Pure Water Oceanside

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  • Опубліковано 13 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 13

  • @Qce-i6d
    @Qce-i6d 2 роки тому

    There is great potential for this pilot project to be a great proof-of-concept that the whole county, state, and nation could apply to improve the sustainability of our water supplies!

  • @gwynnsocolich7271
    @gwynnsocolich7271 3 роки тому +1

    Will the public have access to the water chemical report so we can decide if we need filtration for our tap water? When will construction in Rio Vista Development really end? How loud will the well pumps be in decibels?

  • @MarkWayUp
    @MarkWayUp 5 років тому +3

    great video...very interesting! using recycled water is awesome!

    • @sdtigress74
      @sdtigress74 5 років тому

      Maybe for irrigation/landscaping, but not for drinking, washing dishes with it, and taking a shower in it. It doesn't sit well with me. Nothing is 100% proof...if there is any type of malfunctioning, the people will be screwed. So much filth in sewer water, how much will really be filtered with all the pathogens in feces, urine, bodily fluids, herbicides and pesticides and other chemicals from pharma drugs, heavy metals, and other contaminants that are mutagenic and neurotoxic being dumped into the sewage system...then treated with more chemicals (any safety studies on these treatment chemicals?) to be consumed and absorbed through our skin. It's becoming more like a 3rd world country here in the U.S., when we should have access to an unlimited supply of planet earth's (aka the water planet) primary water.

    • @syweb2
      @syweb2 3 роки тому +2

      @@sdtigress74 That's the _point_ of what's going on in this video. There is a ludicrous amount of filtration happening, followed by months of _natural_ filtration and treatment, followed by _yet more treatment._ There are numerous redundancies, and there is more than likely tens (if not hundreds) of papers about the chemicals - after all, we've been using chlorine to treat our drinking water for decades, and you likely haven't noticed. The trick is that there are several steps that are omitted from this video in order to keep it brief.

    • @chuck950
      @chuck950 3 роки тому

      @@sdtigress74 UPDATE: We've been using locally-processed groundwater for many years right here in Oceanside, as referenced in the video. This is another use of our groundwater source and not a new concept. For a comparison, check what's available everywhere else in California.

    • @sdtigress74
      @sdtigress74 3 роки тому

      @@chuck950 I have and reviewed the results from the water being tested. There are several cancer-causing chemicals in our water supply, but yet they meet the EPA standards lol. Okay.

    • @chuck950
      @chuck950 3 роки тому +1

      @@sdtigress74 So we should stop using the water we are consuming right now. Works for me. Better ask the other 179,998 Oceanside residents how they’d like no water supply.

  • @daveandlunatube
    @daveandlunatube 3 роки тому +2

    Based on viewing this video and my study of geology and hydrology, this seems like a reasonably intelligent plan. I like the idea of maintaining the existiing aquifer with pretty darn clean recharge. This really seems like a major benefit of this plan. I like thinking that perhaps this recharge will prevent intrusion of salt water into the acquifer. (?, hopefully). It seems to me that maintaining the existing aquifer is in a sense working in harmony with nature, and enables systems we have used long term for water supply to continue functioning. This project seems to apply clear-headed systems thinking and state of the art technolgy with minimal potential for enviromental degradation and significant potential for benefits human and more broadly enviromental. I hope this new system is not used to justify new development of open space, and agricultural and natural areas.

    • @carloscortes7747
      @carloscortes7747 3 роки тому

      Thanks for that feedback, I had some of these questions myself

    • @Qce-i6d
      @Qce-i6d 2 роки тому

      Yeah I agree regarding development. Already seeing hyperdevelopment in downtown San Diego though, sigh.