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snooper2

(30,151 posts)
Tue Aug 25, 2015, 12:57 PM Aug 2015

Flooding Fields in California’s Drought (Trailer)

VICE


Published on Aug 25, 2015
Faced with a severe drought, California enacted mandatory water conservation rules in early April for the first time in the state’s history. But the agriculture industry — which consumes 80 percent of the state’s water — was exempt from the new restrictions.

The drought has caused surface water sources such as reservoirs, rivers, and streams to dry up. Consumers have increasingly turned to groundwater supplies, putting an enormous strain on the state’s aquifers. Drilling companies are punching so many holes in the ground that the number of requests for new wells in one recent week surpassed the entire total for some previous years, when water was plentiful.

VICE News went to California to witness the proliferation of water-intensive crops, and to find out why the industry that consumes the overwhelming majority of the state’s water has continued to operate during the historic drought.



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Flooding Fields in California’s Drought (Trailer) (Original Post) snooper2 Aug 2015 OP
Water -- the next war Angry Dragon Aug 2015 #1
Stop eating almonds, then. MineralMan Aug 2015 #2

MineralMan

(146,331 posts)
2. Stop eating almonds, then.
Tue Aug 25, 2015, 03:20 PM
Aug 2015

That's what it will take. If you eat almonds, you're contributing to all of this. And that's not the only thing grown in California that we all eat. And there's the crux of the problem. We all consume food that comes from California. Unless we're willing to stop doing that, people will try to grow that food.

You could switch to produce from Mexico, of course, but the water problem is severe there, too. Almonds, avocados, oranges, grapefruit and many more things we eat come from California. All of it uses water in large quantities. Give it all up and the water use will go down.

It's your choice, really.

Go here:

http://www.netstate.com/economy/ca_economy.htm

Then go here:

http://westernfarmpress.com/tree-nuts/what-happens-if-us-loses-california-food-production

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