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Comment by pfdietz

2 days ago

There are also impediments to the economically rational allocation of water. Look at California for a prime example of this.

theres no drought in california.

if we wanted to tomorrow we could stop it.

its like complaining you are sweaty after working out

  • The "drought vs no drought" conversation hides the fact that a significant percentage of the water in the central valley aquifer has been pumped out for agriculture and other uses. Even if we stopped that tomorrow it would not recharge quickly, and the surface water is not sufficient for current demand.

  • Pedantically, you're correct. There's been drought in California for the previous 24 years, but this year there isn't one.

  • > theres no drought in california.

    CA is not in a drought right now. CA has been in conditions of persistent drought, with no more than a year or two of respite, for two decades. The last sustained period of sustained at-or-above-desired-level precipitation ended in 2007.

    As always, Wikipedia explains this well: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droughts_in_California

    Your logic amounts to "I'm not poor because I just got paid! Let's go to the bar tonight!"

    • My logic is "OH NO I KEEP HITTING MYSELF IN THE HEAD WITH A RUSTY POKER WHY DO I KEEP BLEEDING!"

      If we dont want a drought, stop messing with the water supply.

      "Much of the water used in California comes from the Colorado River. By usage, ~79% of the river goes to crop irrigation (70% of which is cattle feed), ~13% to residential water usage, ~4% for commercial use, and ~4% for thermal power plants"

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