Drought has left Lake Mead and Lake Powell with record low water levels | DW News

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  • Опубліковано 25 сер 2022
  • Facing critically low water levels at the two largest man-made water reservoirs - Lake Powell and Lake Mead - as well as an extreme drought in the West- federal water managers (US Bureau of Reclamation) recently announced and decreed that Nevada, Arizona and Mexico will have less water to use in 2023.
    Colorado River users, working under a federally imposed deadline set in June to negotiate unprecedented water reductions, failed to agree on new, additional cuts needed to preserve the stability of the region’s water system.
    Washington says those cuts are necessary to protect water levels at the largest Colorado River reservoirs - Lake Mead and Lake Powell, both of which have hit record-low levels in the past year and have continued to drop.
    If those reservoirs continue to drop, it could severely hamper the production of hydroelectric power and deliveries of water to residents and farmers in the entire Southwest and northern Mexico.
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    #Colorado #ClimateChange #lakemead

КОМЕНТАРІ • 539

  • @tinetannies4637
    @tinetannies4637 Рік тому +162

    People will keep arguing and pointing fingers while the water levels drop. When those levels hit zero people will still be arguing and pointing fingers.

    • @igweogba6774
      @igweogba6774 Рік тому +2

      sums it up

    • @darrenc8776
      @darrenc8776 Рік тому

      So. Ice caps melting. Global warming. Sea levels and river levels rising? Were is the water then?

    • @mg4361
      @mg4361 Рік тому +5

      when things get bad enough they'll switch from fingers to guns

    • @tinetannies4637
      @tinetannies4637 Рік тому

      @@mg4361 yep

    • @tinetannies4637
      @tinetannies4637 Рік тому +2

      @@darrenc8776 do a little research, sea levels are rising. So are global average temperatures. Weather patterns are shifting and becoming more extreme. If humans wait until cities are underwater before they do anything, it'll be too late to do anything

  • @randyboisa6367
    @randyboisa6367 Рік тому +82

    "Let's build water features and about 200 golf courses, casinos, and about 600,000 people in the middle of a desert! Hey that's a good idea!"

    • @balung
      @balung Рік тому +4

      Genius, genius idea.

    • @alexsozansky
      @alexsozansky Рік тому

      Whoa...never heard this before...but they did it sooo....now we can stop stating the obvious and try to solve it, no?

    • @RumblesBettr
      @RumblesBettr Рік тому +1

      @@alexsozansky no. F em

    • @jshankkk
      @jshankkk Рік тому +1

      This is everyone's sarcastic response to this crisis and it doesn't help dude!!

    • @dontcare7086
      @dontcare7086 Рік тому +2

      Educate yourself. Vegas has some of the best water conservation in the world. Population grew by 300,000 people and vegas used 25% less water over that time. Vegas cleans and filters all that water and returns it to the source to be used again. Vegas also doesn't use the full amount of water it is allotted because they conserve so much water. They have long had laws banning grass on roadways, sidewalks, any areas it is not necessary. Homes get massive incentives and rebates to use natural desert type landscapes. I can go on and on because I used to be ignorant like you but when I spent a few months researching it I was shocked at how impressive the water conservation is.

  • @MrTokinedz
    @MrTokinedz Рік тому +57

    It's not a drought, it's aridification: the end of fresh water in a region.

    • @jollyjokress3852
      @jollyjokress3852 Рік тому +1

      nice to know.

    • @johnbartholf777
      @johnbartholf777 Рік тому +1

      Because the hydrologic cycle was repealed?
      More heat = more rain.
      If there's less rain, then all these record temperatures being reported are bull***t.

    • @steveo1574
      @steveo1574 Рік тому +2

      This is awesome!! Can't wait to see their homes go for pennies on the dollar.

  • @lissavanhouten6628
    @lissavanhouten6628 Рік тому +62

    These states should have been conserving water at least 30 years ago and found ways to mitigate drought (like using drip irrigation for farms) and climate change. And desert cities like Phoenix and Las Vegas should have never been built. It may be ungenerous but I'm against building infrastructure to bring water from the Mississippi River to the Southwest and West Coast. It would just be wasted and overused like the Colorado River was.

    • @carolynmorris7303
      @carolynmorris7303 Рік тому +1

      I think they're going to end up piping water from the Great lakes out west. In the early 1980s, my geology teacher said the West was going to run out of water, and they were going to end up piping water from the Great lakes out west.

    • @sentientflower7891
      @sentientflower7891 Рік тому

      The two reservoirs were filled up as recently as 1999.

    • @agustindejesus7398
      @agustindejesus7398 Рік тому

      Lissa, it is not what people should have done 30 years ago....it is what they should do now....We should have saved our money, but we did not, now we are broke. Ja, ja, ja.

    • @deborahfreedman333
      @deborahfreedman333 Рік тому

      Cal Poly, in San Luis Obispo, has been advocating the use of drip irrigation (developed in Israel) since the 1960s. But, most farmers didn't want to expend the needed money, to do so.

    • @johnbartholf777
      @johnbartholf777 Рік тому +2

      Saying these cities should never have been built is like saying The Netherlands should never have been reclaimed from the sea. It happened because it was where people wanted it to happen.

  • @jamesphilip6737
    @jamesphilip6737 Рік тому +25

    It's in a desert...40+million people are tapping it...there's a drought. What's so difficult to understand?

    • @GhostOnTheHalfShell
      @GhostOnTheHalfShell Рік тому +1

      A drought is unusual. What is happening now is either a recurring 50 span of drier conditions or the new long long term normal.

    • @jamesphilip6737
      @jamesphilip6737 Рік тому +2

      @@GhostOnTheHalfShell According to the Colorado Climate Center, Colorado endured five significant dry periods prior to the twenty-first century: 1893-1905, 1931-1941, 1951-1957, 1963-1965, and 1975-1978. So droughts do happen.

    • @E3ECO
      @E3ECO Рік тому +1

      Interestingly, LA uses less water now than it did 30 years ago, even though there are more people. It's agriculture that's sucking everything dry. They account for around 80% of California's water usage.

    • @GhostOnTheHalfShell
      @GhostOnTheHalfShell Рік тому +1

      @@jamesphilip6737 Yes and in prehistory the south west regions of the US experienced 50 year dry spells. Two and a half generations of far less water. 50 of not enough for cities dependent on water that was abnormally abundant over prehistory. The Colorado you might think of was a deviation. What is going on now is the *normal*. Az and Nv cities are unsustainable. No water. No power. Not from Hoover.

    • @Divedown_25
      @Divedown_25 Рік тому +3

      US short-term thinking. It’s a desert, why agriculture and golf courses?

  • @handenbramilton
    @handenbramilton Рік тому +12

    I love how he says three bodies, then one, then five, then says the barrel body is a mafia suicide. A rollercoaster of possibilities.

  • @YouStupidBunny
    @YouStupidBunny Рік тому +4

    In the last 40 years, over 400 dams have been removed along the Colorado river, but nobody is talking about that. It's like trying to refill a bathtub after you'd pulled the drain plug.

  • @waltbroedner4754
    @waltbroedner4754 Рік тому +22

    Colorado has been snowmaking in its ski resorts since the 1970s. We knew then that we were not getting enough snow for skiing. It has been progressively getting worse since then but our good for nothing politicians have ignored the problem and now we are in deep doodoo, not snow.

    • @Baba-fy1jc
      @Baba-fy1jc Рік тому

      The Tourist makes the World better.😉👍😂😂😂😊😊
      Im come from German and how we can see here have we self enough clever People they do all to make the World better.😉👍😂😂😂😂
      The People Around the World have to much Problems with a Mass Psychologic Disorders and that makes the Nature here more and more Visible.

    • @terra3819
      @terra3819 Рік тому

      Exactly!

    • @Grannathinks
      @Grannathinks Рік тому +1

      @@Baba-fy1jc true but anyone who spends time in nature can't help but see.

  • @marioreds7826
    @marioreds7826 Рік тому +33

    The scariest thing of all is that even if we did all the right things starting tomorrow, it would just stop the situation at the current point and we wouldn't see any improvement for decades. And that is, IF we did the right things, which we are not doing. Honestly, at this point I'm almost glad I'm already relatively old, unlike today's children I won't see the worst of this.

    • @Grannathinks
      @Grannathinks Рік тому +1

      Unfortunately, I may not either. But my children, grand children will. I have been trying to make people listened for 30 years.

    • @babyruthless9670
      @babyruthless9670 Рік тому +2

      That's why my husband and I decided not to have kids. I've always known I didn't want to bring more humans to this planet since I can remember and then I met my husband and he thinks the same. We've seen these things coming since we were kids. Very sad but I'm not bringing more innocents to suffer seeing how the people in power do nothing to make things better, while we are saving water whenever we can, recycle, upcycle, reuse and all we can. I'm hopeless for the future.

    • @tahashamim1602
      @tahashamim1602 Рік тому +1

      You are lucky!
      But what is new generation's fault?!

    • @AFLnewsNtruthatstorytime
      @AFLnewsNtruthatstorytime Рік тому +1

      Read the Bible about this and worse is to come

    • @robinjames7967
      @robinjames7967 Рік тому

      exactly, we're passed the PSR.. enjoy the apocalypse.

  • @Dangic23
    @Dangic23 Рік тому +16

    So basically those areas are returning to what they always should’ve been
    DESERT
    Love it !!!!!

  • @Jonathan-mt9up
    @Jonathan-mt9up Рік тому +1

    The couple at 2:06 taking a selfie in front of the dried up reservoir pretty much sums up humanity at this point.

  • @DennisMoore664
    @DennisMoore664 Рік тому +21

    It's a problem all over the place. Even just in the US there are restrictions throughout the southwest, along the Klamath in Oregon, in areas along the Rio Grande that runs through New Mexico and between Texas and Mexico. And Nebraska and Colorado are in court over other water use issues with the South Platte river. States and groups have always argued about and fought over water rights, but between the drought and the ever increasing consumption for industry and agriculture things are probably going to get worse before they get better. Should have had desalination plants being put in place a decade ago with sufficient infrastructure to pump to inland consumers as well.

    • @sirsplicer
      @sirsplicer Рік тому +1

      Here on the southeast cost of Australia we’ve seen the sun a handful of times this year it’s non stop rain since about November last year

    • @DennisMoore664
      @DennisMoore664 Рік тому

      @@sirsplicer is that normal for that area?

    • @sirsplicer
      @sirsplicer Рік тому +4

      @@DennisMoore664 not at all. We’re normally blessed with sunshine and blue skies, the stereotypical Australian beach weather however the summer, and winter for that matter was full of rain and floods

    • @sirsplicer
      @sirsplicer Рік тому +1

      @Wonderin'Aloud I’m well aware trust me

    • @DennisMoore664
      @DennisMoore664 Рік тому

      @@sirsplicer Not good. Seems like people getting too much water is supposed to be the flip-side of this mess. I hope we can make the drastic changes that need to happen to keep things from getting worse before they are made for us when things do get worse. Good luck!

  • @carolynmorris7303
    @carolynmorris7303 Рік тому +11

    It's a worldwide problem. Many rivers and lakes are drying up worldwide. Many recreational areas by the water have suffered because of the droughts worldwide. It's a shame for people to lose their livelihood.

    • @julianshepherd2038
      @julianshepherd2038 Рік тому +1

      raining more than ever in Scotland and storms getting worse and more frequent.

    • @SheepofTheShepherd-nu3lz
      @SheepofTheShepherd-nu3lz Рік тому

      Sin is a 🌎 wide problem

    • @johnbartholf777
      @johnbartholf777 Рік тому +1

      More heat = more rain. If there's less rain, that means temperatures are lower. It's the hydrologic cycle.

    • @mikef2811
      @mikef2811 Рік тому +1

      Livelihood would be the last thing on people's mind if humans don't get their act together and do better for our planet earth. Soon people will be fighting and killing just to get drinking water.

    • @suntzu94
      @suntzu94 Рік тому

      We have so much fresh water in the great lakes we lost our beaches

  • @marksias6764
    @marksias6764 Рік тому +16

    Much of California's share goes to grow alfalfa that is sold to China as animal feed. Alfalfa is a water intensive crop. Why not ban the use of water to grow water intensive crops that are feed to foreign farm animals?

  • @linmonash1244
    @linmonash1244 Рік тому +9

    Yes - Should have rung the warning bell at least 10 years ago. 'Trying' to reduce usage, in 2023, to 20% of the total of what is left in the lake [ puddle ] right NOW is INSANE! Also, doesn't take into account the increasing heat = increased evaporation of this rapidly shrinking pool as well, as well as the very poor water quality when you get down to 'the dregs' at the bottom. NO leisure craft nor fishing should be allowed on the lake at all ( leaving fuel residues and spillage etc.) into this critically low water resource. When you see kilometres of open irrigation channels - all exposed to massive water loss through evaporation - in desert conditions of 40>50c temps - it is just incomprehensible. Where was the planning to protect fresh water reserves for 40+ million citizens? The fact that the snows were not falling on the mountains, sufficient to maintain river flows is not news! It's been happening for at least 20+ years! And that's not going to change any time soon.
    When I was in China in 2003 I visited the River Li. The river was 1/5th of it's usual height. 2/3rds of the tourist boats were unable to be launched and the remainder that were more flat bottomed were still scraping hulls on rocks on the bottom. The water was green and slimy and no-one with any sense was eating any of the fish that came from that polluted trickle. The local boat man said; exactly the same thing. "The water didn't come down from the mountains for the last few years - no snow." Look at the mighty Yangtse today... 300 million+ rely on fresh water from that huge river system. Now also a mere trickle. And when food crops that rely on heavy irrigation (and fertilizer - thanks Russia! ) due to being planted IN THE DESERT, where no such crops naturally grow, fail; people start to starve. There's been this huge complacency over the post WW2 period, as if 'nothing changes'. OUTRAGE when it does, as if we are 'entitled' to waste incredibly scarce resources, like precious fresh water, indefinitely. We are supposed to be a smart species - but I do wonder...
    When we had the extended drought in South Australia in the mid - late 200's, we had water restrictions. People were not allowed to keep their lawns watered daily. Something similar; Adelaide is situated on the edge of the mid continent deserts and subject to very drying desert winds. People were putting in rock and cactus gardens and grey water systems. Everyone had 3 minute timers in their showers and kept buckets to capture used water for their pot plants etc. Since the weather has flipped here and eastern Australia is now getting unprecedented floods, doesn't mean it won't flip back to drought once more. In the North the regular monsoons are changing dramatically Summer temps are dramatically higher than previous records. 2/3rd's of the 2,300 klm long and 347,000 sqr klm area Great Barrier Coral Reef is dead. When is the human race going to wake up?

  • @peterwuwei3297
    @peterwuwei3297 Рік тому +4

    California really bears the brunt of the needed water cuts. Lots of water is sent to CA in the Central Valley for agriculture and a LOT of water is wasted. Plus, lots of homes in So Cal still have huge lawns and such. I was surprised to learn that S Nevada has cut it's water use by 25% in the last decade while still increasing its population and uses only 8% of the water flowing thru Lake Mead. So Vegas is not the problem as it continues its water conservation efforts and sees thousand of Californians moving here bc cost of living is so much less here and traffic is bearable.

  • @donnacabot3550
    @donnacabot3550 Рік тому +6

    Droughts everywhere, yet no one dare ask Nestle for a loan. 😆

    • @billjane5522
      @billjane5522 Рік тому

      Its dumb yanks building cities in the desert, golf courses in the desert and lawns in a desert.
      Why cant yanks ever accept responsibility for there own stupidity and greed.
      There are plasterboard manufacturing plants in vegas, they consume far more water than bottled water plants.

  • @aayushmundhra7868
    @aayushmundhra7868 Рік тому +2

    Stop water to industries especially the beverage industries.

  • @tylernorby4939
    @tylernorby4939 Рік тому +8

    The Bellagio Fountain uses saltwater that is not usable for drinking or agriculture. Las Vegas has decreased water usage over the last 15 years while increasing it's population rapidly.

    • @salivatinggreed4219
      @salivatinggreed4219 Рік тому

      Someone pin this!!

    • @carrob704
      @carrob704 Рік тому

      It is recycled water in most fountains, not salt water...the same "gray" water that waters golf course, parks and other non-essential things

  • @Tom-tg2jl
    @Tom-tg2jl Рік тому +1

    Droughts are getting really bad all over the planet and we can’t even cooperate yet, scary. Pretty soon we’re gonna have to start pumping water across the country to meet demand, 20% of the freshwater on the planet is in the Great Lakes but pumping those dry isn’t any kind of solution, scary scary stuff.

  • @edc1569
    @edc1569 Рік тому +9

    One side will blame the soya plants the other will blame climate change, they’re probably both right, but it doesn’t matter just cutback on usage massively.

    • @sentientflower7891
      @sentientflower7891 Рік тому

      What does that even mean?

    • @HuplesCat
      @HuplesCat Рік тому

      @@sentientflower7891 they reject science. It’s climate change not the fields of soya beans in Nevada. Basically big oil is peppering these videos with bs comments to dilute the impact

  • @TheKeenTribe
    @TheKeenTribe Рік тому

    Wow! I had no idea!

  • @sutty6779
    @sutty6779 Рік тому

    In Australia we went through the same problems, one great scientist claimed we will never have drought-filling rains again. In the last two years, all the dams are overflowing and excess water is flowing out to the sea, the same great scientist claimed we needed water desalination plants in each state which were built at great cost, like billions of dollars spent and the plants have had little use since.

    • @youtubeaccount5673
      @youtubeaccount5673 Рік тому +1

      From droughts to floods. Sounds like the water source is getting more erratic. All over the world, droughts or flood. All of this after a summer with record breaking heat
      We can't handle droughts or floods, we don't have the infrastructure for either

  • @YouTubeAlex666
    @YouTubeAlex666 Рік тому +3

    answers with Joe did a great video on this problem. Please get rid of lawns. It’s a huge waste of water. Astro turf or gravel please please please. Everyone play their part 🙏

  • @bundleofhumble3119
    @bundleofhumble3119 Рік тому

    Imagine back in the day the water reached the edges of the top of the grand Canyon and it looks to be getting lower and lower.

  • @CHMichael
    @CHMichael Рік тому +5

    IID water district - there is your problem.
    Look it up. - growing alfalfa in the desert.
    Just shutting down practices like that would greatly reduce the problem. Absolute ideocracy.

    • @marklemont3735
      @marklemont3735 Рік тому +1

      Yes, where the humidity is so low you must take you wet clothes off the clothes line in ten minutes. No need for a dryer.

    • @CordeliaWagner
      @CordeliaWagner Рік тому

      Growing food for animals is ideocracy. When we can grow food we can eat ourselves. What a waiste of ressources the consumption of meat and dairy is.

    • @marklemont3735
      @marklemont3735 Рік тому

      @@CordeliaWagner They need to use drip irrigation the way the Israeli’s do in the dessert. 10 minutes drip. Wait 10 minutes. Drip again so the water has a chance to go deep and stay near the plant to encourage deep roots.

    • @CordeliaWagner
      @CordeliaWagner Рік тому

      Why feed animals when we can eat the food ourselves? 80% more efficiant. 80% less water required. Don't you get simple math???

  • @ezyfnef
    @ezyfnef Рік тому +1

    We all take life for granted. Nature keeps reminding us just how fragile our existence is.

  • @Firestorm637
    @Firestorm637 Рік тому

    Both Lake Powell
    And Lake Mead are only 27% full. Hydroelectric is down 33%

  • @Allthebest1010
    @Allthebest1010 Рік тому +2

    This has been a problem for decades - the answer increase the population and the tourism while still not fixing the problem. These politicians need to get the job done for once! I don't live there so, the residents must hold these ppl accountable.

  • @richardg1426
    @richardg1426 Рік тому

    The thing is saving water might not do much if you don't get real heavy snows in the mountains !

  • @averyjohnson8605
    @averyjohnson8605 Рік тому +1

    So surprisingly, LA actually has very good water restrictions. From my understanding, the water features you see there do not use fresh water they use salt water from the ocean. Also, this issue has been well known among the regions for some time and the only folks that seem to care are a few Native American tribes who’ve been trying to use less water for years to prop up the water shed. You guys should probably also look into the fact that when Lake Meads water allocations were dived up to the various states, they KNOWINGLY allocated states more water than what is actually in the lake. As for the farmers, they’ve been using a lot of water, but only because if they use less than their allocated amount the state threatens to take their water privileges away. It’s essentially a use it or loose it policy that forces the farmers to use more water heavy crops in a area where it’s just plain unsustainable. Another thing that isn’t helping is the fact that Arizona doesn’t have any restrictions regarding well water restrictions and they’re rapidly decreasing their underground water shed which will cause mass sink holes.

  • @TheAvtrey
    @TheAvtrey Рік тому

    People are still building homes with Kentucky blue grass in those states. It's mind blowing seeing the continuation of water intensive plants when the natives are much more beautiful and beneficial for local ecosystems

  • @mengwu1113
    @mengwu1113 Рік тому +2

    Blame the "drought", Dont blame the people who decided to build large cities in a desert and overuse the water supplies so much the poor animals don't have enough to drink or livein

  • @ricardovelazquez6292
    @ricardovelazquez6292 Рік тому +3

    Lake mead in Nevada is at a very low level 😳

  • @9102010
    @9102010 Рік тому +6

    Apparently, mankind attaches more value to traveling to other planets than to solving earthly problems such as water shortages due to drought. With very little money, for example, a continent like Africa can be transformed into fertile land. My business plan has been ready for years.

  • @hahaipokedyouoel483
    @hahaipokedyouoel483 Рік тому

    Vegas D tech channel has good solid reporting on the Lake Mead situation.

  • @atzelepis1
    @atzelepis1 Рік тому +5

    We are on track to civilization collapse.we need serious measures

  • @anthonygarcia6229
    @anthonygarcia6229 Рік тому

    Vegas local. Fun Fact, the Bellagio fountain doesn't use fresh water. They import Brackish water nobody uses anyway.

  • @Amen.ahmed1
    @Amen.ahmed1 Рік тому +1

    finding those bodies will make some people nervous if they still alive.

  • @billjane5522
    @billjane5522 Рік тому

    What’s not being reported is the destruction of aquifers and the level of ground water. It’s going to be soon that you have to drill thousands of feet for water.

  • @Drew-wo3ud
    @Drew-wo3ud Рік тому

    Prayers sent

    • @E3ECO
      @E3ECO Рік тому

      I'm sure that will be very helpful.

    • @CordeliaWagner
      @CordeliaWagner Рік тому

      Prayers didn't prevent the Holocaust. But maybe this time because it's you praying?

  • @williamemrich9349
    @williamemrich9349 Рік тому

    At the source Colorado River can use the technology of fog nets. Would bring out a lot of water. The cost is inexpensive also. Nevada, & California can implement technology of fog nets also. LA could reroute the runoff water or any river not being used by water usage, back into the Salton Sea for storage instead of using the Pacific Ocean for storage. Then it can be turned into potable for useage for Imperal valley, LA or etc. The turning salt water into fresh water is being done at the Great Salt Lake.

  • @trainmaster0217
    @trainmaster0217 Рік тому

    I read the other day that the levels are coming up.

  • @imm155
    @imm155 Рік тому

    They have probably used up too much hydro power to generate electricity so less water flow to the shallow rivers

  • @heidi22209
    @heidi22209 Рік тому

    How could this happen???
    How could it not!!
    Reap what you sow.

  • @terra3819
    @terra3819 Рік тому +1

    I'm sorry to see but I'll never understand how water has been wasted for decades in those regions. Water is more precious than gold and irreplaceable.
    Party over. Sad.

  • @dsamva
    @dsamva Рік тому +1

    The story is a bit misleading as water levels in Lake Meade have actually been rising for the last month. The story must have been filmed several weeks ago.

    • @jessyvilleneuve8299
      @jessyvilleneuve8299 Рік тому

      Oh its all hysteria they make it seem like this is all new to humanity when its not this has happened before in history and look we still have water im in Canada and nothing has changed in the past years we have dry years and cold and rainy years its nothing new but people are so dumb now a days they believe whatever the news says

    • @suntzu94
      @suntzu94 Рік тому

      Yet they keep finding bodies in lake mead

  • @loki76
    @loki76 Рік тому +3

    Time to start building desalination plants in these Desert states. Cost of living in areas that do not have enough natural water for the demand. Stop blaming everything else.

    • @Grannathinks
      @Grannathinks Рік тому +1

      And move out of California. Head east and lessen the demand, or simply spread people out more or north toward the mountains and Canada. Stop building property in fire ravished areas! People don't belong there. Animals, birds, trees and brush belong there. Electric power lines not at all.

    • @nrobo3840
      @nrobo3840 Рік тому +2

      Not sure what kind of magic you think happens in desalination plants that makes you think building desalination plants would help in the desert states. There is no ocean water to desalinate.

    • @loki76
      @loki76 Рік тому

      @@nrobo3840 If you can divert rivers and create artificial lake reservoirs. Then you can create desalination plants and water pipelines. California has access. It can be joint program and spending. The reality is what are they going to do if the snow melts in the mountains around Colorado drops off and the river runs dry? Just sit there and thirst to death? Proactive thinking and solutions are needed.

  • @djdj500dr
    @djdj500dr Рік тому +1

    The bell has been ringing for forty years

  • @bakenumber4
    @bakenumber4 Рік тому +4

    There's no substitute for water!

    • @Diana1000Smiles
      @Diana1000Smiles Рік тому

      So true. I remember getting my first "canned Water" back in 1991. All I had to do was add Water.

    • @bakenumber4
      @bakenumber4 Рік тому

      @@Diana1000Smiles 🤔

    • @Diana1000Smiles
      @Diana1000Smiles Рік тому

      @@bakenumber4 😆 Really, a friend gave me a sealed can labeled Water. Directions: Open, Add Water. I kept it for several years but finally gave it to another Climate activist. Pretty funny, huh?

    • @bakenumber4
      @bakenumber4 Рік тому

      In 2008 there were 15 boat ramps onto Mead lake... currently there are one.

  • @marmara9741
    @marmara9741 Рік тому +3

    Desertification phase has begun in many places across the globe. Arid lands and deserts will begin to turn green.

  • @manniepuleshun3792
    @manniepuleshun3792 Рік тому

    the more electricity ("green" or not) we use, the more fresh water we'll lose. Which one would you sacrifice?

  • @stephensipe5405
    @stephensipe5405 Рік тому

    There needs to be a way to reclaim seasonal runoff in Los Angeles which flows directly into the ocean. This runoff needs to go to Mono Lake and the Salton Sea. The Salton Sea could be piped to the Colorado River in dry periods.

    • @sutty6779
      @sutty6779 Рік тому

      Would you drink it.

    • @stephensipe5405
      @stephensipe5405 Рік тому

      Sutty, not for drinking, for crop irrigation. California has a lot of agricultural. However, only Sacramento is a natural farming area. The great valley is natural grazing land. It can be used as farmland only with irrigation.
      Southern California should have been closed for development in the 1970s IF sustainability was a goal. It’s was not a goal. Southern California wanted to divert part of the Sacramento River flow by pipes over to the canal starting at Mono Lake. This was legally stopped.
      California still allows cotton farming. This farming hogs more water off of the Colorado River than any other farming. Leave cotton farming to southern States.
      Southern California wastes tonnes of rainwater run off by dumping it in the ocean. Use windmills to pump runoff into the valley for irrigation. Those great sewers used in movies could all have a series of dams from which the water could be pumped. California always tries to push off its solutions on other people.

  • @wizaaeed
    @wizaaeed Рік тому

    I'm sorry but comparing the water levels to 2008 is strange, for so much time everything can happen. Why don't you compare it to 1 year before?

  • @soloman9151
    @soloman9151 Рік тому

    Hi there, Arrrh but there's also an untold story behind the Lake Mead Dry up that so far nobody has mentioned - but one little Gem of a video presentation I came across about a week ago shows that a little known second massive pipeline/Aqueduct was constructed in the 60's seemingly - to divert water from the Colorado river [ at the expense of other regions in the area's currently impacted by drought in California] to seemingly ensure the exponential growth of the City of Los Angeles.
    Here's that video presentation to ponder - that shows mismanagement of water supplies is also partly to blame for Lake Mead and even the Glen Canyon Dam/reservoirs water shortages But the presentation focuses primarily on the first Aqueduct and just barely mentions the Colorado river pipeline diversion near the End of the video:
    I posted the following Comment at this young man's presentation below because many in the USA are indeed searching for answers that are mostly to do with Climate change narratives that are not necessarily covering the real causes of climate conditions worldwide in order to show him this Gem of a presentation that will hopefully update him on other reasons for the Lake Mead dry up:
    Why Los Angeles won't run out of water: The Aqueduct - IT'S HISTORY [ Just cut and paste this title into the YT search engine and hit the search button to find it ]
    817,036 views Apr 10, 2022
    ____
    Why is Lake Mead so Low?
    583 views Aug 29, 2022
    This video is about why Lake Mead is so low and how this affects the Southwestern US | Climate Change News
    SOLOman
    29 minutes ago (edited)
    Hi there, Very well said and presented and you may have gotten ahead of at least two comments that you might have anticipated but definitely not mine!
    Here's Why that I'll set out below for you and after reading it you may want to do an update on this current video presentation of yours.
    You've clearly been doing your homework/research well but not quite well enough it seems and, yes climate change is coming and not only that it is here to stay. But I'll cover that aspect and why it may not be reversible, If there's enough space here to do so.
    OK, here goes:
    I recently discovered this little Gem on the UA-cam social media that shows that a millionaire/entrepreneur of your country's past was responsible for creating 2 massive water transfer Pipelines/aqueducts in order to advance The City of Los Angeles's Growth but what is seemingly little known is that the second Aqueduct pipeline constructed - apparently syphons off water that should have gone into the Glen Canyon and Lake mead lakes/catchment areas from the Colorado river seemingly somewhere BEFORE it reaches either reservoir. As yet I've been unable to confirm exactly where this was done - so finding where exactly would make an interesting update for you to present here.
    But since I'm from Victoria, Australia, I'm not on the ground so to speak as you are and can not look into that any further than UA-cam presentations.
    So here's that Video presentation I discovered about a week ago on YT from my Viewing history. It deals primarily with the first aqueducts' construction and water diverted from another river then drops the hardly noticeable bombshell that a second pipeline was also constructed later on in the 60's to divert water from the Colorado river to ensure LA's growth presumably and, therefore future water supply would enable that exponential growth [ at the expense of other regions losing their water supplies] and that second aqueduct concerning the Colorado river only just barely gets a brief mention - so you need to watch the presentation very carefully to pick up on that and even I wouldn't have done so - had I not viewed all the other Videos on YT by the Sin city guys fishing Channel and others covering the Lake Mead dry up - because let's face it - Climate change concerns all of us no matter where you live in the world and I've been keeping tabs on that fact for quite some time now and have been watching 'wild weather extremes' with a different perspective and a different Worldview to most - as to why the changes are taking place at this particular point in time in world history
    Why Los Angeles won't run out of water: The Aqueduct - IT'S HISTORY [ Just cut and paste this title into the YT search engine and hit the search button to find it ]
    817,036 views Apr 10, 2022
    ___
    You'll also notice that I posted a comment at the above Channel's presentation that cross references this video to the cin city' guys channel to this video also and I've been doing quite a bit of that recently, i.e. using one channel's presentations to cross reference to another's channel and so hopefully help out a little to keep some viewers up a little better on what's really going on with climate changes. Europe is in serious trouble with severe Drought affecting its commercial water transportation of goods and services and even Lake Thames is dry in places with alarming heat waves and an ill prepared population not used to heat conditions and thus very few homes even have air conditioners - as Cold weather conditions have been mostly their concern in the past.
    Here's that European coverage as well for you to ponder as what effects one country will undoubtedly have repercussions on another country at some point due to international trade being so interrelated on a global scale:
    Europe's rivers are running dry as the climate crisis worsens | DW News
    787,154 views Aug 12, 2022
    Much of Europe and the Northern Hemisphere is battling either wildfires, low water levels, harvest warnings, water use restrictions or a mixture of all these. In Germany, one core focus of the drought is the Rhine River, which ultimately connects the Alps with the North Sea. Europe's second-longest river after the Danube, it is also a core shipping lane for western Germany. It is still open to freight traffic for now, but already boats are unable to run fully laden. Germany's Federal Institute of Hydrology warned on Thursday that without rain, one notorious shallow point on the river could become completely impassable next week.
    __
    Judging from the size of the comment I've written so far I'm not going to be able to fit the other Video's from my YT viewing history here in a limited space UA-cam channel commentary section that show that Solar Cycle 25 [ that began in 2019 ] has been outstripping its expected performance to date and another couple videos [ also by scientists ] that have a different view on climate change to the accepted narratives pushed by the majority scientific community views on climate change that was adopted by most governments worldwide - but if you are interested I could post those also at a later time on any updated presentation you might make. Cheers from Victoria, Aust. 🙃

  • @kaltenburg2637
    @kaltenburg2637 Рік тому

    It is the states thar are parties to the water agreement that are reducing draws of water, not the us government

  • @josephtpg2205
    @josephtpg2205 Рік тому

    There is another cause besides draining aquifers. We dig up wetlands along lakes and rivers. These slow the water down and prevent evaporation.

  • @GhostOnTheHalfShell
    @GhostOnTheHalfShell Рік тому +7

    Although states and regions near Texas (and Mexico) have been subject to 50 droughts in prehistory, the current drought in the West and SouthWest is two decades old. It’s is now *normal* and will be forgoing forward. When the weather conditions last over two generations it isn’t a “drought”.

    • @Crashed131963
      @Crashed131963 Рік тому +2

      The Southwest was a desert before Columbus came to America. The manmade farms and cities is what was new.

    • @Elite59
      @Elite59 Рік тому +4

      Too many straws in the jumbo margarita. The Colorado River basin has received 102% of it's normal precipitation this season. Over the past 4 seasons The Colorado River basin has received 95% of it's normal precipitation. Is that a "severe drought" or is it a slightly below average? The entire Southwest has exploded in population over the past 50 years. The agricultural industry has converted more and more desert into farms. There is just not enough water in the West to support this growth.
      Case in point: Lake Mead has received 130% of it's normal inflow this year, yet the water level is down significantly! Do you hear the sucking sound? It is too many straws in the drink!

    • @Diana1000Smiles
      @Diana1000Smiles Рік тому

      US Wildfires are prolific, over 1,000 plus for 2022, alone. The hotter we Humans make the Planet, the more Radical Climate changes get. ♡ Be safe, I'm doing my best to keep breathing, too.

    • @Diana1000Smiles
      @Diana1000Smiles Рік тому

      @@Crashed131963 Columbus was a racist and terrorized Native Americans when he did "come here".

    • @CordeliaWagner
      @CordeliaWagner Рік тому +1

      Population growth seems to be a problem. Maybe have less children?

  • @jimparsons9454
    @jimparsons9454 Рік тому

    Problem is everybody thinks there is limitless water. Then need to start drastic water cuts. Anything not critical to life needs to go.

    • @jimparsons9454
      @jimparsons9454 Рік тому

      @Ralph Buchwitz I hear you but, it needs to be a regionwide issue. Lawns are the first things that have to go, HOAs be damned. Then any kind of ornamental fountains and especially Lake Las Vegas. Nothing manmade. Then we need to look to what kind of crops that are growing. Anything water intensive needs to go. It will be a major effort but, sooner rather than later everyone must realize they live in a desert. If they don't then all those places will become a barren wasteland.

  • @dominicestebanrice7460
    @dominicestebanrice7460 Рік тому

    It takes a 1000 gallons of that water to make 1 gallon of California almond milk!

  • @0515rnein
    @0515rnein Рік тому

    Monsun rain raised the water level by 2 feet recently.

  • @obi9981
    @obi9981 Рік тому

    we must notice this problem but some people live like everything is normal

  • @factchecker1980
    @factchecker1980 Рік тому

    Las Vegas reuses, and returns to Lake Mead, almost all of the water that they use. Only 3% of the Lake Mead water is allocated to Nevada, with the majority going to California. Basically, If every toilet was flush and every shower is used 24/7, Las Vegas will still have water.

  • @nayhem
    @nayhem Рік тому

    Who is going to stop Deadpool from getting what he wants?

  • @beastinblack4055
    @beastinblack4055 Рік тому

    Got the dam busters theme in my head

  • @cfwin1776
    @cfwin1776 Рік тому +1

    What’s new?

  • @michaelmcgarrity6987
    @michaelmcgarrity6987 Рік тому

    Excellent Fishing. Hopefully we have much Snow this winter. Rain forecast for Colorado. Thankfully Water is pleantyful here. We have Brutal Winter here and don't want anyone making Earth Colder. Move to a colder, wetter place. Siberia has much opportunity.

  • @stevenhagen7320
    @stevenhagen7320 Рік тому

    Alot of the water is wasted on irrigation. There is a plan to divert water from the Mississippi River. Might work.

  • @sherrilldean4598
    @sherrilldean4598 Рік тому

    Man takes for granted that every thing will last forever.

  • @tagalogcaligosiras304
    @tagalogcaligosiras304 Рік тому

    but where those water go?

  • @joblo341
    @joblo341 Рік тому

    Restrictions are not hitting california yet. They have "senior" water rights. They should be on cutbacks too because water levels are still dropping. If the water managers wait the situation will be all the worse for everyone.

    • @NotShowingOff
      @NotShowingOff Рік тому

      It’s not like their “water rights” can’t be negotiated. But California supplies food for the USA and exports food to the world. It’s not trivial to ration the water. The consumption of food and activities should be regulated such as beef, pork and golf

    • @blaydCA
      @blaydCA Рік тому

      There are restrictions in most of California. Colorado River water isn't the only source of our water. Most are doing their part to conserve.

  • @rayray2613
    @rayray2613 Рік тому

    I wonder where all of those people are going to go .

    • @CordeliaWagner
      @CordeliaWagner Рік тому

      Keep breeding more consumers of water and all else somewhere else.

    • @rayray2613
      @rayray2613 Рік тому

      @@CordeliaWagner what ?

  • @bundleofhumble3119
    @bundleofhumble3119 Рік тому +2

    Stop running all the water of roofs and roads / pavements into the sewers and then into the ocean, its not natural to displace so much water from the place it was suppose to fall.

  • @robertwilliams3527
    @robertwilliams3527 Рік тому

    Water used to fill the Grand Canyon ? That’s cool

  • @darrenc8776
    @darrenc8776 Рік тому

    Sea and river levels rising as the ice caps melt. City's under sea level will be washed away........so were is the water

  • @sophieedel6324
    @sophieedel6324 Рік тому +9

    California is a desert, if you want to farm there you need to use a ridiculous amount of water. The fault of the water shortages in California are the farmers, they extract tons of water from groundwater with pumps. Everyone knows what they're doing but no one is stopping them.

    • @machinmon.
      @machinmon. Рік тому +2

      Still provides 25% of us food

    • @bullpup1337
      @bullpup1337 Рік тому +6

      @@machinmon. eating 25% less would not be such a bad idea for most Americans, actually.

    • @deborahfreedman333
      @deborahfreedman333 Рік тому

      @@bullpup1337 Actually the US would be better off consuming more California vegetables, and fewer Idaho potatoes, especially fried ones.

  • @JohannBBravo
    @JohannBBravo Рік тому

    so this guy is getting blisters from 1km of walking.
    going to do a 37k run today.. blisters unexpected..
    people are different...

  • @ps3301
    @ps3301 Рік тому

    No more Vegas for tourist as hotels don't have water for shower

  • @SheepofTheShepherd-nu3lz
    @SheepofTheShepherd-nu3lz Рік тому

    Sooner or later these corporations profits will dry up

  • @pamelathompson3847
    @pamelathompson3847 Рік тому

    Get some ocean water to come through. Desolation the salt out of it and the water level back to normal. Why so hard!

  • @stevenhagen7320
    @stevenhagen7320 Рік тому

    We can move commodities all over the world except for prescious commodity of water. There is no reason we can't move water 1000s of miles from areas that have water

  • @harryrussell154
    @harryrussell154 Рік тому +1

    Look at the terrain and see it is desert. This desert reservoir is to supply mega cities which are also in the desert.
    Cities that keep growing and growing. The equation ends predictably, mass migration out of the desert cities.

  • @gerardzillen4695
    @gerardzillen4695 Рік тому

    Something must be done. But what is even possible to resolve this situation. Other than cut usage. But it won't correct this situation. However, if the snow ❄️ gets high it may make it better. So one disaster for another disaster.

  • @richardwilliams3839
    @richardwilliams3839 Рік тому

    Smh much worst is there to come

  • @simpleman8055
    @simpleman8055 Рік тому +3

    They need to regreen the upper and lower basin to the Colorado River just like China done in their desert

  • @karyherndon4266
    @karyherndon4266 Рік тому +4

    They lose water down valley through leaky pipes, and huge farm irrigation systems... and they take too much agricultural water . (My farmer dad installed an expensive water system, when he was about 49. ) The lease was for other farmers to arrive ...and set it up ...each week. On 80 acres of prime farm country and... one situation, I was helping my aging parents. I would sit out there on the 40 acre fields and see them ...irrigating water and only so much water with tight water rights. (The rural mountain h20 ... was shut down by late June... then farmers prayed ...for rain. The hay crops and wheat crops did well most of the time. Each farmer had massive amounts of water. The other people complained. And things ...changed and a rural town water project was happening. (Expensive urban water rights at 1,000 dollars per summers. Yikes.) Many older gardeners ...loved ...that. Then, the raw water was muddy. Heavens sakes. Always something good was happening for 16 years... that I helped my friends and good food share food ... banks..and my rural farm family. Rural Colorado is hard. You adapt or you move. I loved to be with my only son. He has a bike products manufacturing company by himself. Yikes. Lovely ...rainy weather in southern Colorado. ❣️🧳☕️🦋💟🤎

    • @nenmaster5218
      @nenmaster5218 Рік тому

      Droughts and Water-Shortages and the Rich-screwing-us-over all get
      explained in the Video 'Were running out of Water' from Some-More-News.

    • @danielwoldu1855
      @danielwoldu1855 Рік тому

      Please we have a lot of water in Ethiopia and land in southern Ethiopia pleas give me your what up number

    • @danielwoldu1855
      @danielwoldu1855 Рік тому

      Pleas come to Ethiopia i want to show you southern Ethiopia peace and abundant water

    • @thesilentone4024
      @thesilentone4024 Рік тому

      Its like people haven't heard of native edible plants/trees like oak or pine or even cactus like come on modern farmers.

    • @danielwoldu1855
      @danielwoldu1855 Рік тому

      I need answer ?

  • @dbh3139
    @dbh3139 Рік тому

    No snow for 3 years. No water. Pretty easy

  • @ericastier1646
    @ericastier1646 Рік тому

    Now the Hoover Damn ! name makes sense.

  • @hunty1970
    @hunty1970 Рік тому

    The horse has already bolted!

  • @haridasification
    @haridasification Рік тому +2

    Conservation is of paramount importance going forward

  • @mitchyoung93
    @mitchyoung93 Рік тому

    There's gonna find all a lot of skeletons with cement overshoes.

  • @kateoneal4215
    @kateoneal4215 Рік тому

    Los Vegas actually recycles all it's water. Other cities can...or could have...too.

  • @bombelz
    @bombelz Рік тому

    Las Vegas, contraty to most places there, has excellent water management, bad example

  • @Chris_Harris
    @Chris_Harris Рік тому +1

    C'mon. Check your sources. NONE of the water displays in Las Vegas is fed from the Colorado River. They are ALL fed by deep wells drilled by each Casino.
    *SIGH*

    • @crotalusatrox7931
      @crotalusatrox7931 Рік тому

      Las Vegas water supply is 90% Lake Mead, 10% Groundwater.

    • @Chris_Harris
      @Chris_Harris Рік тому

      @@crotalusatrox7931 The showy fountains are 100% well. It's well known fact. I know some people get nuts over it but the water is from a natural/not damaging source like righout of of Mead or something.

    • @crotalusatrox7931
      @crotalusatrox7931 Рік тому

      @@Chris_Harris and you don't believe these aquifers are running low, check were their source is. Nevertheless Las Vegas is a blight upon the desert.

    • @The_Savage_Wombat
      @The_Savage_Wombat Рік тому +1

      @@crotalusatrox7931 Vegas and surrounding cities use about 1.5% of the water. Nevada is only allocated 4% and is the only southern state that does not use it's full allocation. The extra water is sold to California to farm in the desert.

  • @empirecases4128
    @empirecases4128 Рік тому

    You'll see what you would expect to see from a man-made lake in the desert, dry land.

  • @terjesorhaug143
    @terjesorhaug143 Рік тому

    Sierra Club? ... Why are one off them, that is to blame.

  • @cish960
    @cish960 Рік тому

    Check out the Rhine River.

  • @Supernaut2000
    @Supernaut2000 Рік тому +1

    Keep watering all those damned golf courses.

  • @TenFalconsMusic
    @TenFalconsMusic Рік тому +3

    I've just had 6 pints and I'm in a taxi bound for the airport. Hang in there Vegas... I'm on my way to refill your lake!

  • @keithbill310
    @keithbill310 Рік тому

    i DONT THINK PEOPLE WILL EVER CHANGE .. HOW CAN WE STOP BURNING OIL ? WE ARE IN A HARD PLACE AT THE MOMENT AND IF WE DONT CHANGE THEN WE WILL ALL SUFFER....

    • @skiyman
      @skiyman Рік тому

      Too late for that. The change is certainly coming but not because we prepared rather because we didn’t.