General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Do folks here understand the expense and energy use associated with desalination plants? [View all]JDPriestly
(57,936 posts)We will have to desalinate water. We draw our water from sources that will not be as plentiful for us in the future. The ice pack may be OK this year, but the weather is warmer. I don't know what the summer will bring. This has been the warmest winter I remember. I'm waiting for the statistics on that. Today was another day in the 80s. We have had an incredible number of them.
We have useless low-water-usage toilets. The scourge of city life in California in my opinion. Fact is that you can only save so much water. And city life is tough without water.
It's great for people who live in areas that suffer from tornadoes or hurricanes to complain about California's need to desalinate water. A hurricane in New Jersey? No problem. Federal aid. Very few questions asked. After all, houses are obviously demolished.
'A serious drought in California -- say 7 inches of rain in a year -- don't use so much water. We don't use that much water. Water usage in California is way down.
December's rains enabled Californians to finally meet Gov. Jerry Brown's call for a 20-percent reduction in monthly water consumption, but more restrictions loom as the state adapts to long-term drought conditions.
California is by no means out of trouble, despite a survey released Tuesday that showed an unusually rainy month helped residents cut water use by 22 percent statewide from December 2013 levels."
http://www.kcra.com/drought/state-water-board-california-has-met-waterreduction-target/31070378
The drought is a natural disaster -- like a hurricane or a tornado. We should be treated like other states with regard to natural disasters.