would replace.

    8. Re:Rainwater collection from homes (or roads) by hawguy · · Score: 1

      I didn't read all comments but suggesting to use the water that dropped on our roofs for drinking is silly to say the least. What I've seen new home owners do is have plastic reservoirs placed underground in their backyard. All gutters are redirected to this container which has an overflow to allow the excess to go back to the street. This allows the user to water his garden and lawn at no cost and it reduces the load on the network.

      I personally only have a 50 gallon barrel that is hidden from view and it collects rain water. An electric pump (with filter) is used to water my lawn and garden. I also use it to wash the cars and bring up the water level of the pool. The cost of the setup paid for itself within less that 5 years. In my case I have about 1200 sqft of roof. The only disadvantage of the setup is that I have to stay on top of it before winter (drain and seal the barrel)

      I don't see how you get so much use out of a single 50 gallon barrel -- a lawn needs around an inch of water per week, so a small 10 foot by 10 foot lawn is going to need around 62 gallons of water per week. Yet you manage to water your lawn, wash your cars, and bring up the water level of the pool with a single 50 gallon barrel.

    9. Re:Rainwater collection from homes (or roads) by Ravaldy · · Score: 1

      1 inch of water per SQFT is for those who want that golf green lawn. Until about 6 years ago I never watered my lawn and it remained reasonably beautiful with just normal precipitation. Now I only water my lawn when it's dry for extended periods. I water for only 15 minutes per section (whatever amount of water that equals to I'm not sure but I managed to do the whole lawn which is about 30x30 total which is about 1/3 inch per sqft).

      So the point is, I get whatever I get out of the 50 gallons. It's water that isn't coming out of the city's water supply. Those that are more serious (such as some I know) will get a 1000 gallon tank installed at time of construction. Each 50 gallon saves me $10 (based on the lowest rate in the consumption chart) and based on my bills I figure I save between $25 and $40 a month.

    10. Re:Rainwater collection from homes (or roads) by hawguy · · Score: 1

      1 inch of water per SQFT is for those who want that golf green lawn. Until about 6 years ago I never watered my lawn and it remained reasonably beautiful with just normal precipitation. Now I only water my lawn when it's dry for extended periods. I water for only 15 minutes per section (whatever amount of water that equals to I'm not sure but I managed to do the whole lawn which is about 30x30 total which is about 1/3 inch per sqft).

      Watering a 30x30 ft lawn with 1/3 inch of water is around 180 gallons, so if you're spreading 50 gallons over that lawn, you're only getting around 1/10th of an inch of water, barely enough to penetrate the soil.

      So the point is, I get whatever I get out of the 50 gallons. It's water that isn't coming out of the city's water supply. Those that are more serious (such as some I know) will get a 1000 gallon tank installed at time of construction. Each 50 gallon saves me $10 (based on the lowest rate in the consumption chart) and based on my bills I figure I save between $25 and $40 a month.

      Where do you live that you pay $0.20/gallon for water? In San Francisco, the water+sewer rate is closer to $0.02/gallon. The city with the highest cost for water + sewer in this chart is Atlanta, GA ataround $0.026 per gallon.

      If you're refilling your 50 gallon barrel 2.5 to 4 times a month with rainwater, you probably don't need much water for irrigation anyway, sounds like you're already getting regular rain.

    11. Re:Rainwater collection from homes (or roads) by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

      Reusing water that lands on roadways is difficult. It tends to be polluted with various byproducts of cars, like petroleum products and worn-off synthetic rubber from the tires. In places that get snow you also have to deal with road salt. Road runoff is not suitable for direct agricultural use; it would have to be cleaned up first.

    12. Re:Rainwater collection from homes (or roads) by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

      The average rainfall for the entire state of California is about 10 inches per year, but that includes drier areas like the Central Valley and some actual desert areas like Death Valley. The annual average for San Francisco is 23.64 inches, so rainwater collection there will be more effective than your estimate.

  153. Sam Kinison by istartedi · · Score: 1
    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  154. Just build a Series of Tubes by tomhath · · Score: 1

    That's worked in other applications.

  155. Ag water isn't lost forever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some of the "gallon per almond" and "1000 gal/steak" things overlook a few aspects of this.
    1) they're often talking "lifecycle costs". That is, they take total water consumption of all almond farmers and divide by number of almonds produced. In reality, some of that water is used for "keep the tree alive"
    1a) the beef numbers are not the amount of water a cow drinks, it's also the water used in growing the feed/grass, etc. I'll happily concede that alfalfa is not a efficient crop in $/gallon of water spent or even in "tons of alfalfa/tons of water", but see below.

    2) Dump a foot of water on the soil and it soaks in. The trees use some, but some replenishes the aquifer, some evaporates.
    3) Water lost to evaporation isn't lost forever. California is unique: water evaporates in the central valley and then rains or snows on the Sierra Nevada (granted most of the moisture comes from our big solar de-sal plant called the Pacific Ocean). In any case, I would venture that water evaporating in California winds up as rain/snow falling somewhere in the US. Just another way in which California helps the nation. We appreciate your thanks.
    4) Particularly in the case of animals, some of the water is excreted. and returns to the aquifer, etc.
    5) Those of us in California who eat California produce (most of us) get part of daily water intake from that produce. We exhale, sweat, excrete some of it.

    Assessing true water consumption is really difficult, with lots of externalities, sort of like determining carbon footprints.. where do you draw the boundary line on the system. It's not like you are packaging up little bladders with a gallon of water and shipping them to China.

    And if you're a farmer, you want to make effective use of the water you have: growing a high dollar crop like almonds isn't a bad idea, compared to say, growing hay, or celery (note that California is one of world's leading producers of celery, too).

    And that's as it should be. Farmers can make money growing almonds or avocados, and use the income from that to buy tomatoes grown in Mexico, and have some money left over to pay for public schools, roads, sending their kids to college, cleaning up the atrocious air quality in Fresno, etc.. OK, I grant that some of the big farms are really owned by hedge funds and other investors who are using them as a speculative instrument. But that's a financial systems problem, not a water problem.

    Heck, with the taxes on those high dollar crops, maybe we could even build a fast train to get from LA to SF in a couple hours. Or, as our governor proposed in his first term, we could launch a California only comsat to provide universal internet service.

  156. I've met Shatner ... by ninjagin · · Score: 1

    ... and he's kind of a jerk. It doesn't surprise me that he's thinking about simplistic, over-costly "solutions" to the problem. Note that he's going to give the money as political campaign donations to whatever politician says that they'll build it (if he doesn't hit the mark, which he has no hope of hitting). Politicians all tell the truth, too, right?
    All we see here is a pretty obvious play that Shatner is making to aggrandize himself and magnify his political influence... with other people's money. It's all about him making himself a bigger celebrity in political circles. Free dinners of chicken and peas, and easy, casual podium gigs he can write off.

    --
    .. pa-ra-bo-la, pa-ra-bo-la, 2 pi R, 2 pi R, where's your latus rectum, where's your latus rectum, 2 pi R
  157. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the issue is even more absurd than that. I bet a pretty damn large percent of the water bottled by Nestle actually gets used for it's intended purpose. Very little wastage. Likely much more efficient than sending an equivalent amount of water through someone household system, and vastly more efficient than if it went to agriculture.

    Hell, if the farmer's had to buy their water from Nestle, there would be no drought and we would have the most efficient farms in the world.

  158. Re:Here's a better idea by interval1066 · · Score: 1

    Bottled Water...

    What a racket.

    --
    Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
  159. Sweet Georgia Almond by turning+in+circles · · Score: 1

    Almonds are fascinating, using over a trillion gallons of water per year in California. I always thought eating nuts was lower impact on the environment than eating meat and so a better use of resources. Not sure why we can't grow almonds in water-wealthy states - almonds grow all over the Mediterranean. In fact, almonds are very genetically close to peaches, and I'm sure would make Georgia more money than peaches, with a little investment.

    --
    Might as well face it I'm addicted to data.
    1. Re:Sweet Georgia Almond by Richy_T · · Score: 1

      Georgia actually has its own water issues.

      http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB...

    2. Re:Sweet Georgia Almond by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Atlanta is a water issue. That many people living piled on top of each other always strains resources. The EPA stays in Atlanta's ass as well because all the filth accumulated when over a million people live stacked on top of each other often ends up in the rivers and streams. Atlanta has grown so damn fast and with such piss poor planning that there are all kinds of problems to deal with. Still it's not as bad as the catastrophe coming at California.

  160. Russians tried that already by umghhh · · Score: 1

    They tried real hard and 'succeeded' at Aral sea. They also tried but not so hard with lake Sevan so it still exists. Let us see how US env. engineering can fuck things up.
    BTW Could this be that huge number of mad cows steaks have been consumed by Shatner along his service in Enterprise?

  161. Re:Here's a better idea by ilguido · · Score: 1

    From what I've read, The Alfalfa crops are about 1B gallons of water being moved to China.

    The fact is that California harvest alfalfa up to 12 times a year, it sucks up a lot of water not because it is a particularly thirsty crop (it is not), but because farmers want very high yield. Cutting alfalfa would mean less returns for farmers, guaranteed.

  162. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Orange county is full of right-wing lunatics, but the rest of the state is OK.

  163. Re:Here's a better idea by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

    Better yet, how about California stops growing alfalfa (see page 4) for their beef and dairy industry. A better idea would be to quit providing subsidies to the beef and dairy industry that makes it economical to raise them a what otherwise would have been a desert. Between alfalfa, other grass forages, and corn for cattle, the other uses of water for producing food are pretty small. Unfortunately California is a state with a lot of electoral votes and no one wants to put an end to cheap shitty beef in this country so don't expect logic to ever win out, these same policies also help out states like Washington and Oregon which also like to raise cattle out in the fucking desert.

    --
    Time to offend someone
  164. No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry Capt. But California needs to learn to MANAGE the water, and there are lots of ways to do that without building any new pipelines.

  165. Re:Here's a better idea by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    Water demand can be very elastic when there are actual economic incentives. For anyone to say demand is inelastic shows just how wasteful we are with water in modern society.

    I agree, but in the context of the conversation I was talking specifically about the demand of poor people. They probably are not huge users of water, and while their behavior can change a bit (flush the toilet less, take less showers, use disposable dishware, etc) - it's really not going to change overall water use much.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  166. Crazytalk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's just crazy - That's almost as much as building a high speed rail running along the San Andreas fault.... Even if Diane Feinsteins husband would do the job for cheap.... but that would be corruption at first level, and as such should be dismissed as craaazytalk...

  167. Re:Here's a better idea by camg188 · · Score: 1

    But unlike the East, CA has all year growing. That greatly increases a farm's earning potential. That attracts a lot of farmers.

  168. Re:Here's a better idea by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    He said setting a market rate. Using a market rate clearly implies letting the market set the rate. It does not imply setting an arbitrary rate.

    Letting the market set the rate and "setting" a market rate are different things - but I'll agree that the statement is ambiguous. I was addressing the statement as if it were the state actively setting a rate somehow as opposed to setting up some kind of a market.

    The problem of obtaining the water and paying whoever owns the water is already a solved problem.

    The fact that we are having this discussion at all would seem to contradict you. There is not enough water in CA to satisfy demand at the moment. There is plenty of water in other places. There is certainly a problem here that is not solved.

    We are only discussing how to divvy the water out.

    A more accurate word would be "rationing". We are actively limiting a resources that has more demand than supply. I happen to agree with you and ShanghiBill that rationing by raising the price is the way to go, but I think we disagree about how hard this would be to get right. I don't live in CA, or anywhere within pipeline distance of CA - so my opinion does not really matter much in the end. But I can tell you that rationing purely based on price is going to muster a whole lot of people to fight politically.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  169. Re:Here's a better idea by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

    All those hipsters who drink almond milk will have to find another kind of nut.

    Most probably already have.

    --
    Time to offend someone
  170. Good think we have all these actors in Californa by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    If not then its plights would be ignored by the rest of the world. Much like the 49 other states.

    New York (Well its city will get attention too)

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  171. in terms of energy ? by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

    How much more energy is there in a spoonful of salt plus a cup of fresh water vs a cup of salty water. Is the problem with desalination that there is an immense energy difference to overcome or that the technology we have is very inefficient ?

    --
    Nullius in verba
    1. Re:in terms of energy ? by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

      Apparently I shoudl ahve used google !

      In theory, calculation shows that 1 kWh is enough to produce one ton of fresh water from seawater. However this assumes a perfect thermodynamic and mechanical system which is not possible to build. In practical terms a desalination system will require 7 to 18 kWh/m3 depending on the corresponding investment.

      --
      Nullius in verba
  172. here's a cheaper solution ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it would be a lot cheaper just to move shatter to Seattle.

  173. Re:Here's a better idea by interval1066 · · Score: 1

    Um, rolling brown-outs? Not lately. We did have some of that early 2000's, because of a TEXAS business.
    California is the 5th largest economy in the world, and grows most of the food in the country. But yeah, your right, we're water pigs. I hope you don't mind paying $10 for a small basket of strawberries.

    --
    Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
  174. "Real" by allquixotic · · Score: 1

    Admittedly, Brad Paisley is the (credited) author of this song, but Shatner spoke the words. Maybe he should listen to the track again.

    "I'd love to help the world and all its problems
    But I'm an entertainer, and that's all
    So the next time there's an asteroid or a natural disaster
    I'm flattered that you thought of me
    But I'm not the one to call"

    I think drought qualifies as a natural disaster. Why the change of heart, Mr. Shatner?

  175. Isn't California right next to water? by guruevi · · Score: 1

    All you need is a solar powered project to convert sea water into potable water. I'm pretty sure $30B will go a long way to set up several projects all along it's coast. Also, converting current pipes from metals to plastic so your sewage systems etc can handle a little bit of salt water, then you don't need to flush with clean water and it's a lot healthier (salt water is inhospitable to a lot of bacteria)

    --
    Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
  176. Re:Here's a better idea by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

    I don't know about crappy land, but the climate is more temperate and the growing season is much longer (provided water, of course). If you're a farmer, those are excellent attributes to exploit.

    Right. That water part though - seems to be a problem for you all. Seems you want everyone elses water and plan on doing to other rivers what you did to the Colorado River. We grow food crops just fine here in the Northeast.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  177. pelosi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    according to the billboards in the central valley, this whole thing is Pelosi's fault

    so we just need to take her out of the picture - problem solved

  178. Shatner finally going senile? by kuzb · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure how he expects to raise 30B on something that only benefits one specific demographic. All successful kickstarter campaigns are for products that could potentially benefit anyone willing to plunk down their money.

    --
    BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
  179. Re:Here's a better idea by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

    a country that goes under siege will starve unless they food security.

    Except that they are not "under siege" nor is there any reason to believe they will be in the future.

  180. Re:Here's a better idea by tompaulco · · Score: 1

    all that brine has to go somewhere

    How about back where it came from?

    --
    If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
  181. Desalinization sucks by mcrbids · · Score: 1

    Desalinization is expensive. It's energy intensive, they're ugly as sin, it results in bad-tasting water, it pollutes the oceans with saline, the resulting water still needs to be pumped hundreds of miles to be used, etc. etc.

    It's a raw deal and it's stupid to mention it. Please don't.

    --
    I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    1. Re:Desalinization sucks by sjbe · · Score: 1

      Desalinization is expensive.

      So is diverting water from thousands of miles away. So is trying to turn desert into grassland when it REALLY wants to be desert.

      It's energy intensive

      No argument there but it does have the advantage of not being affected by seasonal variations or climate change and the cost is known and consistent.

      they're ugly as sin

      Who cares? It's an industrial building and odds are you don't even have to be close to it. You can pretty the building up if it really bothers you.

      it results in bad-tasting water

      Umm, bullshit. Water is water. You can filter it to make it taste fine or terrible.

      it pollutes the oceans with saline

      Again bullshit. The salt is already in the ocean and the amount we would add back to it is inconsequential. We're not reducing the amount of water in the ocean by a meaningful amount.

      the resulting water still needs to be pumped hundreds of miles to be used

      Exactly the same as it is now. Do you think water comes out of your tap by magic?

  182. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    rubycodez insulting someone about failing to know something. Now that is fucking rich. The same idiot who magically becomes and opinionated expert based on a laughably shallow understanding of any topic. A circus act.

  183. Burn down the rain forest ? by drnb · · Score: 1

    There are plenty of places that do have the climate and the rain and that would desperately like to export produce to the US, but the US agricultural lobby is keeping that from happening.

    Yes, and those places would need to burn down their rain forest to convert the land to commercial agriculture. There are massive environmental consequences for doing so, a unoffset massive carbon release, an ongoing loss of carbon sequestration and oxygen generation, the loss of possible medicinal botanics that have not been evaluated yet (ex. a new family of antibiotics that would be effective against the current resistant strains circulating in our hospitals). Plus these regions tend to be high on corruption and low on regulatory compliance. See the recent Vice episode on Palm Oil production.

    1. Re:Burn down the rain forest ? by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      Rain forests actually create their own rain and water. It's a known scientific fact.

      The height of the trees creates clouds that seed themeselves to rain.

      Chopping stuff down just causes massive wildfires and mudslides.

      (hmm, that does sound like the coast of Southern California)

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    2. Re:Burn down the rain forest ? by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

      Yes, and those places would need to burn down their rain forest to convert the land to commercial agriculture.

      Commercial agriculture doesn't need to burn down rain forest; in fact, we need less and less farmland to feed the world because agriculture is getting more efficient. Rain forest destruction is mostly due to logging and small farmers.

      But your reasoning is precious: you're saying that you favor massive crony capitalism and massive environmental destruction in the US because there is a possibility that some other nation may engage in unwise environmental policies. Wonderful. Thanks for clearing that up.

    3. Re:Burn down the rain forest ? by drnb · · Score: 1

      Yes, and those places would need to burn down their rain forest to convert the land to commercial agriculture.

      Commercial agriculture doesn't need to burn down rain forest;

      True. Yet, that is what is in fact happening. Again, watch the Vice episode on Palm Oil production to get up to speed. It gives wonderful insight into those around the world desperate to export produce to the US.

      Rain forest destruction is mostly due to logging and small farmers.

      You seem decades out of date. For example in Indonesia Palm Oil production rivals paper pulp production. The deforestation is done on an industrial scale by large corporates. Small farmers, among many others, are being displaced.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S...

      But your reasoning is precious: you're saying that you favor massive crony capitalism and massive environmental destruction in the US because there is a possibility that some other nation may engage in unwise environmental policies. Wonderful. Thanks for clearing that up.

      Silly little boy, I'm saying that the environmental havoc in rainforest regions of the developing world is far far beyond the havoc that takes place in the US. When corporations can roll into Yosemite bulldoze the trees, burn the remains and turn the land in large scale industrial production get back to me. That is exactly what is happening in Indonesian national forests for example.

    4. Re:Burn down the rain forest ? by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

      Silly little boy, I'm saying that the environmental havoc in rainforest regions of the developing world is far far beyond the havoc that takes place in the US

      Based on a Vice episode on palm oil, something that isn't even grown in California in significant amounts. Yeah, sure, makes sense. Moving right along...

    5. Re:Burn down the rain forest ? by drnb · · Score: 1

      Silly little boy, I'm saying that the environmental havoc in rainforest regions of the developing world is far far beyond the havoc that takes place in the US

      Based on a Vice episode on palm oil, something that isn't even grown in California in significant amounts. Yeah, sure, makes sense. Moving right along...

      Try moving along to the link I provided to one of many relevant wiki articles. Try a little googling on your own. That is if you actually want to be informed on what has happened in recent decades.

    6. Re:Burn down the rain forest ? by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

      Try moving along to the link I provided to one of many relevant wiki articles.

      A link to oil palms.

      Try a little googling on your own. That is if you actually want to be informed on what has happened in recent decades.

      I am informed on what has happened in recent decades; you obviously are not.

      The primary causes of deforestation in the South American rain forest are cattle ranches, logging, and subsistence agriculture. Large scale commercial agriculture is a negligible cause. Go look it up yourself if you don't believe me "if you actually want to be informed on what has happened in recent decades".

      Furthermore, your claims that "there are massive environmental consequences for destroying rainforests" are unfounded; logging, for example, arguably increases sequestration, and managed forests are at least as effective as rainforests for sequestration (and that assumes that sequestration is even important).

      Finally, it's rather selfish for the West after essentially completely deforesting Europe and using the wood to develop and become rich to deny other nations the same route to wealth. If the West wants a large forest cover, it should plant lots of trees; and in fact, the responsibility for that falls mostly on the shoulders of Europe.

      Your idea that California needs to suck dry the aquifers of the US so that Brazil subsistence farmers don't slash-and-burn the rain forest that we need because Europe deforested is absolutely idiotic. People like you are the cause of our environment problems.

    7. Re:Burn down the rain forest ? by drnb · · Score: 1

      I am informed on what has happened in recent decades; you obviously are not. The primary causes of deforestation in the South American rain forest ...

      Please continue to make my point for me and display your ignorance. Do you really think that rain forests are only found in South America. Did multiple references to Asia not provide you with a clue?

      Furthermore, your claims that "there are massive environmental consequences for destroying rainforests" are unfounded

      Various rain forest centric environmentalist groups think otherwise. As do various scientists. Seriously, google is your friend. Get educated, stop embracing your ignorance. For example you might read up on rain forests that are peat based.

      Your idea that California needs to suck dry the aquifers of the US ...

      Straw man, I said no such thing. California needs to massively reform agriculture and redo its farming infrastructure and equipment related to watering. There is no reason for California to stop being a massive supplier of food to the rest of the US. They just need to be smarter about it.

    8. Re:Burn down the rain forest ? by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

      Do you really think that rain forests are only found in South America. Did multiple references to Asia not provide you with a clue?

      Rainforest destruction in Asia follows the same patterns. But what relevance do rainforests in Asia have to this discussion anyway? You made the ludicrous assertion that if California stopped subsidizing its farmer, "the rainforests" would get destroyed. So far, you have provided nothing to support your fear mongering.

      Various rain forest centric environmentalist groups think otherwise. As do various scientists.

      I'm old enough to have lived through several decades of dire predictions from environmentalist groups and "various scientists". They all turned out to be utter and complete bullshit.

      Get educated, stop embracing your ignorance.

      Take your own advice.

    9. Re:Burn down the rain forest ? by drnb · · Score: 1

      Rainforest destruction in Asia follows the same patterns.

      No and no. On the usage front large scale agriculture is as big or bigger a threat than lumber/pulp. On the environmental consequences front the peat bases make the carbon release many times larger.

      But what relevance do rainforests in Asia have to this discussion anyway? You made the ludicrous assertion that if California stopped subsidizing its farmer, "the rainforests" would get destroyed.

      Perhaps if you faced the reality that large scale commercial agriculture in the developing world is destroying rainforests even with California producing you might understand the point that it is not as simple of replacing domestic California suppliers with offshore suppliers of food.

      So far, you have provided nothing to support your fear mongering.

      You mean other than the evidence of the damage that a single crop, palm oil, can make? Links that include things like:
      "Many Indonesian and Malaysian rainforests lie atop peat bogs that store great quantities of carbon. Forest removal and bog drainage to make way for plantations releases this carbon."
      "According to a 2007 report published by UNEP, at the rate of deforestation at that time, an estimated 98 percent of Indonesian forest would be destroyed by 2022 due to legal and illegal logging, forest fires and the development of palm oil plantations." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S...

      Again note, one single crop.

      And again, the VICE documentary was well done. it could get you up to speed rather quickly.

      I'm old enough to have lived through several decades of dire predictions from environmentalist groups and "various scientists". They all turned out to be utter and complete bullshit.

      Really, your choosing to go down a denier-like path? Well that provides some insight into your desire to keep your eyes closed.

    10. Re:Burn down the rain forest ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No and no. On the usage front large scale agriculture is as big or bigger a threat than lumber/pulp

      There are tons of sources you can find that show that your statement is bullshit, for example: http://rainforests.mongabay.co...

      Perhaps if you faced the reality that large scale commercial agriculture in the developing world is destroying rainforests even with California producing you might understand the point that it is not as simple of replacing domestic California suppliers with offshore suppliers of food.

      You have provided no evidence whatsoever that ending subsidies for California farmers will lead to an increase in the destruction of rain forest elsewhere. In fact, the world is not experiencing a shortage of farmland, it's experiencing a surplus and farmland will be taken out of production anyway. It might as well be taken out of production in California when subsidies are eliminated.

      You mean other than the evidence of the damage that a single crop, palm oil, can make? [...] Really, your choosing to go down a denier-like path? Well that provides some insight into your desire to keep your eyes closed.

      I don't deny that climate change and rain forest destruction are happening. What I "deny" is that the US can or should do anything about it.

      You're choosing to go down the path of bubbleheaded environmentalist fear mongers. There is no need to get "insight into your desire to keep your eyes closed", you're simply uninformed and stupid.

    11. Re:Burn down the rain forest ? by drnb · · Score: 1

      No and no. On the usage front large scale agriculture is as big or bigger a threat than lumber/pulp

      There are tons of sources you can find that show that your statement is bullshit, for example: http://rainforests.mongabay.co...

      Your own citation proves you wrong. Your citation has a chart stating that logging is responsible for 10-15% of deforestation and large scale agriculture is responsible for 15-20%.

      Now those were general figures. I was speaking with emphasis about asia where big-ag is even worse than in the americas.

    12. Re:Burn down the rain forest ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now those were general figures. I was speaking with emphasis about asia where big-ag is even worse than in the americas.

      Yes: you put up a red herring, avoiding any support for your ludicrous core thesis, namely that reducing or stopping agricultural subsidies in California will substantially increase rain forest destruction.

      I merely gave you some pointers suggesting to you why your fears are completely irrational. Those are hints for you to get some more information, nothing more. Go take your own advice and educate yourself.

      You have also failed to produce any rational arguments for why loss of rain forest or loss of species is a serious problem, why it is our problem, or why massive agricultural subsidies and environmental destruction in California are the best solution to preventing it.

      Your environmental arguments are about as sensible as those of flat earthers and creationists and should be treated as such.

    13. Re:Burn down the rain forest ? by drnb · · Score: 1

      Now those were general figures. I was speaking with emphasis about asia where big-ag is even worse than in the americas.

      Yes: you put up a red herring, ...

      Yeah, pointing out your "facts" are wrong based on evidence from your own citation, that's a read herring.

      ... avoiding any support for your ludicrous core thesis, namely that reducing or stopping agricultural subsidies in California will substantially increase rain forest destruction.

      I've provided ample evidence that big-ag in the developing world is currently engaged in massive rainforest destruction to convert the land to large scale agricultural production. Repeat, already happening. And you think moving 25% of US food production overseas won't increase this.

      why massive agricultural subsidies and environmental destruction in California are the best solution to preventing it.

      I offer no evidence for such a position since it is not mine. It is merely your delusional misrepresentation of my position.

  184. Re:Here's a better idea by denobug · · Score: 1

    Alredy paying that much here in Texas. There must be a conspiracy theory from the Californians!

  185. Re:Here's a better idea by denobug · · Score: 1

    why don't we reserved all the residential usage and some quota for criticalinfrastructure. Agriculture and mining users can bid to use the surface and underground water - after general public has their fair share of water usage.

    Free market at its best. Let them pay for the water they reap profit from.

  186. Snake River? by tmjva · · Score: 1

    Sometime back in my Geomorphology class back in the early 1980's I either read of the professor said there was a theory the Snake River wound its way down the backside of the Sierra Mountains and down to Baja and joined up with the Colorado River. The change came after one of those massive Northwestern volcanic eruptions. So it doesn't seem so far fetched.

    So by that reckoning, any pipe doesn't have to be built the whole way. Just over that portion where it got shunted to the Columbia River back to its old course.

    At late middle age, my memory could be faulty also. Or the theory may have been disproven by now.

    --
    Tracy Johnson
    Old fashioned text games hosted below:
    http://empire.openmpe.com/
    BT
    1. Re:Snake River? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Snake River originates in Yellowstone, many 100's of miles northwest of the Sierra Nevada. The Hoback Range stands between it and the Green River drainage. It has never flowed there. Since the last Yellowstone eruption 600,000 years ago it has followed its current coarse though Hoback Canyon and to the Snake River Plain of Idaho.

    2. Re:Snake River? by tmjva · · Score: 1

      Then perhaps I misheard.

      I recall being told there was apparently "some" major river that flowed Southward from North, East California that isn't there anymore. I remember a professor showing us his aerial photo slides taken from a small plane following the extinct riverbed in his attempts to prove it.

      Of course this wan the days before major releases of unclas Satellite Imagery. Who knows where his theory went.

      --
      Tracy Johnson
      Old fashioned text games hosted below:
      http://empire.openmpe.com/
      BT
  187. Urban drainage by drnb · · Score: 1

    Some (most ?) of that rainwater landing on roofs drains into the soil not the urban drainage system, which for the record is separate from sewage. So leave the roofs alone. Collect water at the urban drainage system.

  188. Use the Transporter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, Captain Kirk wants to build a PIPELINE to move that water? Just have Scotty use the transporter to move the water to Lake Mead.

  189. No, the focus need to be on agriculture by drnb · · Score: 1

    One would need a massive inland industrial solar facility to power a desalinator. Assuming such a facility could be built it might be better put to other uses. A far more practical plan would involve massive updating of water policy and watering techniques in California agriculture. That is where 80% of the water goes.

    1. Re:No, the focus need to be on agriculture by Lumpy · · Score: 1, Troll

      Just two large nuclear plants will do it just fine. We dont have to go all hippy huggy green for the power source.

      Plus sell the salt to Trader Joes for the rich people to buy.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    2. Re:No, the focus need to be on agriculture by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      One would need a massive inland industrial solar facility to power a desalinator. Assuming such a facility could be built it might be better put to other uses. A far more practical plan would involve massive updating of water policy and watering techniques in California agriculture. That is where 80% of the water goes.

      Or you could just put solar panels on top of your water canals, which would cut their evaporation to 1/10th, and provide power for desalination.

      But that would work.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    3. Re:No, the focus need to be on agriculture by drnb · · Score: 1

      One would need a massive inland industrial solar facility to power a desalinator. Assuming such a facility could be built it might be better put to other uses. A far more practical plan would involve massive updating of water policy and watering techniques in California agriculture. That is where 80% of the water goes.

      Or you could just put solar panels on top of your water canals, which would cut their evaporation to 1/10th, and provide power for desalination.

      But that would work.

      Actually, no, well with respect to solar that is. Power transmission, maintenance and repairs, etc are incredibly complicated by decentralization and distance. Practical solar needs to be concentrated. Talk to engineers rather than activists.

    4. Re:No, the focus need to be on agriculture by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      No, grids work by power flow, and if you've ever driven along I-5 where most of the canal infrastructure is colocated with, you'd know that the high power lines go along that route too.

      Used to be a power engineer. Studying for PhD in C&EE with focus on power systems.

      A lot of Cali energy comes from as far away as BC. Used to provide it myself and helped set up the intertie disconnects at the borders as part of the Y2K/wildfire/quake safety prep.

      Replace power in one place and you push fewer electrons in another place, power loss drops as fewer electrons pushed from low demand high supply area to high demand low supply area.

      I'm working on multi-system integration of solar wind hydro and other systems, and use of biofuel shaping. Which is another can of worms, of course.

      Desal is a good coastal solution, which the maps show could help, but you still have to pump it up. Good use for solar/wind (variable supplies can run pumps fairly well, with stop systems, to resupply reservoirs).

      But ... have to fix the water demand part of the equation first, and the loss of water/soil that feeds that cycle. There's your big problem.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    5. Re:No, the focus need to be on agriculture by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      why solar? why not use the excess salt to build a salt reactor??? free fuel

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    6. Re:No, the focus need to be on agriculture by drnb · · Score: 1

      Its not the long distance transmission lines that are the problem. Its the complication of all the gear to connect that long snaking line of panels to such infrastructure. It just seems so unlikely to be cost effective be construct and maintain such remote/repetitive gear compared to a more centralized industrial solar facility. Hell, not just keep it working but guarding it as well. There will be a lot of panels stolen from such a project.

    7. Re:No, the focus need to be on agriculture by doccus · · Score: 1

      A desalinator should properly be powered by wave power..

  190. solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kill half of Californians and suck the water out of their dead bodies to hydrate the other half.

    Or, you know, they can move north.

    WTF is with all these people living/growing in fucking deserts? Yeah, I'm talking to you Southern California, New Mexico, and Goddamn ARIZONA!

  191. They did it in China by Justpin · · Score: 1

    With the south north water diversion project. Cost $80bn so far and has 2000km of pipes.

  192. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because the Middle East is the poster-child of international peace and stability, and has been for the last thousand years... /s

  193. Water in Seattle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shatner is an idiot. I lived in Seattle until a couple of years ago. The city has a marvelous snow-fed water supply, but it is barely able to cope with the demand of a growing population. In years with low snowfall, there's rationing. This fool confuses the city's drizzle with lots of rain. Seattle only gets about 40-50 inches of rain a year. It has no major rivers to tap.

    Tapping the Columbia River might be more viable, but I've heard that Oregon has told California that there's no way they're going to give up its water. California is going to have to tackle this one on their own.

  194. Hey rabbits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about instead of turning farmers into rural poor we find a way to stop the urban poor from breeding like livestock ?

  195. It's not drinking water that's the problem here. by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    The 2 "crops" that are taking the water:

    • Alfalfa - going to China to feed THEIR livestock.
    • Bottled Water - Nestle's is buying municipal water at residential rates and selling it back at 100s of times the original cost.

    Shut those 2 things down and water problem solved.

    You are clueless.

    Look, I hate Nestle and I think bottled water is stupid too, but the amount of water they bottle is trivial compared to the trillions of gallons of water shortage representing the drought. They could bottle a hundred times more water, or a thousand, and it still wouldn't make a lick of difference.

    The problem is measured in trillions of gallons. It's not drinking water that's the problem here.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  196. Um, no, we have a drought too. by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    No, seriously, half of the Washington State counties are already in Drought Emergency, and we barely have enough water to provide bottled water to all the Hollywood folk drinking bottled water that is really our tap water from Seattle (Tolt River watershed).

    Stop subsidizing agricultural water use for "high-profit" water using crops. That might actually work.

    We use 1/4th the water in Seattle that you water wasters in California use. One-fourth. Per capita.

    Change YOUR behavior.

    Then we'll talk.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  197. Re:Here's a better idea by cusco · · Score: 1

    On the other hand, my grandfather used to ship peaches from Traverse City to Georgia for their Peach Festival, for much the same reason (plus his quality was a lot higher).

    --
    "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
  198. To expensive to dump spray on the ground by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    Desalination is a plausible solution for water for consumer use--that is, urban and suburban locations.

    It is not a very plausible solution for agricultural use-- too expensive.

    Actually, there are a number of issues with desalination as it presently exists. The cost of plant construction and operations puts the cost of water supply at roughly triple that of traditional methods.

    Exactly. That's why it's not a plausible solution for agricultural use. If your application is to take water and spray it on the ground, yes, it needs to be cheap.

    For urban and suburban use-- well, given the rents, and the cost of housing, in San Diego (not even to mention San Francisco!)-- the cost of water just isn't a factor. You could triple it and not notice.

    They also depend on fossil fuels and thus contribute to greenhouse gasses. They produce brine and boron contaminants that can not easily be disposed of on either land or sea without potentially significant impact of the wildlife exposed to them.

    Those are engineering problems.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  199. Re:Here's a better idea by toadlife · · Score: 2

    California does not grow "most of the food in the country." California does grow most of the Artichokes, Strawberries and Almonds, but those are hardly staples like corn and wheat, which are not grown in California in any significant amount.

    --
    I don't always use unix-like operating systems; but when I do, I prefer FreeBSD.
  200. Invisible Hand of the Market! by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    1) Stop exemptions and subsidies.
    2) Change more for water.
    3) ???
    4) PROFIT!!!

    This would fix the whole water shortage thing in short order. It would likely destroy a lot of unsustainable agriculture in the area as well. It would also promote a lot of conservation and probably innovation. So win-win-win.

    Even doubling what the cost per volume of water would probably be pretty trivial to most domestic households.

  201. Re: Why not? farmers by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    I prefer the farmers move out. Those assholes use 60% of the water.

    Actually, there are some easy fixes to use less water.

    1. Stop subsidizing agricultural water use.

    2. Plant mixed crops (alternate rows) and plant cover crops between tree rows. Bonus: more soil retention, more water retention, easier to control pests.

    3. Plant barrier trees around fields. Birds on those eat pests, Trees reduce soil loss, and water loss.

    We learned this all in the 1970s in British Columbia, just north of Seattle. Adapt.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  202. Re:Here's a better idea by smithmc · · Score: 1

    One of the great ironies.. the east coast has a good watershead and extremely fertile land, but we moved so large chunks of our agriculture to regions with crappy land.

    "Crappy" is defined by more than fertility. What California's land has lots of, that the East Coast doesn't have as much of, is sunshine, which is even more difficult to ship around from place to place than water.

    --
    Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
  203. Re:Here's a better idea by toadlife · · Score: 1

    I've read the most of the alfalfa grown in CA is actually shipped to China to feed Chinese cows.

    --
    I don't always use unix-like operating systems; but when I do, I prefer FreeBSD.
  204. Re:Here's a better idea by smithmc · · Score: 1

    People plant there because one of the most important ingredients in farming is not water, or nutrients (not that those aren't also very important), but sunlight. And California has lots and lots of it.

    --
    Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
  205. Re:Here's a better idea by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

    Well shit, I guess if that 1.5 billion gallons a day that 30 desalinization plants would produce doesn't completely fix the problem, better not pursue it at all. We can't have multiple solutions that all add up, can we?!

    --
    Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  206. Re:Here's a better idea by toadlife · · Score: 1

    Our agricultural economy makes up barely 2% of the state's GDP. It's only a problem for the plantation owners and their quasi slave labor in the middle of the state. Unfortunately, those plantation owners give a shitload of money to state politicians in order to make sure production trumps sustainability.

    --
    I don't always use unix-like operating systems; but when I do, I prefer FreeBSD.
  207. Re:Here's a better idea by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

    There's bigger problems than that with what he's proposing here, like the fact that Oregon is between Washington and California.

    Oregon doesn't like massive pipelines of stuff spanning their state - they don't even like the pipelines if they get a piece of the action, such as the proposed LNG terminal on the coast.

    Better file this under "Good Luck With that."

    --
    Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  208. Re:Here's a better idea by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

    This is why the Greens' whole approach is to make both electricity and water scarce and expensive, to punish man for the sin of having civilized prosperity. If we could unleash technology on the problem with no restraints, as we have in the computer/electronics field, we could make both those resources cheap and plentiful. But under current conditions Greens would love to set urban society against the agricultural world by maintaining artificial scarcity until southern and central California become deserts once more, as they were in the state of nature.

  209. He's forgotten about Oregon. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oregonians will not be happy about letting a pipeline run through their state - and especially not if it's going to South CA.

  210. Hyperloop! by Andy_R · · Score: 1

    If you're going to spend $30Bn on a pipe to Seattle, build a Hyperloop instead!

    --
    A pizza of radius z and thickness a has a volume of pi z z a
  211. yes precious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Where does he wants to get the water?"

    Yes, precious. We wants the precious. For our precious bodily fluids, precious. It's incredibly obvious... Gollum! Gollum! Foreign substances in our precious bodily fluids, precious. Without the knowledge of the individual precious! No! No choices... precious. That's the way your hard core Commies workses, precious.

  212. You don't build a major city away from water by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Oh, really?

    Yes really. A small town is fine. A city of 1million+ in the middle of a desert is an absurdity.

    Yes, Phoenix and Tucson have added to our natural water supplies by diverting some of the Colorado River,

    "Some"? The Colorado River doesn't even reach the ocean anymore. ALL of it gets diverted. Not just by Phoenix to be fair but really there is no reason the diversion to Phoenix should even be necessary at all.

    The communities have existed for a VERY long time.

    Not with 1.5 million people they haven't. Phoenix existing as a small city is fine. At it's current size is not.

    I dare say it's far easier to deal with water conservation in the desert here, then the floods, hurricanes, earthquakes, blizzards, frosts, tornados, mudslides and other forms of natural disasters found in other parts of the country that we are quite immune to, thank you very much.

    I think you have no idea what living in other parts of the country is actually like if you think those things are huge problems most of the time. Plus we aren't sucking down massive amounts of power for air conditioning for most of the year and diverting entire rivers to support a huge city in a place where there is no justification for a huge city to exist. I've been to Phoenix. Nice enough town. But it should be no more than 1/10th it's current size.

  213. Edumacated? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Someone needs to tell Shattner that he didn't ACTUALLY go to Starfleet Academy.

  214. Re:Here's a better idea by KingMotley · · Score: 2

    California doesn't even come close to "grow[ing] most of the food in the country". The account for 13.2% of the food grown in the US. While that is good for a single state, it's falls far shy of "most". In fact, California, while nearly 3 times the size of Illinois in area, only generates slightly over twice the food. That seems a lot less impressive.

  215. Re:Here's a better idea by toadlife · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, if you dump it straight back into the ocean without carefully dispersing it, it can end up killing all of sea life around it.

    --
    I don't always use unix-like operating systems; but when I do, I prefer FreeBSD.
  216. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So where did all the water go once they watered the crops with it? Surely you're not suggesting that it simply vanished?

  217. Re:Here's a better idea by Rei · · Score: 1

    That's actually the point. Warm temperatures and near constant sunlight = high productivity - if you import water. Ag in California takes up 80% of the water, but ag + mining together is only 2% of the economy. It's fine when water is abundant, but when it's in short supply, ag has to give.

    --
    *Kid Rock runs for Senate* Democrats: We must run Kid Scissors.
  218. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And that produce will have more minerals and grow bug free. Double win!

  219. Re:Here's a better idea - Water usage percentages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I need a good source here, but I recently heard that public use (citizens) was 4% use of the water pie, commercial was around 24% of the water pie, and over 70% was agriculture. The governor recently added water restrictions, etc. to that 4% to accomplish what exactly? Pie charts are amazing.

  220. Re: Here's a better idea by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    Wannabe central planners think they have all the answers.

    Here's a crazy idea - stop artificial price fixing of water and let the stupid uses become unprofitable through millions of decisions by people who know about their own business.

    "Oh, no," they say, "we know better. Even though they created this mess with that attitude.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  221. Re:Here's a better idea by KingMotley · · Score: 1

    Area of the states taken from Wikipedia. Crop production taken from the respective state's agricultural departments.

  222. Re:Here's a better idea by ninjagin · · Score: 1

    :) I live in Colorado, and we have our own water problems. (Though less of them, of late, but it's always been really dry out here.) Our snowpack fills a bunch of rivers. At the same time, our glaciers and year-round snowpack are fading, and that takes a lot of elasticity out of the supply. It'll be dry times up here, too, before long (again?), and there's nobody around to pump water to us.

    There's a lot of agriculture out here, too, but it's nowhere near the scale or variety of California. I suspect that this is why New York isn't, for example, a big producer of almonds. It's dead last, in fact. So yeah, you can grow "food crops" in the northeast, but not nearly as many different ones, and not nearly as productively/cheaply.

    --
    .. pa-ra-bo-la, pa-ra-bo-la, 2 pi R, 2 pi R, where's your latus rectum, where's your latus rectum, 2 pi R
  223. Re:Here's a better idea by cusco · · Score: 1

    Magical market approaches only work when there is some possibility of an actual market existing. Water supply is a natural monopoly, there is no real way to have more than one source available to a residence unless you're willing to tear up the streets and run several thousand miles of pipes. Any sort of "market-based" approach to water supply in California are likely to replicate the Aguas de Tunari privatization fiasco, where the water company executives had to run for their lives because of the (justifiably) irate customer base was coming.

    --
    "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
  224. Re:Here's a better idea by Chess_the_cat · · Score: 2

    Maybe we could dilute it with fresh water.

    --
    Support the First Amendment. Read at -1
  225. Who wrote the fucking summary? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "whatever that has been collected... Where does he wants to get the water?"

    Where indeed.

    You fucking American idiots.

  226. I don't know what it is but I know what it costs by goodmanj · · Score: 1

    Just for future reference, if you find yourself in a position of authority and someone comes to you with a solution to your pressing problem, and he doesn't know exactly what the solution is or how to make it happen, but he knows exactly how much it costs? You throw that guy out on the street, because that guy is at best a con artist, at worst utterly clueless. (Yes, in that order.)

  227. playing fair by Tristfardd · · Score: 1

    The original parent said "for the past century" and this is correct, California did have the climate. You can state that conditions have changed. They have, indeed, but not in such a way as to imply the falseness of the quoted sentence.

    It is just a matter of playing fair in an argument.

    1. Re:playing fair by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

      But the conditions have not changed; California has never had the climate: it's always been too dry for this kind of agriculture.

  228. Re:Here's a better idea by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    Yes, at best it could be a market like the electrical market where you have suppliers and distributors. The suppliers could certainly compete, I guess.

    I think what they are really suggesting is that rationing should be implemented via price increasing with demand or inversely with supply. This would definitely work, but I'm not sure they have thought through all of the repercussions and it would be very tricky to get right.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  229. Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seattle doesn't have too much water, it has the correct amount to support the trees and other lifeforms that inhabit the region. I know. I was one of those life forms for 10 years. If we ever had an unseasonably dry winter, it quickly turned into a drought. So stealing Seattle's water is a dumb idea and Seattleites will have none of it.

  230. They can buy my water by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would be glad to sell them the water I use to water my lawn and spray off my sidewalks. Actually I'd just trade it for some Disneyland passes and a couple of Dodgers Tickets. (That costs 5x more than I spend on water a year anyway)

  231. my worry is politics by k6mfw · · Score: 1

    A lot of wars began when the water supply dried up. Fortunately northern and southern California are not separate countries otherwise we'd be in a shooting war. But as water crises continues, we will also see a lot political nonsense. I'm sure there are cooler and more intelligent heads working this situation, but a licensed engineer is no match against The Shatner on the talk shows.

    --
    mfwright@batnet.com
  232. Re:Here's a better idea by SirGeek · · Score: 1

    And that produce will have more minerals and grow bug free. Double win!

    Yup. They use stuff like Azomite and Elomite (Rock Dusts) as soil amendments.

    I used it for the 1st time last year and my garden's yeilds were amazing (I harvested double the plum tomatoes from the less plants - 132lbs in 2014/15 plants vs. 66lbs in 2013/18 plants

  233. Go ahead and build it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We will only charge you a small fee for our excess water.

    $1bn/year sounds about right.

  234. CA is fine the way it is. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nope pretty happy that it is drying up. It takes a lot of water to grow fruits & nuts in the desert, and frankly California has had too many decades in a row of bumper crops of both.

    Time to let them die off.

  235. Shatner's Got It Backwards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With the number of Californians who have moved to Oregon and Washington over the last 30 years, California is already coming to the Northwest's water. There's no reason to send more of the Northwest's water to California.

  236. Re:Here's a better idea by cheater512 · · Score: 1

    What exactly is wrong with anti-caking additives? Generally people don't like their salt as a single solid mass.

  237. Re:Here's a better idea by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    texas electric is fully within the borders of texas. not on the national grid. how can you blame texas for that?? http://www.texastribune.org/20...

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  238. Re:Here's a better idea by ganjadude · · Score: 2

    free markets would mean ye who owns the land owns the water. not a bidding war after the government takes and distributes it

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  239. Re:Here's a better idea by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    NY is mostly apples and corn, at least in the hudson valley

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  240. Re:Here's a better idea by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    san fran is the capitol of left wing lunitics

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  241. From Shatner's Scotch by hduff · · Score: 1

    All that water that Shatner won't use to dilute his Scotch . . .

    --
    "I believe in Karma. That means I can do bad things to people all day long and I assume they deserve it." : Dogbert
  242. 30 billions, really? by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

    No way.
    People get impressed when they see millions, billions, trillions etc.

    You want to build a pipeline from Seattle to California providing water? How much per day? Actually not relevant ...

    Look at the cost of the Panama Channel, 400 million dollars. For just diging a trench ... a few locks and using mostly the lakes already there.

    No way anyone is building a super pipeline for water for a mere 30 billion ... he is off by one magnitude, if not ny two!

    --
    Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  243. Re:Here's a better idea by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    whats wrong with thinking local first? Instead of trying to fix the entire state at once, take smaller areas and fix them

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  244. What water? by adameros · · Score: 1

    By the time the pipeline is built, Washington will be dry as well: http://kuow.org/post/drought-d...

  245. And the PNW is in a drought too by Radical+Moderate · · Score: 1

    Not as bad as CA, but this year's snowfall is just a fraction of normal. Expect lots of fires in the forests of OR and WA this year. I don't know where Shatner gets the idea that Seattle has more than it can use.

    --
    Never let a lack of data get in the way of a good rant.
  246. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Great, we'll put you in charge of this, so everyone can come a lynch YOU when you collapse Californias' economy because suddenly things we produce that the WORLD is buying are no longer being produced. Great plan, asshole, you should run for President as a Tea Party Republican or Libertarian or some other fucktardedly stupid group.

    WE ARE IN A 100 YEAR DROUGHT YOU MORONS, THAT'S WHY WE HAVE A WATER CRISIS! STOP PILING ON WITH YOUR OWN GODDAMNED AGENDAS!

  247. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just slapping a sticker on it does nothing. They will just pass the cost on. You need to be a bit more direct with it if you want it to happen any time soon. Your way *maybe* the magic hand will do the work?

    thru rational water prices.
    Who picks the water prices? The local govs? The ones OWNED by the people using the water now? Further up? You mean the ones owned by interests that dont care about water?

    Right now the ideal way is flood it and hope for the best. Its cheap and easy. You need to have a stick and a carrot to fix it.

  248. Re:Why not? dirty desal probs by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    Good point. Desalination typically does produce a lot of "gunk".

    Even ones using old fashioned multistage evaporation still has large quantities of residue left.

    We could take that plastic-filled residue and dump it in the nearest Marianas Trench, thus providing food for the next invading aliens, or we could just give up and pretend we can't do something with it.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  249. So many things that are just wrong by charrois · · Score: 1

    First, a 4 foot diameter pipeline is going to make any kind of significant difference? This wouldn't even have the capacity of a small creek. Second, he wants to build it aboveground. Maybe in California that's doable, but in piping the water from Seattle, there are some places that do freeze. How would such a pipeline handle that? As others have posted here, that $50,000,000,000 would be much more effective in working out better (more economical, environmentally friendly, etc.) methods of desalination. Also, the economics just don't make sense. It takes 5 gallons of water to grow a single walnut. How in the world would it be cost effective to power the pumps needed to transport that much water that far to raise so little? Unless people expect to pay hundreds of dollars per pound of walnuts, I can't fathom how this would work. I think if California is being hit by drought, it needs to take a hard look at where their water is going. If the crops they love to grow there just aren't sustainable for the water they use, they really have no choice but to transition to agriculture appropriate for their climate. A bandaid solution like this is in no way the right way to go.

  250. Gee, great plan. by Half-pint+HAL · · Score: 1

    So Shatner is looking for charitable donations to provide water to one of the richest regions on the face of the planet? Seriously? Is he going to back this campaign with a video of slow-mo shots of people suffering in the OC because their lawn is looking a little brown and the water level in their swimming pools is slightly lower than they'd like. "The people of Beverly Hills are slightly uncomfortable -- let's make their lives better."

    --
    Got them moderator blues I blieve I walk out the do', With these mod-points I been gettin', I 'most never post no mo'
    1. Re:Gee, great plan. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, he's looking for voluntary donations, whether or not this plan would constitute charity, I don't know.

      Given that there are plenty of rich people in the area, perhaps he is hoping for their voluntary contributions to solve their own problems.

      Or he's just shitting us, because this is the kind of joke he'd play.

  251. Re:Here's a better idea by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    A lot of lettuce is grown in Yuma. Not liberal territory.

    No, not all of it,and that water comes from elsewhere also...

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  252. Re:Here's a better idea by Last+Warrior · · Score: 1

    Agriculture in California happens primarily in the central valley. That is an arid part of the state would pretty much be desert if the water wasn't piped in there. So yea, if they want to claim the groundwater before any other water is piped in then I expect that the central valley will dry up in the next few months and no one will have any water. The reason they have water now is that they are allotted water rights over a certain amount that is piped in from other places.

    Free markets would mean that they would get no water and they would have been stupid to create a agricultural business in the desert.
    Free market is not the answer to every business question.

  253. Re: Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ENRON = "a Texas business". Houston, Texas. Price manipulation. Ring a bell ???

  254. Re:Here's a better idea by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    Who cares if Nestle is reselling water ant any price? Their usage is a tiny fraction of the total, and shutting down ALL bottled water production in California would change nothing about the drought and impact.

    Agriculture is the big user, and then people who live where water isn't. As with many resource shortages, this is equally a problem of delivery and planning. There is water to be had for Californians, but it takes planning, and there are few excuses for not doing that already. Only now do they start looking at desalination.

    Looking to take it from Arizona is sort of cheap. Not going to happen.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  255. Re:Here's a better idea by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    Santa Barbara has a plant in standby mode - 2 years to reactivate, and they have begun planning for that. Planning.

    San Diego will be getting water form the Carlsbad plant late this year. It took only about 15 years to build this, mostly to overcome objections from everyone.

    These plants take time to permit and build, and planning is the most important step. But in California, that is in short supply, like the water.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  256. Re:Here's a better idea by budgenator · · Score: 1

    Interesting, in Michigan farmers who grow alfalfa, cut it and let it lay until it's dry before they bale it. That way you don't lose the water, it stays local. I can't even imagine how you would ship wet baled alfalfa to china in a ship without it catching fire from the fermentation! It's hard to imagine exporting Alfalfa to China period, but stranger things have happened, I'd imagine the shipping would be several times the cost of the alfalfa.

    --
    Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  257. scam by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

    This has nothing to do with bringing water to California.

    "..if the KickStarter campaign doesn't raise enough money then he will donate whatever that has been collected to a politician who promises..."

    The probability of kickstarter providing 30 billion seems....low so the secondary plan must actually be the real plan.

    --
    blindly antisocialist = antisocial
  258. Re:Here's a better idea by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    Free markets would mean that they would get no water and they would have been stupid to create a agricultural business in the desert.

    thisa sums it up nicely.

    why should cali get to take water from other places because of their poor planning? I mean if they want to buy it AFTER the state that has the location of water has gotten all it needs/wants, and they sell it to cali, thats fine i suppose. but plain and simple. if you plant in a desert, dont complain when you run out of water

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  259. Re: Here's a better idea by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    ahh, I got you now. Still it has nothing to do with texas. a private company screwed cali (and a bunch of others) I wonder how many companies screwed millions of americans that are located in cali

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  260. Re:Here's a better idea by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    im sorry are you proposing the government raise taxes on water??

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  261. Water pipeline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh my William has not been in the Pacific Northwest lately. Sir drive from LA to Seattle, and you will see how the drought is effecting more then California.

  262. Re:Here's a better idea by onepoint · · Score: 1

    sorry, that's a fallacy.
    Under siege might not be a good word

    but here are some examples of what I am trying to present

    bananas ( we have no bananas today ) long modern history of food shortages

    Potatoes, real good example of improper management lead to the Irish famine, blamed on the virus ( which is a factor ) but the restrictions of import / export from Ireland lead to it.

    Corn as a stable product ... biodiesel changed all that
    production history variations and the market did respond well to it.
    http://www.card.iastate.edu/io...

    Rice as a stable product ... subject to weather issue, one good flood can wipe out %'s of the worlds production
    storms and percentage of damage http://environmentalresearchwe... ( I think it might be a tainted new source, but I feel the idea of damage of crops is presented properly )
    panic and rumors caused http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2...

    --
    if you see me, smile and say hello.
  263. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What I've never understood is that California can have both agriculture and high population density. However agriculture has to get with the program.

    Take a look at the Israelis. They grow lots of stuff in the desert, and with all the water scarcity that implies. It's called trickle irrigation; I'll wait while you look it up.

    As long as agricultural water is costed in a way that allows farmers to ignore water-wise growing systems, they are going to ignore the hassle and expense of those techniques. No, don't bother digging up the case study of the one farmer in a thousand who cares about water rationing. Don't show me the academic study or the pilot project of someone doing it better. These water-wise systems need to deployed at scale, and it should have happened 20 or more years ago already.

    The technology already exists and it's practical. The only thing lacking is the incentive structure to make it happen.

  264. Re:Here's a better idea by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

    But unlike the East, CA has all year growing. That greatly increases a farm's earning potential. That attracts a lot of farmers.

    And so does Florida. They just have water to go with it.

    Without th ewater that California steals from other states, it's just scrubland.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  265. Stop the California drought by stopping geoenginee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.geoengineeringwatch.org/engineered-drought-catastrophe-target-california/

  266. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's fine, just stop using California almonds. Ship them from Spain, or the Middle East. Syria, Iran and Turkey all produce excellent almonds, and the more trade (in non-controversial products) America does with those countries, the better.

  267. Re: Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is cheaper to ship to China than move it within cali. Ever heard of trade deficit? All these empty ships going back to China will bring alfalfa along for almost nothing...

  268. Re: Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank you for being the first person yet to point out the biggest issue. Water's not free, get your damn own.

  269. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Washington State is anything like British Columbia (and considering they're right next door to each other, and Washington is south of the 49th), there are looming water problems; an extremely low snow pack which will likely mean water restrictions in some areas. Yes, it's rains a lot in the region, but the way that rain is "captured" is through snowfall.

    There are reservoirs that are typically drained in the spring but has been forgone this year due to low snowpack. WA should be OK this summer but a second year of such conditions could present a problem.

  270. All that's left is to quote Mark Twain by storkus · · Score: 1

    "Whiskey is for drinking and water is for fighting over."

  271. Re:Here's a better idea by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 1

    Um, rolling brown-outs? Not lately. We did have some of that early 2000's [wikipedia.org], because of a TEXAS business.

    Don't confuse a blackout with a brownout.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B...

    A brownout is often unobservable to people, however computer equipment is known to fail faster if it has to endure too many. California has generally had them every few years or so, lasting different variations, with the last one happening in 2013 for about 4 hours.

  272. Re: Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    We already pay to much for California crops. Beef in Idaho 2.99 Cali 7.99. California has a cost problem. It's a desert quit growing grass.

  273. Michigan guy here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I used to live in California, but I'm a Michigan native. To me, socal is a desert, and always was one. I didn't need anymore proof than to just look around at the dry land, but when I mentioned that to anyone, they'd just say:

    "We're in the middle of a drought!"

    That was back in the 90s, but its funny how that drought must have been going on for about a hundred years now. The place isn't conducive to a large population or growing a large amount of crops. End of story.

    No, you won't be able to pipe water in from any other state. Other states don't even like you, and they have their own environmental groups and government departments that would never let anyone pipe water somewhere else. Here, if you have a swampy area on your land, you can't just drain it and plant grass - it's considered a natural wetland and has to stay that way. And outsiders think you could somehow pipe the water to someplace else...

    Nope, California is going to have to solve this one on their own. They created the problem on their own with massive over-development and crazy water rights laws.

  274. Fuck California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you come for our fresh water we'll kill you all. Now go die in your uninhabital desert you never should have moved to in the first place.

  275. Re:Here's a better idea by rubycodez · · Score: 1

    The same place as piss from people who drank Nestle bottled water

  276. Re:Here's a better idea by 4pins · · Score: 1

    Mod parent up! The drought has hit Seattle. It is going to be a long summer!

    --
    I will not mourn that which I never had to lose. - Unknown
  277. No way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We're not giving California our water. They should do what every other nation has done, desalination.

  278. No, they don't - you're misleading people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reverse-osmosis plants (which is they type most people build) DO NOT use "all kinds of chemicals" - THAT would add complexity and costs for no benefit. They use pressure to force sea water through filters. At the end stage of the filtration system, you get two things: [1] fresh water, and [2] all the other stuff that WAS in the sea water that was pulled into the system. It's all that latter stuff that goes back into the sea WHERE IT CAME FROM AN WHERE IT BELONGS!

    A desalination plan does EXACTLY the same thing as the natural water cycle, just by a different mechanism. The natural cycle uses heat to takes fresh water from the salty ocean by evaporation, leaving behind the salt and lots of other stuff (like fish and their waste). Desalination systems take fresh water from the salty ocean using heat (in the boiler-type systems common on ships) or using pressure and filters with microscopic holes (for the osmosis type common on land) and toss back all the rest - there's no real difference unless you are a crazy fanatical greenie who is just looking for some way to spook an uneducated public into supporting your political drive to de-industrialize the western world

    1. Re:No, they don't - you're misleading people by ImprovOmega · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but even reverse osmosis plants use chemicals to prep and clean the water and to protect their equipment. Sea water is astoundingly corrosive, so if you don't want to be replacing all the core parts of your plant every year you have to treat it to prevent that damage. Those chemicals are not typically filtered out before being dumped back into the ocean.

      But let's just assume they filtered out all those chemicals and only dumped saltier concentrated sea water back into the ocean. The area around the dump site would still be a death pit for any and all marine life very close by. Now you can get away with a few of these plants, sure. But if you start trying to provide enough water for, say, the entire state of California, through desalination alone, you're going to absolutely murder the coastal ecology.

      Again, I'm not an eco-freak. I think we should have maybe a dozen or so such plants (maybe a few more) to help offset the drought and tough beans for some of the sea life involved. But if you scale it out too much you will wreck the coast.

  279. Just what does he think the train is for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The governor of California is spending tens of billions of dollars building the world's slowest high-speed train. When it's done, he can put water tank cars on the rails and use it move water! There are not, after all, very many people who travel between the small towns in the central valley that the train will connect. Warren Buffet is probably investing in water tanks right now (He sure owns LOTS of oil tank train cars, and makes tons of cash moving oil in them while encouraging dopey young voters to elect politicians who oppose oil pipelines... gotta admire that man's ability to invest and plan)

  280. Another dumbshit idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    California needs to quit wasting water. Period. There's no reason people need to be watering lawns or golf courses or washing their cars more than once a month. Learn to live within your means, California, and quit pretending that everyone else is out there to serve your wants and whims.

  281. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why do you shave your almonds? Do they grow little beards?

  282. LFTR? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uh Bill, you may want to watch a few videos on LFTR technology. Clean power during the day and run desalination plants at night, pump it into the reservoirs and when those are full enough pump the water back into aquifers.

    How many LFTRs can you build for $30 billion? What would their output be? Will we just wait and buy them from China?

  283. The bottom line by fseminario · · Score: 1

    Urban: 11% Agriculture: 39% Environmental: 51% http://www.ppic.org/main/publi... Urban is already doing what it can to save, which is not really known because I see a bunch of ads for saving water at home recently where I live in Orange County, CA. The finger should be pointed at Agriculture. Don't force what you can't grow at the cost of the citizens funding the imbalance.

  284. Fuck 'Em by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    CA created their own problem, don't suck the rest of the country into their mess.

  285. why do we waste water to flush by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most water consumption is for activities not related to hydration. Look at the volume of water in every flush of a toliet. Plus mismanagement of the infastructure because of morons like brown. Conservation just pushes the issue down the road. True issue is efficiency of water use.

  286. Why? by MercTech · · Score: 1

    Why spend more public money to prop up an oversize municipality built in a desert? Southern California doesn't have a water problem but an overpopulation and overbuilding problem.

        If you read some Mark Twain; you can get an idea of what California was like before it was overpopulated and overbuilt. "A squirrel could go from Angel's Camp to San Francisco Bay without ever touching the ground." Now, all you have between Angel's Camp and San Fran Bay is cheat grass dotted with small towns and a few vineyards.

    --
    NRRPT/RCT
  287. O-o-or-r-r-r.... by ancientmyth · · Score: 1

    ....you could tell companies like Nestle to stop bottling it for profit and make THEM move out. Why does a foreign company get more than local farmers? Or not have to ration at all?

  288. Desalination would be cheaper.... by LinuxLuver · · Score: 1

    As a stop-gap measure (on the way to poisoning the entire planet anyway, eventually).....desalination would buy some time. Religion and cigarettes are two obvious proofs as to why the human race has no future. Not a rational one, anyway. If we can't guard our sanity / mental health and our physical health directly from delusion and voluntarily consumed carcinogens........the air, earth and water doesn't stand a chance. Take the salt out of the ocean water. It's right there at the beach. It will buy some time.

    --
    Only boring people are ever bored.
  289. california not in a drought by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it just has too many fucking people, and too many people fucking.

    captcha (i shit u not): pregnant

  290. Re: Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not nothing, just a tiny fraction of the cost to run a desalination plant.

  291. Re:Here's a better idea by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

    How about California stops growing almonds. Water crisis averted.

    Perhaps they should learn from the Israelis. They run plastic water tubing with directed drip spiggots to each plant (tree). Don't arial spray, water is too precious to be wasted thusly.

    --
    Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
  292. Re:Here's a better idea by gizmo2199 · · Score: 1

    In fact, it's called "Silicon Valley" because of the high silica content of the soil, which helped nitrogen propagation in crops. True story!

    --
    This Sig does not Exist.
  293. Re: Here's a better idea by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

    I think you mean meat and dairy, which waste far more water.

  294. California's drought by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    gosgog:
    Seems to me California could do a lot better with a deal from ISRAEL, the experts at converting salt, seawater to drinkable ordinary water for a hell of a lot less money! Obummer might be pissed but so what!!

  295. Re:Here's a better idea by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

    Then it is an even shittier idea. The fact is that there is a lot of water that is being used to grow food for grazers that we then eat. Still why does California even have a dairy and beef industry, when I had over the air TV I would regularly see ads stating "Happy cows come from California" here in Minnesota. So some of it is being turned into cattle feed for local use.

    --
    Time to offend someone
  296. Stop exporting (and wasting) water by MoarSauce123 · · Score: 1

    California's problem is that too much water is exported. Farmers grow very thirsty plants and then export the crop and the water out of state. Less thirsty plans will make a huge difference...and yes, that also means less Californian wine. Another huge water waster are golf courses...there are 1140 golf courses in California...a few hundred less will make a big difference.

  297. Re: Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank goodness there is a california, without it's population America would be a loser country. Try leading the world without CA. Lol

  298. Re:Here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is no water to be owned on that land. That's what irrigation does, brings the water in from elsewhere.

  299. Re:Here's a better idea by jtgd · · Score: 1

    Either way California *could* stand to be a little more self sustaining.

    Maybe the rest of the country could be more sustaining and not eat all the food that California grows for them.

    --
    J
  300. Re:Here's a better idea by jwhitener · · Score: 1

    Except modern conventional agriculture requires two things: 1) lots of sun, and 2) lots of water. Those two items rarely are in the same region at the same time.

    It makes a lot of sense to have agriculture growing in desert regions as opposed to wet/dark regions. It is far easier to deliver water to a desert than it would be to deliver more sun to a shady region.

    A market price for water doesn't make a lot of sense, if you are thinking about that market price being the same that consumers pay. Urban consumers are paying price X because it is supporting the infrastructure and other resources used to deliver the water to their individual houses.

    Farms aren't using any of the urban infrastructure to get their water. They have a whole 'nother set of pipes (where I lived it was a river, and you bought your own water pump to fill your own set of pipes, private infrastructure per farm), entirely different usage patterns, etc... I can see value in have some more market forces influence the price of agricultural water, but it would never make sense to have it be the same set of market forces that influence consumer water prices.

    Plus, there are some goods that we intentionally subsidize, because the forces don't exist in the market, or the market would do a poor job of delivering the outcomes we want. Keeping food/power costs down, are often things that get direct or indirect subsidies because it is beneficial for so many people.

    It would be an interesting experiment though, seeing if people would really want something like avocados if they cost 10 bucks because water was pricey.