Submitted by Mamacrass t3_11t0h02 in UpliftingNews
Comments
downonthesecond t1_jcghe8y wrote
Mission accomplished!
jezra t1_jcgja0x wrote
reservoirs "moving" seems like a bad thing. Where are they moving to?
Jtsansuey t1_jcgja5o wrote
HAARP seems to be up and running
Citizen-Kang t1_jcgljkg wrote
Didn't you read header? The right direction.
haggisaddict t1_jcgzest wrote
Is this because we are getting more precipitation? Conserving more? Or is the water being pulled from other reservoirs or aquifer?
SXOSXO t1_jch0230 wrote
And none to the left? That still sounds bad.
SXOSXO t1_jch03kx wrote
craziedave t1_jch0kek wrote
For real the east coast has plenty of water. Move the water to the left of the map
galspanic t1_jch1now wrote
Right! It’s good to acknowledge that it’s moving in the right direction, but it really feels like we are 4-5 years before we know if this is anything more than a death rattle.
keefstrong t1_jch2nbx wrote
Global warming is causing these depleted reservoirs to receive more deposits. GW is good!
Edit: wow I didn't know I needed the /s for this thought the explanation amrk was enough big whoosh
Citizen-Kang t1_jch3lz7 wrote
Let's not allow perfect be the enemy of good.
[deleted] t1_jch5sob wrote
What is that?
redyellowblue5031 t1_jch92n2 wrote
“Government” controlling the weather.
kennacethemennace t1_jch989z wrote
>Drought over? Spring outlook finds relief -- and flood risk
No, one rainy season won't fix a century's worth of water diversion projects and irrigation systems. Drought, wildfires, drought, wildfires, drought, flood, then repeat.
Oldskoolguitar t1_jchbq27 wrote
To the left, to the left.
TKtommmy t1_jchf3tu wrote
For the very last time, I imagine...
ncc74656m t1_jchgud4 wrote
The trouble here is that one year's heavy precipitation does not a drought end make. You need consistent rain that doesn't overwhelm the dams or cause regular releases which largely go to waste (at least for most human use), and deep, consistent snowpack, which is built up over many years, not a single event.
If it returned to drought this year, that water would still run out very quickly.
People need to not go back to their wasteful habits, we need to get farms out of the arid climate, let aquifers refill, and kill off the golf courses and wasteful lawns.
ThePopKornMonger t1_jchh7fz wrote
At least the reservoirs will be full so everyone is not pulling from each other.
OkFury t1_jchmgbi wrote
I'm pretty sure if they all keep moving right it's going to put the earth off balance and change the axis, which is the real concern and takeaway here.
AzLibDem t1_jchmxi3 wrote
>we need to get farms out of the arid climate
Agreed. Stop eating lettuce in the winter.
Edit: I love the down-votes; everyone loves to tell us how to live in the desert, but they get upset when we point out that they're part of the problem.
Ragingdark t1_jchn85l wrote
Man that article was depressing if anything.
medoy t1_jchsseo wrote
They've been moved outside the environment.
[deleted] t1_jchtlz6 wrote
[deleted]
[deleted] t1_jchx47p wrote
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Hunter62610 t1_jchxbcb wrote
wait does my lettuce in NJ come from Arizona? Why would they even do that.... oh money.
AzLibDem t1_jchxvsh wrote
>wait does my lettuce in NJ come from Arizona? Why would they even do that.... oh money.
80% of the lettuce in the US after September comes from Arizona, because it's too cold to grow it elsewhere.
Agriculture uses around 85% of our water, but accounts for about 2% of our income.
We need to tack on a $5 per head water use surcharge.
lintinmypocket t1_jci00ls wrote
Or just grow it in greenhouses in the southeast US.
AzLibDem t1_jci06cz wrote
Fine with me; what's taking so long?
lintinmypocket t1_jci19j9 wrote
It would probably cost more. But to be quite honest I think that growing in the winter in the southwest probably is not the worst decision, it’s growing in the summer, combined with flood irrigation that is an egregious waste of water. Even if irrigation moved to drip or more water conserving sources that would be a help. And the govt needs to STOP subsidizing certain crops to be grown in arid regions for export. Also also water laws in the SW are bananas.
AzLibDem t1_jci1qxh wrote
We need to just stop all of it.
It wastes our water, and brings in relatively little money, Without it, we have all the water we need to live here.
If people want salad, they can grow the stuff elsewhere.
gibbillionreasons t1_jci2td9 wrote
This isn't uplifting, just an opportunity to ignore the inevitable trajectory of water in the Western US - too many straws vying slurping up the same limited water supply
upwardstransjectory t1_jci59oi wrote
Take the water back now y'all
upwardstransjectory t1_jci5dbj wrote
Lot of agriculture phds up here in the comments lol
LargeMarge00 t1_jciguxy wrote
It's a radio system. That's it. Some people who find flexible metal fashionable for headwear believe that it can be used by the government to control the weather via radio transmissions. I'm kind of charmed to see it mentioned since 5G stole the thunder of people that don't understand electromagnetic radiation.
missionbeach t1_jcigz9x wrote
It's a start.
96vette t1_jciipvl wrote
Someone needs to do a study to see if increased rain and snowfall cause reservoirs to have more water.
Mentalfloss1 t1_jcittrl wrote
Reservoirs move?
imnotsoho t1_jcixxis wrote
LaunchpadMcWack t1_jcizioz wrote
People come to this sub to, for a brief moment, escape the crushing ache of cynicism.
keefstrong t1_jcj7v92 wrote
Im sorry I didn't even know what the sub was, I came from the homepage and misread the situation. Oops.
ProfessorGluttony t1_jck18ns wrote
It's the internet, always have to add /s as tone is highly up to interpretation.
keefstrong t1_jck9423 wrote
I've never read someone advocate for GW and be serious tho idk man idk haha
ProfessorGluttony t1_jckgx0w wrote
I don't put anything beyond people anymore on the internet. Statistically speaking, there is probably someone out there who believes GW is a good thing and actively does things to increase it.
AzLibDem t1_jddsd3g wrote
Actually, while you meant to be sarcastic, there's a reasonable chance that temperature increases will result in more rainfall for Arizona.
Historically, the Sierras have prevented moisture from reaching us, but as the air gets warmer, more moisture makes it over the mountains.
At the same time, the Yuma low, which is a static low pressure system, is getting bigger, and deflects the Jet stream farther south.
This means that colder air is hitting the increased moisture from the coast, causing greater precipitation.
It will take a while to see where it all settles out, but this later-season increase may be a new normal.
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