Not enough water to go around: Colorado River Basin, ravaged by drought, plans for a drier future

2023 ж. 30 Шіл.
744 064 Рет қаралды

Seven states and 30 Native American tribes lying in the Colorado River Basin prepare to make hard choices as water levels plummet due to a 23-year drought. Bill Whitaker reports.
#coloradoriver #drought #news
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  • California has 1100 golf courses, 140 in Palm Springs. Arizona has 300, Utah about the same. It takes 385,000 gallons of water per day to keep the grass watered for these courses. Saudi Arabia has 15,000 acres of alfalfa in Ariz. And Cal. 1 acre of alfalfa takes 1100 gals 0f water per acre. Alfalfa is illegal in Saudi Arabia because it takes to much water to grow. They need it for their cows. The acres of alfalfa planted in Ariz. are above an aquifer that the Saudis use with no restrictions. Meanwhile our farmers are going bankrupt because they have no water. Our citizens have to have drinking water trucked in. Cattle farms are selling off their cows and why are golf course allowed in the desert? WTF!

    @joanjohnson9616@joanjohnson96169 ай бұрын
    • Golf courses use a tiny fraction of the water in AZ. Less than 2%. With some of that being recycled water.

      @basedoz5745@basedoz57459 ай бұрын
    • What a BS elitist sport...

      @stayinganonymous.3172@stayinganonymous.31729 ай бұрын
    • 20 years ago I ran into a guy that recorded data from the North rim of the Grand Canyon. Whenever he turned in data he'd get reading material. One journal was on old cedar growth tmrig data. He said some ancient rings showed up to 90 year droughts in the Arizona area

      @gumecindogarcia1070@gumecindogarcia10709 ай бұрын
    • Money makes the water flow!

      @yogawithjengentleyoga3614@yogawithjengentleyoga36149 ай бұрын
    • That's bs

      @alexlifeson8946@alexlifeson89469 ай бұрын
  • Who would have thought that we would run into water issues when establishing cities in the desert? Amazing

    @MrBlpete@MrBlpete8 ай бұрын
    • would would have thought that adding "ghost water" to the colorado river treaty would ever be a good idea.

      @chubbysumo2230@chubbysumo22308 ай бұрын
    • But ding dongs keep moving to and building in Phoenix. Crazy.

      @ryeann2567@ryeann25678 ай бұрын
    • The Colorado River has not made it to the gulf as a real "river" for many decades, so it should make folks suspicious that the corrupt media and government are just now claiming that they learned the truth~! Any competent boater/water skier individual who was experienced in the Havasu & Parker Colorado River area sure would know that the Colorado River is not enough to play in below Parker AZ BTW~! It has been that way for over 50 years as far as I know ;-) M

      @mikeheath7551@mikeheath75518 ай бұрын
    • People use less than farms in the desert, which account for 70% of the water consumption.

      @heyRex@heyRex8 ай бұрын
    • ​@heyRex and without them, we would not have fruits and vegetables in the winter. "They produce 90% of winter greens".

      @karl5404@karl54048 ай бұрын
  • Decades ago, I hiked down the Canyon to the Colorado River. The water was so nice. I hope there will always be water.

    @eddieleong6490@eddieleong64908 ай бұрын
    • Water created the Canyon so take a Xanax.

      @Bonzi_Buddy@Bonzi_Buddy8 ай бұрын
    • There will always be water. Ignore this silly eco propaganda.

      @buildmotosykletist1987@buildmotosykletist198717 күн бұрын
  • If you see how much water people and businesses waste in the LA basin is mind blowing everywhere you look there is fountain and water decoration like wow

    @diegogonzalez7279@diegogonzalez72798 ай бұрын
    • All that makes little difference. Residential water usage is a small fraction compared to agriculture. U could ban all that, and it wouldn't do much to fix the problem.

      @SkyGlitchGalaxy@SkyGlitchGalaxy8 ай бұрын
    • @@SkyGlitchGalaxy But that shows the careless mindset of CA population, which is part of the problem. No solution can be found if people don't think they have a problem.

      @weekendwarrior3420@weekendwarrior34208 ай бұрын
    • ​@@weekendwarrior3420true but we do have an answer, desalinization. We can make more clean potable water. Make our water treatment more efficient after use and we are fairly golden. The issue would be it would cost more but that would help limit population use. Be honest water bill is cheap. Electricity bill not so much. The problem is desert states can't make water and there is only so much ground water.

      @djm2189@djm21898 ай бұрын
    • @@djm2189 the condition for that to work is to massively build up renewable energy production. That way solving the water problem also helps with the cost of electricity, because desalination can help balance energy production.

      @MusikCassette@MusikCassette8 ай бұрын
    • @@djm2189 People need to break up with the idea of having meat 3 meals/day 365 days/year. Vast majority of water used in agriculture is used to grow corn and alfalfa which is used for animal feed.

      @McAwesome363@McAwesome3633 ай бұрын
  • First problem: Arizona is allowing Saudi Arabia to drain millions of gallons of water every year free of charge. Second problem: Gourds require a large amount of water to grow yet they're mostly decorative. There's little to eat inside a gourd and what's there isn't palatable anyway. Third problem: If you want to live in the desert like a Bedouin then live like one, start by getting rid of the lawns and golf courses. 🤦

    @sissyroxx@sissyroxx9 ай бұрын
    • Agree. Why are they growing a thirsty, non-food crop in the middle of a desert. 🧐

      @Dina-lc4bt@Dina-lc4bt9 ай бұрын
    • How is Saudi Arabia draining water from Arizona? Are you implying an aquifer connects the two locations in some way?

      @Randy-jz9ox@Randy-jz9ox9 ай бұрын
    • They bought land to grow alfalfa and export it for their Saudi dairies/horse farms.

      @Doktracy@Doktracy9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@DoktracyWhy hasn't the US banned any and all land purchasing by other countries. Make em rent it like Corporate America is doing to it's citizens now. And make that rent really high, just like these investors are doing to the average American.

      @williebeamish5879@williebeamish58799 ай бұрын
    • @@Randy-jz9ox They are buying thousands of acres of land in America, and so is China.

      @KB-ke3fi@KB-ke3fi9 ай бұрын
  • correction, the colorado river basin is ""NOT"" ravaged by drought, but by water abuse.

    @patrickmurray3846@patrickmurray38469 ай бұрын
    • It’s a combination of both with the heat wave evaporating more water everyday.

      @raulaguilar4952@raulaguilar49529 ай бұрын
    • Just don't blame nevada, we only get 4% of the lower basin and put back over half we use by water treatment. California is like 60% water usage ...

      @Clarkem1@Clarkem19 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Clarkem1bs Vegas sucks it up too

      @johng.8600@johng.86009 ай бұрын
    • @@johng.8600 California is the Problem with the Colorada making the inner States in the Region bare the cost of this.

      @roboparks@roboparks9 ай бұрын
    • Arizona is not my concern...Smart to to live there.... to live there...?????

      @raven113p6@raven113p69 ай бұрын
  • As we've been reporting our whole lives, " WATER IS LIFE".

    @richsantiago5663@richsantiago56638 ай бұрын
  • John Wesley Powell, the namesake of the river, predicted a similar situation more than 150 years ago. The plans at play were based on a very wet period of time. Now precipitation declines back to what should be seen as normal and everyone panics.

    @blitzegron4848@blitzegron48488 ай бұрын
    • “Normal” if you consider the longest drought in 1200 years normal

      @off_mah_lawn2074@off_mah_lawn20748 ай бұрын
    • @@off_mah_lawn2074 1200 years? Who was the observer? Based on what data? Also, if the age of the earth is 4.5B years, the 1200 years is nothing and there is virtually no reliable data for that region older than maybe 200 years at best.

      @blitzegron4848@blitzegron48488 ай бұрын
  • Why does farming in a desert seem contradictory to me? Especially a water-hungry crop.

    @HandyMan657@HandyMan6579 ай бұрын
    • Because it is a massive waste of a limited resource. Just so our corporate overlords can become slightly richer.

      @Praisethesunson@Praisethesunson9 ай бұрын
    • @1:24 : you!

      @hebrewisraelitescharleston843@hebrewisraelitescharleston8439 ай бұрын
    • Alfalfa is a very thirsty crop, and a huge amount of water is wasted on growing it and other livestock feed crops. 70% of Colorado River water is used for agriculture, and most of that is used for animal agriculture.

      @someguy2135@someguy21359 ай бұрын
    • Nothing wrong about farming in the desert...farming alfalfa and cotton in the desert doesn't make sense.

      @Madmun357@Madmun3579 ай бұрын
    • @@Praisethesunson How could each of us fight the companies that profit from this wasteful practice? Boycott animal products. Each vegan saves 219,000 gallons (829,000 liters) of fresh water every year! "UNESCO Institute for Water Education:The production of a meat-based diet typically consumes twice the amount of water as compared to a plant-based diet. National Geographic:"On average, a vegan, a person who doesn't eat meat or dairy, indirectly consumes nearly 600 gallons of water per day less than a person who eats the average American diet." Diet change-a solution to reduce water use? (IOP Science):This 2014 research finds "reducing animal products in the human diet offers the potential to save water resources, up to the amount currently required to feed 1.8 billion additional people globally."- Truth or Drought

      @someguy2135@someguy21359 ай бұрын
  • Greed is the “magic” word here.

    @riccardob7774@riccardob77749 ай бұрын
    • Combined with corrupt politicians.

      @petebusch9069@petebusch90699 ай бұрын
    • It’s spelled “capitalism”.

      @ronilm100@ronilm1009 ай бұрын
    • ​@@ronilm100learn about the word capitalism.

      @thomasnew8606@thomasnew86068 ай бұрын
    • Again? Another report ignoring the fact that Colorado is stealing the Colorado river. There are over 400 Tributaries of the Colorado River being diverted away to the eastern side of the Rockies feeding the farms of Colorado. That is over 400 creeks, streams, and rivers diverted from the Colorado River watershed to Denver and its surrounding cities and farms yet no one reports on this major theft. 60 Minutes, you failed! It is surprising that they showed flood irrigation and sprinkler irrigation, the 2 worst and wasteful irrigation types and barely talked about conservation techniques. Not to mention they showed cotton and alfalfa fields, which are the worst water consuming crops. I have never seen anyone eat either of those yet they wanna claim they feed country? They are cash crops and nothing else But while people get all bound up about woke or tRump, they ignore the problems that need to be solved and allow themselves to be distracted enough to continue to steal the wealth of America

      @cehii9514@cehii95148 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for this video! I spend a vacation in that region in 1996 and a ranger informed us about water problems at Lake Mono - and now it´s 2023 and the problem is much bigger....

    @Bettina4257@Bettina42578 ай бұрын
    • 20 years of drought in the desert southwest, and the water used to water the grass and fill swimming pools. 163 million people in the US circa 1963. Now 334 million using the water for crops, showers, watering the lawn, toilets, laundry machines, washing cars and dishes, golf courses. It ads up.

      @Orcinus1967@Orcinus19678 ай бұрын
    • Increasing population comes with a cost , and the United States just keep bringing people in like there is an abundance of everything here

      @briom1425@briom14258 ай бұрын
  • California water mismanagement is the second problem when it comes to a water shortage out west. The first problem is probably far to many people want to reside in the desert without learning to live the dry life.

    @oso9809@oso98098 ай бұрын
    • this isn't CA mismanagement. The Colorado river treaty included 15 million acrefeet of "ghost water". They literally added fake water that never existed so that some people could get larger allocations than they needed or deserved. CA is pretty good with water conservation.

      @chubbysumo2230@chubbysumo22308 ай бұрын
    • California should get most of the water since they are the most important state in the nation. I been living in Arizona off well water all my life and honestly, people shouldn't be moving here and building homes. Luckily, I have enough land that I can live off here forever with my ground water.

      @the_DOS@the_DOS8 ай бұрын
    • Yeah ..they need to get they're own water... straight up....n stay in California too

      @JustOne-qi5vg@JustOne-qi5vg8 ай бұрын
    • Each state for there own

      @JustOne-qi5vg@JustOne-qi5vg8 ай бұрын
    • Fun fact: Los Angeles, the second largest city in the United States, does not have its own water. Every last drop has to be imported.

      @miketexas4549@miketexas45498 ай бұрын
  • Millions of people live in a desert and they wonder why water is running out?

    @demonslayer5613@demonslayer56139 ай бұрын
    • When our species lets its overpopulation spiral out of control to 8 billion and counting, kind of hard to have no one live in any non-ideal places. We're going to find more and more humans feeling cramped and cornered into uncomfortable places as climate change renders the lands we once took for granted desolate wastelands. The mass collapse of ecosystems has begun. Water is going to keep becoming more and more scarce, and the scarcity will gradually affect more and more places as those who live in dried up areas are forced to shunt water off those communities that still have it. It's a fantastic recipe for some ugly wars to go along with our destruction of nature. Gonna be fun.

      @Synathidy@Synathidy9 ай бұрын
    • @@Synathidy Water isn't scarce at your house because it's delivered through a network of pipes. Say the water company turned off your water, would it then become scarce? Water isn't scarce, it just needs to brought where it's needed...like it is at your house. Plenty of water on the planet.

      @Bouncer-id1rh@Bouncer-id1rh9 ай бұрын
    • Those millions on people you state only use roughly 12% of the water per the USGS. Over 80% of the water, per the BOR, is used to irrigate crops, crops that are shipped all over the world to feed people, including you. Where did you ever get the idea it that "population" using all the water?

      @Bouncer-id1rh@Bouncer-id1rh9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Bouncer-id1rhYeah, just pipe the water over mountain ranges. 😅😅😅

      @Don-md6wn@Don-md6wn9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Bouncer-id1rhMuchas agua tiene 🧂. Estás ignorante. Demasiado muchas personas en la planeta = menos agua por individuales

      @CHIEF_420@CHIEF_4209 ай бұрын
  • Let's talk about a farmer who grows water thirsty plants like cotton (which is inferior to hemp) and alfalfa (used for animal feed) and crookneck gourds (which are a substitute for pumpkin) and each of those crops can be grown where there's enough water to sustain them. Arizona is the wrong place to grow thirsty crops and animals.

    @danhumphrey5755@danhumphrey57559 ай бұрын
    • I have said for a long time that Americans never learned to live with the land we are constantly trying to force it to do what isn't natural. Like reroute an entire river system to water golf courses in the desert.

      @irreccon@irreccon9 ай бұрын
    • We should grow these along the Pacific Coast. The challenge there is getting enough light, as the rain-laden clouds get in the way of the sunlight.

      @StephenGillie@StephenGillie8 ай бұрын
    • Wish I could remember what channel just did a great video breaking down how much water was used simply for feed crops for cattle. Maybe Now This Earth channel.

      @mattsimon931@mattsimon9318 ай бұрын
    • @@irreccon we aren’t perfect but we’ve done a lot. European rivers used to have swarms of migrating fish like North American rivers do, but they dammed all their rivers without regard for the fish and ended up killing them all, to where their rivers are still pretty much bare to this day. They used to be able to live off the river fish, so they then had to go ocean fishing, depleting ocean stocks until they were fishing off the coast of North America just to be able to find good fishing. But we give the fish paths to migrate upriver when we dam, so we still have lots of the migrating game fish. And we still have big animals too. Germany killed all its bears like 400 years ago. Then a bear climbed over the Alps and into Germany, so Germany had one wild bear. And then a hunter shot and killed it, so they went back down to zero wild bears.

      @meminustherandomgooglenumbers@meminustherandomgooglenumbers8 ай бұрын
    • @@mattsimon931 It's through alfalfa, which can have up to 10 growing seasons per year, but humans don't really like to eat. But cattle do. The other side is that the world's largest generation will be passing on through the next couple of decades, making a lot more room for the rest of us. Too much, in many areas.

      @StephenGillie@StephenGillie8 ай бұрын
  • If you are a Colorado farmer, do this: Harvest your rain water by subsoil plowing 2 to 3 feet deep during your rainy season. Build swales on land that you are not planting to harvest rainwater. Around your well subsoil plow or build swales to harvest rainwater to help raise your well water , raise your groundwater levels and to raise your water aquifer levels. If you have clay soils, build large ponds to collect rainwater and cover with tarps to prevent the pondwater from evaporating.

    @jamessang5027@jamessang50278 ай бұрын
    • Arh salt release? Happens in Australia.

      @glennwall552@glennwall5528 ай бұрын
    • It is illegal to harvest rainwater in CO.

      @thenuthouse98@thenuthouse988 ай бұрын
    • @@thenuthouse98 collecting water = illegal ???? wtf

      @johnbrylledomingo6377@johnbrylledomingo63778 ай бұрын
    • there are states that you cannot collect water. They say it belongs in the lake. It’s crazy that what comes out of the sky from God people cannot collect?

      @lostnlove2309@lostnlove23098 ай бұрын
    • ​@@thenuthouse98 You people in those states that a person can't collect rainwater need to fight to regain it, especially if you own land.

      @TheKuptis@TheKuptis8 ай бұрын
  • I live in arizona and have always hated seeing large grass fields

    @jake-ip9vg@jake-ip9vg8 ай бұрын
    • And where do you see those other than in bonafide agricultural or grazing for cattle and horses.

      @larrysorenson4789@larrysorenson47898 ай бұрын
  • We live in North San Diego County. We put in 5,000 gallons of rainwater tanks. We save our shower water, wash our dishes in a small tub in the sink, don't flush every time. We have the rain tanks to water our fruit trees in the hottest part of the year. According to our water bill, we are low water users. It's not fun restricting water usage, but it can be done.

    @humblecourageous3919@humblecourageous39199 ай бұрын
    • I forgot to say that for about 8 years, using Oasis detergent, we have been on a laundry to landscape system. It waters 3 fruit trees and some plants in the front yard. We filled our swimming pool with dirt about 15 years ago. If we knew how bad it would get when we filled it with dirt we would have tried to convert it to a rainwater tank instead.

      @humblecourageous3919@humblecourageous39199 ай бұрын
    • I live exclusively off of rain water in NM. Yes, I have to conserve. I also use permaculture methods which increases the water table in my immediate area. My property is greener than most.

      @pookahdragon5850@pookahdragon58508 ай бұрын
    • Ya you're not virtue signaling. Lol

      @cantrell0817@cantrell08178 ай бұрын
    • There is so much potential in water reuse like you mentioned.

      @mattsimon931@mattsimon9318 ай бұрын
    • @@pookahdragon5850 Good job.

      @humblecourageous3919@humblecourageous39198 ай бұрын
  • Gourds, cotton, alfalfa none of which are edible by humans.

    @sandradunn7547@sandradunn75479 ай бұрын
    • They are grown for profits. Not for something as trivial as feeding humans

      @Praisethesunson@Praisethesunson9 ай бұрын
    • Alfalfa is fed to cows, parts of whom are edible, but humans would be better off without animal agriculture. Each vegan saves 219,000 gallons (829,000 liters) of fresh water every year! "UNESCO Institute for Water Education:The production of a meat-based diet typically consumes twice the amount of water as compared to a plant-based diet. National Geographic:"On average, a vegan, a person who doesn't eat meat or dairy, indirectly consumes nearly 600 gallons of water per day less than a person who eats the average American diet." Diet change-a solution to reduce water use? (IOP Science):This 2014 research finds "reducing animal products in the human diet offers the potential to save water resources, up to the amount currently required to feed 1.8 billion additional people globally."- Truth or Drought

      @someguy2135@someguy21359 ай бұрын
    • Alfalfa is a very thirsty crop, and a huge amount of water is wasted on growing it and other livestock feed crops. 70% of Colorado River water is used for agriculture, and most of that is used for animal agriculture.

      @someguy2135@someguy21359 ай бұрын
    • One more reason to switch to a fully plant based diet. Can anyone refute any of these compelling reasons to boycott animal products? 1-Your own health (vegans are less likely to get the most common chronic, deadly diseases) 2-Helping to end animal agriculture would reduce the chance of another pandemic & other zoonotic diseases 3-Helping to end animal ag would reduce the chance of the development of an antibiotic resistant pathogen. 4-Animal ag wastes a huge amount of fresh water. Each vegan saves 219,000 gallons of water every year! 5-Animal ag is a major cause of water pollution 6-Animal ag is a major cause of deforestation 7-Animal ag increases PTSD and spousal abuse in the people who work in slaughterhouses. Workers in meat packing facilities often endure terrible, dangerous working conditions. 8-Animal ag is a major cause of the loss of habitat and biodiversity 9-Needless killing of innocent, sentient beings cannot be ethically justified. 10- It is the single most effective way for each of us to fight climate change and environmental degradation. 11- Longer lifespan. 12- Healthier weight (vegans were the only dietary group in the Adventist Studies that had an average BMI in the recommended range.) 13- A healthy plant based diet significantly reduces the chances of ED later in life, and even 1 meal can improve bedroom performance 14- Vegetarians and vegans have lower rates of dementia later in life 15- A plant based diet could save money! You could reduce your food budget by one third! 16-A fully plant based diet improves the immune system according to a study published in the journal BMJ Nutrition Prevention & Health 17-A fully plant based food system would greatly reduce food borne illnesses like salmonella 18-A fully plant based food system would be able to feed millions more people. Our population is growing! 19-A fully plant based food system would save 13,000 lives a year from the air pollution caused by animal agriculture, according to a study 20- A vegan world would save 8 million human lives a year, and $1 trillion in health care and related costs (Oxford Study) Links for some of these are at my channel under "About." If you doubt any of them, I would be glad to cite evidence from credible sources to back them up. KZhead only allows a certain number of links at my channel. After I made my list, I found this video with his own list which overlaps mine. He cites evidence from credible sources in the description. kzhead.info/sun/qMdvfc6lqmOom4U/bejne.html

      @someguy2135@someguy21359 ай бұрын
    • A meat-eater’s diet requires 17 times more land, 14 times more water and 10 times more energy than a vegetarian’s, according to research published by The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. This is principally because we use a large proportion of the world’s land for growing crops to feed livestock, rather than humans. (Of the world’s approximately five billion hectares of agricultural land, 68% is used for livestock.) This squeeze on resources is only set to intensify. In 50 years’ time, the UN predicts there will be 10.5 billion people on the planet (the current world population is around 7 billion). To feed us all, it says, we will need to grow food more sustainably. Dr Walt Willett, professor of medicine at Harvard University, says we could eliminate the worst cases of world hunger today with about 40 million tonnes of food - yet 760 million tonnes is fed to animals on farms every year." -BBC Good Food Title- "What would happen if everyone went vegan?" (By Paul Allen)

      @someguy2135@someguy21359 ай бұрын
  • When the SoCal Municipal Water District (SoCal-MWD comprised of 13 counties) was founded & then funded the Colorado Aqueduct Project back in 1931 (for $220M) the entire population of California was approx 7M people. The project employed nearly 38K people during the depression over a 10 year period. CA today (August 2023) is nearly 40M people and the states of Nevada, Utah and AZ have grown significantly and are demanding their previously agreed upon allotments. In 1980 the population of CA was approx 23M - when several lakes on the Colorado river were at "full pool". We are almost twice that in CA population now - with significantly increased agricultural production. Almonds and other crops are particularly water intensive and, as noted in the video nearly 70% of CA's water consumption is for agriculture. The demands on the CO aqueduct system are at levels far beyond the original design. Truly a testament to the engineers and people who made it a reality. And yet we blame "Climate Change". Nope - It's Demand Change. We ignored our increased demand, lack of planning and the cyclical weather of an arid region. The LADWP "stole" water from Northern CA back in the 1930's as well - it's still an issue today. There's so much history to this story & easily glossed over. Don't get me wrong - the Colorado Aqueduct system which terminates at Lake Mathews CA is an AMAZING feat of engineering - traversing 5 mountain ranges and creating some of the most beautiful lakes to be enjoyed along with Boulder Dam (aka Hoover Dam). As a side note, due to the extended winter the western US has recently experienced, Lake Powell is up over 43' and Lake Mead is up over 20' as of August 7th 2023 from a year ago. I encourage anyone who has read this far to search YT regarding Boulder Dam and the CO Aqueduct system - it's an amazing story of Vision, Engineering, Politics and shear Determination by the hard working people who made it happen.

    @vitale6633@vitale66338 ай бұрын
  • Farmers and ranchers and residential yards and gardens can use regenerative techniques to improve the soil quality and greater infiltration rates of whatever water falls or irrigates the lands. Regenerative techniques include polyculture crops, cover crops, intensive rotational grazing of cows, chickens and pigs, and no-till agriculture.

    @Reciprocity_Soils@Reciprocity_Soils8 ай бұрын
  • WATER is more important than any amount of wealth !

    @rbl6822@rbl68229 ай бұрын
    • many a battles over water have happened, and likely to happen

      @mikethomas7138@mikethomas71389 ай бұрын
  • Get rid of the golf courses. We need water for survival!!!

    @clock99times@clock99times9 ай бұрын
    • Golf courses are playgrounds for the rich. The rich have already made it clear they don't care about your life.

      @Praisethesunson@Praisethesunson9 ай бұрын
    • You were ahead of me on that but I have a real problem with the private courses.. They can play at public courses with the rest of us mere mortals or they can pound sand.

      @eleventy-seven@eleventy-seven9 ай бұрын
    • You and I can't do much about golf courses, other than to boycott them. But we can convert our grass lawns to alternative landscaping, and we can switch to a plant based diet. "A meat-eater’s diet requires 17 times more land, 14 times more water and 10 times more energy than a vegetarian’s, according to research published by The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. This is principally because we use a large proportion of the world’s land for growing crops to feed livestock, rather than humans. (Of the world’s approximately five billion hectares of agricultural land, 68% is used for livestock.) This squeeze on resources is only set to intensify. In 50 years’ time, the UN predicts there will be 10.5 billion people on the planet (the current world population is around 7 billion). To feed us all, it says, we will need to grow food more sustainably. Dr Walt Willett, professor of medicine at Harvard University, says we could eliminate the worst cases of world hunger today with about 40 million tonnes of food - yet 760 million tonnes is fed to animals on farms every year." -BBC Good Food Title- "What would happen if everyone went vegan?" (By Paul Allen) Each vegan saves 219,000 gallons of water every year!

      @someguy2135@someguy21359 ай бұрын
    • Agree!

      @clock99times@clock99times9 ай бұрын
    • ​​​@@someguy2135every vegan I know had to start eating meat protein for health reasons, and i was told by a vegan over over 30 years that started eating some meats recently that they felt better than they had in decades. Vegan diet isn't sustainable.

      @Randy-jz9ox@Randy-jz9ox9 ай бұрын
  • Just sitting back and enjoying the show. This has been a looming issue for decades, and just as expected, no one has been willing to take any preventative action, until the crisis becomes inevitable.

    @jamesburge1983@jamesburge19838 ай бұрын
    • 🍿🍿🍿

      @jonbaker3728@jonbaker37288 ай бұрын
    • coward

      @tuckerbugeater@tuckerbugeater8 ай бұрын
    • That "action" will be moving millions of people out of the region in a hurry. That, right there, will be the definition of a stupid human moment.

      @allwheeldrive@allwheeldrive8 ай бұрын
    • @@tuckerbugeater I don't get it, please explain.

      @jamesburge1983@jamesburge19838 ай бұрын
    • ​@@allwheeldrivepeople are sheep. They go were everyone else goes.

      @deanchapman1824@deanchapman18247 ай бұрын
  • I sincerely hope they find a quick solution to this problem. We sure as hell don't want those folks moving back east.

    @Georgiagreen317@Georgiagreen3178 ай бұрын
  • Saying that you have a right to drink from an empty ditch is denial. Having a politician do this is just pandering.

    @rayrous8229@rayrous82299 ай бұрын
    • Was one of the dumbest spiels I’ve heard from a politician in a long time

      @rbrookeb@rbrookeb9 ай бұрын
    • One of Reagan’s best Jokes. Soviet apparatchik: OK you can have a new car. Pay for it now and you can collect it in 10 years from today. Russian asks: Morning or afternoon. Soviet: why would that matter. Russian: the plumber is coming in the morning.

      @bradleysmall2230@bradleysmall22309 ай бұрын
    • Reagan was a dunce.

      @Don-md6wn@Don-md6wn9 ай бұрын
    • @@Don-md6wn trump 2024

      @bradleysmall2230@bradleysmall22309 ай бұрын
    • Regan was also a US president & a grown Man in His own right ! & words can hurt others & should be considered before spoken or wrote ! 💝🐕

      @proudchristian77@proudchristian779 ай бұрын
  • I'm in Henderson and my neighbors are still putting in massive pools, huge palms, power washing their block walls for weeks, and on down the line. Behaviors will only change for the majority when it's forced. I find it asanine and selfish, but they are within their rights.

    @ProCoach2373@ProCoach23738 ай бұрын
    • Prisoner dilemma tragedy of the commons

      @marcusrobinson1778@marcusrobinson17788 ай бұрын
    • What is asinine and selfish is that so much of the rain that recently fell is let out to sea. If were really in a "drought" why would the government let this practice continue?

      @NYyankeeboi@NYyankeeboi8 ай бұрын
    • @@NYyankeeboi source? What sea? What are you on about

      @marcusrobinson1778@marcusrobinson17788 ай бұрын
    • Las Vegas uses very little water, and returns most of their allocation after processing to lake mead via the wetlands. Las Vegas is NOT the problem in the west. Arizona with it's alfalfa. California this year is supplying mostly its own water from the record year.

      @orthopraxis235@orthopraxis2358 ай бұрын
    • ⁠I think you mean “what are you on?”

      @mikemanner9811@mikemanner98118 ай бұрын
  • Up here in Washington, if you drive through Washington from south to north you will cross the Columbia, Lewis, Coldwitz, Nisqually, Puyallup, Skagit, Skykomish, Noosack, and Snohomish Rivers. Most of that water goes out to the sea

    @StevenAbbott@StevenAbbott8 ай бұрын
    • Thats how it works lmao

      @jorgerios5719@jorgerios57198 ай бұрын
  • We need to build massive desalinization plants and harvest all the water from the ocean that is rising! We have an abundance of water. We need to start using it. I think irrigating dryer places would have a huge impact on bringing down temperatures around the globe while making sure potable water is available everywhere.

    @LK-dx2oq@LK-dx2oq7 ай бұрын
  • Many cultures have abandoned ancient cities and looks like that will happen again in the southwest and the Panhandle.

    @Toneloke-3000@Toneloke-30009 ай бұрын
    • When?

      @Bouncer-id1rh@Bouncer-id1rh9 ай бұрын
    • @@Bouncer-id1rh come on man, Central and South America, Africa , Middle East do I need to go on

      @Toneloke-3000@Toneloke-30009 ай бұрын
    • Funny, I was just looking at google earth images last night thinking they need to build a lot more dams across West Texas. I remember travelling West bound on I-10 having to wait 3 days before I could continue because the Pecos river flooded over the interstate. Shore woulda been nice to catch half of that for next year and avoided all that damage to interstate and I'm sure it messed up a lot of other stuff too.

      @laserflexr6321@laserflexr63219 ай бұрын
    • @@Toneloke-3000 So what you're saying is those cities in the southwest will need to be abandoned? Are you really saying that?

      @Bouncer-id1rh@Bouncer-id1rh9 ай бұрын
    • @@Bouncer-id1rh yes eventually. The more these desert cities expand the quicker they will exacerbate the water problem to a Tipping Point and that'll be the beginning of the end

      @Toneloke-3000@Toneloke-30009 ай бұрын
  • What the farmer did actually got me thinking. How many of farmers are actually optimizing their resources? Previously he’s been farming as if he had unlimited water. Now he’s investing into old wells, using new techniques that would provide plants with the adequate amount of water and etc. More farmers need to be doing this to conserve water.

    @KSwizzleDrizzle@KSwizzleDrizzle8 ай бұрын
    • They are actually overpumping the aquifers at unsustainable levels.

      @marthadoelle7585@marthadoelle75858 ай бұрын
    • Again? Another report ignoring the fact that Colorado is stealing the Colorado river. There are over 400 Tributaries of the Colorado River being diverted away to the eastern side of the Rockies feeding the farms of Colorado. That is over 400 creeks, streams, and rivers diverted from the Colorado River watershed to Denver and its surrounding cities and farms yet no one reports on this major theft. 60 Minutes, you failed! It is surprising that they showed flood irrigation and sprinkler irrigation, the 2 worst and wasteful irrigation types and barely talked about conservation techniques. Not to mention they showed cotton and alfalfa fields, which are the worst water consuming crops. I have never seen anyone eat either of those yet they wanna claim they feed country? They are cash crops and nothing else But while people get all bound up about woke or tRump, they ignore the problems that need to be solved and allow themselves to be distracted enough to continue to steal the wealth of America

      @cehii9514@cehii95148 ай бұрын
    • I suspect farmers have not made significant efforts to optimize how they utilize water. Farms in spain have been forced to rethink how they farm and use water because globally the water supply is drastically reduced. The amazon river may actually lose much of its flow within my life time. It isn't just farmers, housing developers and planners need to completely rethink how housing is implemented.

      @Enonymouse_@Enonymouse_8 ай бұрын
    • If he was concerned about water usage, he'd stop planting water heavy crops every season like alfalfa.

      @xCkillaxC@xCkillaxC8 ай бұрын
    • Except he's not changing what he grows. He's growing the crops that China pays him the most for. I have no sympathy for that.

      @kimm6589@kimm65898 ай бұрын
  • When you find out after all these years 60 minute specials are only 13 minute long when all the advertising is taken out.

    @AdamKazarian@AdamKazarian8 ай бұрын
  • We can control supply. My book Pluvicopia shows 3 ways. 1) Chapter 8 details how Riverside Counties can be water exporters, providing water to LA, OC, SB, SD, and Imperial Counties. That is the recommended prototype. Arizona, New Mexico, Old Mexico, and Baja can all increase water production beyond their needs to whatever level they desire. The more they take from moist air through Northern Mexico, the greater the production in Mexico and the US Southwest. They can all be water exporters, too. 2) The book shows how the mechanics of the monsoon can be replicated to produce water and energy. 3) We can use similar mechanics from moisture on the east side of the Rockies, as well as in the California Central Valley. It is all phenomenally profitable on water production alone; energy production is a more significant profit source, as is CO2 sequestration and reforestation. But you have to do your part, which is to be critical and advocate for the theory offered in the book. It is up to each of us; the normal peer-review process needs to be faster, although essential.

    @atanacioluna292@atanacioluna2928 ай бұрын
  • A single desert golf course can use up to 1 million gallons of water per day. How many golf courses are in the 7 states sharing the Colorado River water? There are 370 golf courses in the Arizona desert. Over 300 in Colorado. In Utah, 140. Over 100 courses in New Mexico. Almost 100 courses in Wyoming. 88 courses in Nevada. And more than 600 golf courses in Southern California! (Northern CA doesn’t use Colorado River water) That’s approximately 1700 golf courses! Some of these courses use ground water and recycled water in addition to river water, but the amount of water wasted on 1,700 golf courses in this region is flabbergasting! Are we going to continue cutting back on water needed to grow our food just so rich people in ugly pants can hit a ball with a stick for fun?

    @soul2soul399@soul2soul3999 ай бұрын
    • "A single desert golf course can use up to 1 million gallons of water per day" Cite your source or remove your comment...

      @wipatriot510@wipatriot5109 ай бұрын
    • ​@@wipatriot510Google it champ. An 18 hole golf course uses over 1 million gallons of water per year.

      @Praisethesunson@Praisethesunson9 ай бұрын
    • Golf courses are playgrounds for the rich. So those will be protected. The rabble can drink dirt.

      @Praisethesunson@Praisethesunson9 ай бұрын
    • @@wipatriot510 I just looked it up. Even in 2008, Palm Springs and other desert courses were using a million gallons a day.

      @susankeith326@susankeith3269 ай бұрын
    • You and I can't do much about golf courses, other than to boycott them. But we can convert our grass lawns to alternative landscaping, and we can switch to a plant based diet. "A meat-eater’s diet requires 17 times more land, 14 times more water and 10 times more energy than a vegetarian’s, according to research published by The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. This is principally because we use a large proportion of the world’s land for growing crops to feed livestock, rather than humans. (Of the world’s approximately five billion hectares of agricultural land, 68% is used for livestock.) This squeeze on resources is only set to intensify. In 50 years’ time, the UN predicts there will be 10.5 billion people on the planet (the current world population is around 7 billion). To feed us all, it says, we will need to grow food more sustainably. Dr Walt Willett, professor of medicine at Harvard University, says we could eliminate the worst cases of world hunger today with about 40 million tonnes of food - yet 760 million tonnes is fed to animals on farms every year." -BBC Good Food Title- "What would happen if everyone went vegan?" (By Paul Allen) Each vegan saves 219,000 gallons of water every year!

      @someguy2135@someguy21359 ай бұрын
  • They need to plant biome appropriate trees and shrubs in the hills; farmers need to switch to polycropping using biome-appropriate, food-producing perennials, shrubs and trees (avoiding monocropping with annuals, which require a lot more water); ranchers need to practice a type of rotational grazing called mob grazing, which builds protective soil cover and avoids overgrazing by frequently moving cattle; and everybody including parks, homeowners and cities install rainwater harvesting structures from obsite materials, these would include swales, bunds, checkdams, bioswales etc. This could include prioritizing using road and parking lot runoff to water landscaping instead of diverting it to sewer drains. Brad Lancaster is a great resource regarding rainwater harvesting techniques and has two books on the subject, and Mark Shepard discusses biome appropriate crops in his book, Restoration Agriculture. The Savory Institute is a great resource on mobgrazing. More rail instead of roads would be better as well. Roads dry out landscapes, while rail allows a lot more permeability.

    @b_uppy@b_uppy9 ай бұрын
    • They just had a flood, so the immediate problem has significantly changed.

      @StephenGillie@StephenGillie8 ай бұрын
    • @@StephenGillie Not quite. Flooding is a symptom of the soil being dead from lack of moisture. This is where what I described is important. Plant life and raising the water table would greatly reduce flooding, water lost directly to evaporation, reduce soil loss, increase water for wildlife, reduce fire danger, etc.

      @b_uppy@b_uppy8 ай бұрын
    • @@b_uppy But the reservoirs are refilled, so it's just a matter of time. To say that the drought is a permanent state despite the flooding would be misleading at best, as there is always an end to the drought.

      @StephenGillie@StephenGillie8 ай бұрын
    • @@StephenGillie You're only thinking of the reservoirs being filled instead of thinking of better water management. Filled reservoirs do little to reduce wildfires, flooding, soil loss, etc.

      @b_uppy@b_uppy8 ай бұрын
    • @@b_uppy Dessicated soil reduces wildfires quite effectively - what can't grow can't be there to burn. And again, I do not believe that flooding doesn't fix droughts, at least somewhat. Especially with the reservoirs full to slowly refill the groundwater. The scenario you're describing sounds unscientific, where the soil is permanently damaged and unable to sustain life, yet still contributing to wildfires. Soil is just oxides and detritus, just add water and bacteria and boom it's viable again.

      @StephenGillie@StephenGillie8 ай бұрын
  • Maybe be Missouri River water should be diverted to Colorado river during flood seasons to solve drought situation in western states.

    @therandomthings6933@therandomthings69338 ай бұрын
  • On July 20, 2019, John Martin Dam registered a blistering temperature of 115˚F (46.1˚C), officially marking it as the highest temperature ever recorded in Colorado. This surpassed the previous state record of 114˚F (45.6˚C), set in July 1933 in Las Animas, underscoring the extraordinary nature of this weather event.

    @themosthigh1075@themosthigh10758 ай бұрын
    • We (denver) had the coldest wettest spring and summer 2023 fyi..

      @Think-dont-believe@Think-dont-believe6 ай бұрын
  • Well, the water is going away but your representatives and senators are making sure you keep your guns.

    @MrSesmith11@MrSesmith119 ай бұрын
    • Bingo!!!

      @gixellia8455@gixellia84559 ай бұрын
    • Save it.

      @lowellcalavera6045@lowellcalavera60459 ай бұрын
    • @@Think-dont-believe As the result of climate "change". More extremes.

      @mrmark8603@mrmark86039 ай бұрын
    • @@mrmark8603 This drought is made worse by climate change. Animal agriculture is a major contributor to climate change. It contributes more green house gasses than all transportation combined. One more reason to boycott animal products. Going vegan is the single most effective way for each of us to minimize our environmental footprint. "According to the most comprehensive analysis of farming’s impact on the planet, plant-based food is most effective at combatting climate change. Oxford University researcher Joseph Poore, who led the study, said adopting a vegan diet is “the single biggest way to reduce your impact on planet Earth.” “A vegan diet is probably the single biggest way to reduce your impact on planet Earth, not just greenhouse gases, but global acidification, eutrophication, land use and water use. It is far bigger than cutting down on your flights or buying an electric car,” he explained, which would only reduce greenhouse gas. Avoiding consumption of animal products delivers far better environmental benefits than trying to purchase sustainable meat and dairy,” he added.”. -Joseph Poore, Environmental Science Researcher, University of Oxford. Joseph Poore switched to a plant based diet after seeing the results of the study. Links at my channel under "About.

      @someguy2135@someguy21359 ай бұрын
    • Good. We will need the guns when the water becomes really scarace. That'll make it harder for the rich to gargle it all up.

      @stayinganonymous.3172@stayinganonymous.31729 ай бұрын
  • Not once have I ever seen that gourd or alfalfa on the shelves at any grocery store in the Phoenix area. How about we stop growing high use crops that we don't even use. Crops are the largest user by far than anything else.

    @shamrock5725@shamrock57259 ай бұрын
    • If you consume meat or dairy then you are indirectly consuming the alfalfa.

      @McAwesome363@McAwesome3633 ай бұрын
    • Yet you see beef which is what the alfalfa is fed to

      @McAwesome363@McAwesome3632 ай бұрын
  • Summer, August 2023, lake Mead is full, Colorado river is running full again.

    @larslarsman@larslarsman8 ай бұрын
  • You've overpopulated areas with no water supply. What did you expect? Youd better develop a cheap sustainable way to desalinate sea water.

    @Randy-jz9ox@Randy-jz9ox9 ай бұрын
    • @km-vm9yl that doesn't exist in that area

      @Randy-jz9ox@Randy-jz9ox9 ай бұрын
    • @@Think-dont-believe you're not very bright if you think trucking in water is a viable option.

      @Randy-jz9ox@Randy-jz9ox9 ай бұрын
    • doesn’t exist

      @igaroot@igaroot9 ай бұрын
    • @@Think-dont-believesea level rise is due to the melting of the ice caps

      @igaroot@igaroot9 ай бұрын
  • There are tribes in the area without running water, electricity, phone service and they have up to now been denied I hope the tribes who have access remember that.

    @poetmaggie1@poetmaggie19 ай бұрын
  • How old is this program? The winter of 2023 was one of the wettest on-record, and we saw massive flow through Flaming Gorge, Lake Powell and Lake Havasu. Even Lake Mead, started to turn around somewhat. Another wet season is predicted for 2023-2024, signalling an end to the drought. Lake Powell is now at 120 feet below full pool, not 155 feet below full pool, as this guest stated.

    @ccrider77@ccrider778 ай бұрын
  • I love the Great Lakes

    @stevesummers2462@stevesummers24628 ай бұрын
    • Be ready to defend our water in the great lakes, the Western States and China want it and I be ready to defend it

      @thepatriot4076@thepatriot40768 ай бұрын
    • ​@@thepatriot4076agreed!!!! I would've never thought that water would become the most precious resource. I have no sympathy for the people living in those areas. They keep expanding, knowing what the consequences are.

      @deanchapman1824@deanchapman18247 ай бұрын
  • That figures.... it's absolutely unbelievable how bad the Natives have been treated and it's the absolute truth .

    @user-fe4ef4uc3r@user-fe4ef4uc3r9 ай бұрын
    • Genocide is the word. The US was built on it.

      @patrickfitzgerald2861@patrickfitzgerald28619 ай бұрын
    • Yep. I live on the Navajo Rez. However there is an opportunity for the tribes to install wind and solar on the vast, empty spaces out here. They could lead the US in clean energy, but we have our own issues with trial government B.S. so it will never happen.

      @jdotsalter910@jdotsalter9109 ай бұрын
    • Gotta have a pool in every backyard.

      @KB-ke3fi@KB-ke3fi9 ай бұрын
    • @@KB-ke3fi don't forget those green lavish golf courses...

      @abernathymonsoon4638@abernathymonsoon46389 ай бұрын
    • Cry me a river.

      @Bouncer-id1rh@Bouncer-id1rh9 ай бұрын
  • I live in glenwood springs We had a mudslide in the canyon tonight because of the fire that happened in 2020. It closed i70 for about 2-3hrs. I checked the united states Geological service data charts and the turbidity spiked off the charts over 500 because the water was really muddy. The Roaring Fork was emerald blue it was cool to watch them mix at the convergence

    @jamesregan5438@jamesregan54388 ай бұрын
    • Also about 20 years ago I used to live in Eloy Arizona with my dad in the summers as a kid. It was fun going to the cotton gin seeing the big bales processed. Sucks it's all drying up now.

      @jamesregan5438@jamesregan54388 ай бұрын
  • I see open irrigation which means plenty of water lost to evaporation from the crops and also water loss from water sprays. Perhaps they can build transparent canopies to conserve and capture water loss to the atmosphere? Or look at greenhouses for crops?

    @eddieleong6490@eddieleong64908 ай бұрын
  • Close all golf courses and government supplied drip irrigation systems should do the trick. And of course no grass in residential homes.

    @abrahamgonzalez1028@abrahamgonzalez10289 ай бұрын
    • You and I can't do much about golf courses, other than to boycott them. But we can convert our grass lawns to alternative landscaping, and we can switch to a plant based diet. "A meat-eater’s diet requires 17 times more land, 14 times more water and 10 times more energy than a vegetarian’s, according to research published by The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. This is principally because we use a large proportion of the world’s land for growing crops to feed livestock, rather than humans. (Of the world’s approximately five billion hectares of agricultural land, 68% is used for livestock.) This squeeze on resources is only set to intensify. In 50 years’ time, the UN predicts there will be 10.5 billion people on the planet (the current world population is around 7 billion). To feed us all, it says, we will need to grow food more sustainably. Dr Walt Willett, professor of medicine at Harvard University, says we could eliminate the worst cases of world hunger today with about 40 million tonnes of food - yet 760 million tonnes is fed to animals on farms every year." -BBC Good Food Title- "What would happen if everyone went vegan?" (By Paul Allen) Each vegan saves 219,000 gallons of water every year!

      @someguy2135@someguy21359 ай бұрын
    • Golf courses use reclaimed water, genius.

      @rsenior7140@rsenior71409 ай бұрын
    • @@someguy2135 Same boring post. Of course there are things that people local to the area can do. They can vote out the idiots and vote in people that will keep their cities healthy by getting rid of waste. How? By outlawing golf courses that are not using local plants and shrubs for one thing.

      @ronj9448@ronj94489 ай бұрын
    • @@rsenior7140 Couldn't that reclaimed water be used for growing the food we need instead?

      @someguy2135@someguy21359 ай бұрын
    • @@ronj9448 70-80% of Colorado River water is used for agriculture. How much of that is used for animal agriculture? "And when you zoom in to look at exactly which crops receive the bulk of the Colorado River’s water, 70 percent goes to alfalfa, hay, corn silage, and other grasses that are used to fatten up cattle for beef and cows for dairy. Some of the other crops, like soy, corn grain, wheat, barley, and even cotton, may also be used for animal feed."-Vox Title, Subtitle-"Let’s talk about the biggest cause of the West’s water crisis The Colorado River is going dry ... to feed cows. By Kenny Torrella"

      @someguy2135@someguy21359 ай бұрын
  • The Colorado River has only reached the sea once (Mar. 2014) in the last 60 years!

    @TinShackVideos@TinShackVideos9 ай бұрын
    • Again? Another report ignoring the fact that Colorado is stealing the Colorado river. There are over 400 Tributaries of the Colorado River being diverted away to the eastern side of the Rockies feeding the farms of Colorado. That is over 400 creeks, streams, and rivers diverted from the Colorado River watershed to Denver and its surrounding cities and farms yet no one reports on this major theft. 60 Minutes, you failed! It is surprising that they showed flood irrigation and sprinkler irrigation, the 2 worst and wasteful irrigation types and barely talked about conservation techniques. Not to mention they showed cotton and alfalfa fields, which are the worst water consuming crops. I have never seen anyone eat either of those yet they wanna claim they feed country? They are cash crops and nothing else But while people get all bound up about woke or tRump, they ignore the problems that need to be solved and allow themselves to be distracted enough to continue to steal the wealth of America

      @cehii9514@cehii95148 ай бұрын
    • Nice job! Finally, someone who knows the truth and now the only real question is "why is the corrupt media now gas lighting folks about something that has been going on for well over 50 years?"~! Pretty soon the Americans who have not been paying attention and who still foolishly trust the government and mainstream media will "own nothing and be happy"! Ha! Safe & effective? Not us here my friend! Not a chance~! ;-) Stay safe~!!! M

      @mikeheath7551@mikeheath75518 ай бұрын
  • The federal government typically only met with the states and their metropolitan officials. As a matter of fact Navajo and Hopi councilmen, Fred Johnson and Don Noble were fighting the BIA and other federal departments for Navajo and Hopi water and mineral rights. Their biggest concern was water rights and they realize the future importance of water. They were traveling back from Washington DC after meetings and possible Supreme Court filing documents when they killed in January 1976. It was an unusual airplane crash which exploded so much their body parts had to be gathered as much as possible. Many law enforcement and tribal officials indicated there must have been explosive device used, but the news and government ran with the narrative that the plane went down in bad weather conditions. My mother's uncle traveled with the councilmen to Washington, in the negotiations the federal department heads and senators got enraged because the tribal councilmen would not bend to the government's wishes. While traveling back to their tribes, they diverted from the commuter flight from Albuquerque to Gallup NM into a small aircraft. My mom's uncle told her that they got separated by 2 or 3 officials at the Albuquerque airport from the councilmen who were then lead out into this other small aircraft.

    @ru2yaz33@ru2yaz338 ай бұрын
  • I would agree with what they are saying in this report, changes do need to be made. But the irony is with changes to the climate there is actually more water today and even more tomorrow on Earth because the Ice Caps are melting raising sea levels with Fresh Water, not Salt Water. What we have is not enough water in some areas, not less water but actually more water on Earth. We simply need to use ingenuity and knowhow to get water to where it needs to be, otherwise yes, we have a problem.

    @williamdriver2883@williamdriver28838 ай бұрын
  • 70% of colorado goes to ag. 80% of that goes to fodder crops like alfalfa, which is exported or feeds cattle for export. We must choose: feed ourselves, provide water for cities, industry and hydro or export water as alfalfa and beef. It’s that simple. Choose.

    @GhostOnTheHalfShell@GhostOnTheHalfShell9 ай бұрын
    • Murica will choose the profit interests of the rich before they care about drinking water for the poors

      @Praisethesunson@Praisethesunson9 ай бұрын
    • Welcome to globalization. We need to put something back on those import ships, can't send them back empty.

      @robbank8027@robbank80279 ай бұрын
    • @@robbank8027 Lol we used to send a bunch of trash plastic to China and called it recycling

      @Praisethesunson@Praisethesunson9 ай бұрын
    • @@robbank8027 kinda. people like their showers and tap water. they also like electricity.

      @GhostOnTheHalfShell@GhostOnTheHalfShell9 ай бұрын
    • Let them drink sand.

      @gmac8852@gmac88529 ай бұрын
  • "We live in an era of limits right now and it's not going to go away anytime soon. In fact, it's only going to get worse" Well said. Very well said.

    @A3Kr0n@A3Kr0n9 ай бұрын
    • Overpopulation is the root cause of today's significant problems

      @JackF99@JackF999 ай бұрын
    • Graphene water filters will be the magic savior once someone figures out how to manufacture them in industrial quantities. Then sea water can be filtered easily and the water pumped inland anywhere, recharging rivers, lakes, dams and reservoirs and supplying limitless clean drinking water anywhere. Laying a pipeline in the CAP canal and pumping water back up through it would probably be a relatively cost effective way to get water back up into the mountains and lakes. The ever increasing federal water quality requirements make drinking water that was fine twenty years ago, hazardous today. THAT water could be run through graphene filters so we can drink it. Biden should be investing in THAT technology instead of sending hundreds of billions to Ukraine or paying for someone else's higher education financing choices.

      @keithsj10@keithsj109 ай бұрын
    • That sentence in particular grabbed my attention. The 2030's and beyond are going to be all about our previous naive infinite growth models violently crashing up against the stark reality of a world of limited resources. The whimsical American culture of instant gratification and exceptionalism is going to react in ways that will terrify imo. I'm nearly as afraid of that ideological reaction as I am of the actual climate change up ahead, but this time I'm afraid we won't have another FDR to open up a new path through representative democracy as was done during the great depression nearly a century ago. This time sclerotic octogenarian political leadership, corporate overlords and straight up fascists are all we'll have. utterly terrifying

      @PendulumCancel@PendulumCancel9 ай бұрын
    • @@PendulumCancel especially since the conservative half of the population is today more than ever programmed to dismiss any mention of limiting growth or acknowledgement of limited resources of any kind as godless SOCIALISM.

      @JackF99@JackF999 ай бұрын
    • It just flooded. It went away. Sorry that the quote isn't relevant anymore.

      @StephenGillie@StephenGillie8 ай бұрын
  • I grew up in Arizona in the 1960s and 1970s. We Arizonans were saying this back during those times.

    @jefffortney4261@jefffortney42618 ай бұрын
  • I live in Colorado. It's been raining here every day. I don't know how.

    @Arturo-km3tv@Arturo-km3tv8 ай бұрын
  • My mother and father have been in the public water supply district industry since I was 7 years old and my mother eventually became director of the national rural water association which basically tried to keep water rights from being commodified and keep the chemicals out of our water sources. This is pretty much the same conversation I've heard most of my life and I'm 60 years old. Nothing will get done because the media will divert people's attention when it comes time for mega Monopoly corporations to commodify and control the resource. Water is still more Fought over than any other resource such as oil but most people have been taught to ignore such life sustaining vital resource and take it for granted that when they turn the valve the water works. Water infrastructure has been fleeced by politicians and greedy CEOs. The village where migrant workers live who work the agriculture fields in central California that use 100% irrigation don't have any water access and they are not allowed to use any of the Colorado River water that's irrigating the fields that they're laboring in. I have always loved California and that is where my heart is and California people will always be the best people to me but California has been taken over by criminal send to get networks and this Governor is one of the most evil anti-American inhumane criminal people I have ever experienced in my life! This governor and his syndicate crime Bosses have nothing to do with being a liberal, a democrat, a Catholic or a Christian! But the media that they own and control makes you think they do. If people would look at the behavior and actions and results of the politicians and celebrities that they bow down to they would see that it does not match what they say and more importantly what's been programmed into the voters head. Unfortunately when politicians are going after voters using advertising (psychology programming) it's also affecting the people who don't vote and just want to live a simple life without having to work 60 hours a week and have children that don't even know him cuz they have no time to spend with them until there's a shooting at their school and then everybody is allowed 24 hours before they got to go back to their training and their corporate jobs! The blue and red voters just keep voting no matter how messed up their party becomes! HUMANS NEED AIR WATER AND FOOD IN THAT ORDER. THOSE SHOULD BE YOUR TOP THREE PRIORITIES. NOT HOW GOOD YOU LOOK WITH YOUR CLOTHES, OR HOW COOL YOUR CAR SOUNDS, OR HOW MANY FRIENDS YOU HAVE ON YOUR SOCIAL MEDIA ACCOUNT.

    @orionhauk@orionhauk8 ай бұрын
    • Why write an essay when no one is going to read it?

      @facitenonvictimarum174@facitenonvictimarum1748 ай бұрын
    • This comment kind of explains the problem. It's in the contradicting labels of the people in that region i.e. Christian/liberal/Democrat. Claiming love for the people that created the abomination this story reports enables their behavior. When things happen in my life that complicate things and result in negative consequences I'm generally told I did it to myself. Many circumstances and influences weigh in on my decisions, but I'm always blamed regardless. I vowed I'd never use the phrase on another, however they are doing this to themselves. One thing I'm conscious of is to never allow my plan to solve my personal problems affect others negatively. Rather then change the ideology and policies that created thier problems, California wants to maintain the course, and expect others to go without, exasperating the problem, and forcing others that made better choices suffer.

      @tylerloterbauer3711@tylerloterbauer37118 ай бұрын
    • @@tylerloterbauer3711 Another filibuster.

      @facitenonvictimarum174@facitenonvictimarum1748 ай бұрын
    • Well said - thanks for sharing - No reservoirs have been built since the 70s I believe? What a joke… The real story is so different than this climate crisis nonsense

      @richvanevery3@richvanevery38 ай бұрын
    • don’t lie. Farm workers have access to water. stop spreading far left lies.

      @juliemunoz2762@juliemunoz27628 ай бұрын
  • Lake Powell is up 35 feet. They failed to report on the effects of VERY WET spring.

    @rtschuh2@rtschuh29 ай бұрын
    • Yup there some greedy Propaganda here as they act like there was no rain or snug over the last season floods.

      @911jayishsupremacy@911jayishsupremacy9 ай бұрын
    • Lake Powell is also going down a half foot a day so we can celebrate all that new water until the start of October when California who hasn't built a dam since 1976, steals all that water again. 80% of the water they steal will be flushed into the ocean to protect an invasive species bait fish.

      @rogerschroeder8905@rogerschroeder89059 ай бұрын
    • The Glen Canyon dam very nearly failed in the '82-'83 El Nino.

      @candui7278@candui72788 ай бұрын
    • Yet it's 160 feet below normal so let's try again 😂😂😂😂

      @thepatriot4076@thepatriot40768 ай бұрын
  • Sounds like the desert needs to better utilize it’s surplus solar energy by pumping sea water to desalination plants. By the math they provided, to replenish lake Meade we need to produce 87.6 million gallons of water everyday for the next 10 years. Preheat the sea water by using it to cool solar panels that could also power heating elements to speed up the evaporation process in saltwater “pools” inside greenhouse like structures with a channel along the inner perimeter to collect evaporated freshwater. By scale for what a survival solar desalination still produces, you’d produce about 500,000 gallons of water a day per acre. So you need a 175 acre solar/ desalination farm in as hot of a place as you can find with a giant pipe flowing seawater to it all. Although this is a bandaid on a bullet wound, the flow created by a 175 acre desalination plant would be over 1,000 gallons per second 24 hours a day or about 1/3 the rate of Niagara Falls.

    @russellchampagne3830@russellchampagne38308 ай бұрын
  • My sister in law lives in Arizona. Despite the shortage people are watering their lawns and filling their swimming pools. Same things can be said for the other states. Can’t understand why the spineless politicians don’t restrict this wasteful usage instead of going after farmers….

    @matthewtang9290@matthewtang92908 ай бұрын
    • Right, and with all that residential is only 12% of water usage. Meanwhile, farmers use 7 times that amount. I'm not against farmers at all.

      @SkyGlitchGalaxy@SkyGlitchGalaxy8 ай бұрын
  • Solar panels over canals might help reduce evaporation of water from the canals and produce electricity?

    @willapanews9761@willapanews97619 ай бұрын
  • I guess they should have listened to Dr. Carl Sagan in 1985.

    @trdoffroadguy1684@trdoffroadguy16849 ай бұрын
  • Make it mandatory everywhere to cut off our water when it reaches a certain time. Like they do in Australia. People have to be okay with having water for years & years from now instead of showing for 45 mins today. Make. It. Mandatory!!!

    @TiffnVA757@TiffnVA7577 ай бұрын
  • ITS A DESERT. It has always been a DESERT. Because of a lack of precipitation for many hundreds of years.

    @blitzegron4848@blitzegron48488 ай бұрын
  • Utah's Great Salt Lake lost 73% of its water and 60% of its surface area since 1850. They have been limiting water needed for farms, houses, reservoirs and the extraction of critical minerals from brine, such as lithium and magnesium for relocation to public and private golf courses. 13% Of the water usage from the basin goes to Utah golf courses with 177 millions of gallons being consumed and used. This is more related to water rights abuse and the water wars are becoming more visible.

    @009Raines@009Raines8 ай бұрын
    • Salt water!

      @ovidiuciuparu6421@ovidiuciuparu64218 ай бұрын
    • Lakes in deserts tend to dry up.........have you never seen a nature documentary before?

      @zbelair7218@zbelair72188 ай бұрын
    • They don't send salt water to golf courses and neighborhoods. 🤣

      @Mars-77@Mars-778 ай бұрын
    • @@Mars-77the water that flows into the lake isn’t salt water, it’s mountain runoff. The land around the lake are full of salt, which makes the lake salty. Also the Great Salt Lake is destined to dry up, regardless of what we do. It’s the last remains of a vast inland sea that’s been drying up for millennia, I.e. the bonneville salt flats is a dried up portion of the same lake.

      @derekwest4245@derekwest42458 ай бұрын
    • So funny to see these comments when people don't even know what they are talking about....😂

      @peterpam5479@peterpam54798 ай бұрын
  • Growing cotton and alfalfa in the desert is lunacy. What were these farmers thinking? I can grow cotton on my farm on the east coast, without any irrigation, just the rain Mother Nature supplies.

    @lordchaa1598@lordchaa15989 ай бұрын
  • Wouldn’t snow cap mountains melting help the water issue?

    @Rajt828@Rajt8288 ай бұрын
  • Not once was it mentioned about stopping growth in huge cities out in the middle of nowhere. No growth means no taxes for these politicians to enjoy.

    @MsNextgeneration12@MsNextgeneration128 ай бұрын
  • I went white water rafting in the Colorado river back in 2016. It was a blast. I went back to the same area in summer 2022, and was absolutely shocked to see the same river, at such a low level. They still run rafting tours, but it's more like a paddle boat ride than the white capped wild adventure that I went on. I bet that water will be the next rare resource that the planet will go to war over.

    @markcarr5142@markcarr51429 ай бұрын
    • Correct. Humanity already tears itself apart over politics and products. But soon enough, it'll all be about digital connectivity, clean air, food, and water. One day, when XiXiPi controls all money, all food, all water, and all major land... that's it. Game over. 💪😎✌️ Masters and slaves at the ULTIMATE level. As desired. #2049 #XiXiPi #WorldDomination

      @Novastar.SaberCombat@Novastar.SaberCombat9 ай бұрын
    • Not where I live freshwater is plentiful i see lots of it every day to the tone of 750,000 gallons of water a second I live by Niagara Falls, Lake Erie and Lake Ontario

      @wm3293@wm32939 ай бұрын
    • People are already going to war over it all over the world.

      @angelinimartini@angelinimartini9 ай бұрын
    • Wow, talk about the definition of anecdotal.

      @Bouncer-id1rh@Bouncer-id1rh9 ай бұрын
    • @@wm3293 That area sucks.

      @Bouncer-id1rh@Bouncer-id1rh9 ай бұрын
  • The solution is obvious. In times like these we need to plant more shade trees in parking lots, increase drainage land in our concrete jungle, convert our wasteful lawns and backyards to permaculture food forest gardens landscapes with perennial drought and heat tolerant plants to provide shade and food year long for our family, friends and neighbors. It’s healthy and better for us mentality/physically and the environment. You will get your vitamins C from the medicine foods you grown and vitamin D from the sun. :)

    @Ded-Ede@Ded-Ede9 ай бұрын
    • I've said the same with growing crops on lawns.. if were going use water this should be the wat, not watering grass smh

      @princetonjoshway4689@princetonjoshway46899 ай бұрын
    • Most cities and states will not allow this, especially houses with an HOA because it is considered an eyesore/nusance to the public and decreases property values. Major grocery store companies do not like people having gardens in their yards because it takes away from their profit margins so they lobby the cities and counties to ban it.

      @he_lives_in_apineapple_und9743@he_lives_in_apineapple_und97438 ай бұрын
  • 3:38 exactly. Where is the demand coming from? Is it distributed fairly? Is it used efficiently? (No, No)

    @heyRex@heyRex8 ай бұрын
  • Just curious, this may be a dumb question, but why doesn't our federal and state government start building more reservoirs instead of letting all of our river's empty into the ocean?

    @Johnny53kgb-nsa@Johnny53kgb-nsa8 ай бұрын
  • Arizona was allowing Saudi Arabia water for over a decade to grow their Alfalfa that went to feed their cows! It got revoked in April2023👍🏼

    @missshroom5512@missshroom55129 ай бұрын
    • I can't find that information they were stopped. I did find several articles 7/2023 that state that the Saudis are still doing this. (Esquire and Wash Post). Thanks!

      @ronj9448@ronj94489 ай бұрын
    • Is that true? If not, it needs to be.

      @Bouncer-id1rh@Bouncer-id1rh9 ай бұрын
    • @@ronj9448 Either can I. Where did he get that info from?

      @Bouncer-id1rh@Bouncer-id1rh9 ай бұрын
  • Greed is most stupid of human behaviors and the most dangerous of all human behaviors for other humans. Once a person decides they need more than they fundamentally need to survive and live, they become an enemy to all other humans. That's the reality of a world with limited resources.

    @ronaldcole7415@ronaldcole74159 ай бұрын
    • I’m writing a book that touches on this subject!!! Sci fi but reality.

      @thetravelingkittens1393@thetravelingkittens13939 ай бұрын
    • @@michaelcoca4902 evolution seems to indicate cooperation was humanities greatest strength.

      @ronaldcole7415@ronaldcole74158 ай бұрын
    • and most importantly nature. no humans without it.

      @michaeldelgiudice1057@michaeldelgiudice10578 ай бұрын
  • Having lived on the Colorado river for many years it has been the most litigated river on earth since I can remember. That’s even before the water shortages. I can only imagine how it is now. The reliance on the river is unsustainable and the river is a National treasure. Drastic action needs to be taken. Southern California uses so much. It would seem plausible to use desalinized ocean water to relieve the strain on the Colorado river. They say ocean levels are rising so it would seem to make sense. Just a thought

    @livelikemateo6951@livelikemateo69518 ай бұрын
    • California is the problem. They steal as much water as they can and lie about it. They truly believe they own that river. And conservation be damned. It costs them to much money so they lie about all the work they have been doing when they can do more conservation but dont.

      @milt6208@milt62088 ай бұрын
    • Yes, but desalination costs money and people are used to get Colorado water for free.

      @thorium222@thorium2228 ай бұрын
    • @@thorium222then that’s a financial problem not a climate problem..

      @Think-dont-believe@Think-dont-believe6 ай бұрын
    • @@thorium222how much more does desalination cost over water treatment?..

      @Think-dont-believe@Think-dont-believe6 ай бұрын
    • @@thorium222that’s a trick question because they are exempt from reporting

      @Think-dont-believe@Think-dont-believe6 ай бұрын
  • How many gallons of water do data storage facilities use in the state of Arizona?

    @michaelpaquette5181@michaelpaquette51818 ай бұрын
  • I’m concerned also about water temperature and algae if there’s any marine life left still. It’s like dominoes right now.

    @reginaerekson9139@reginaerekson91399 ай бұрын
    • That's impossible to ignore when so many dead fish wash ashore and I'm irritated too that so much methane release from north Russian tundra and shallow ocean shelves now without sea shore ice has even more very bad news being hidden by omission. That much increase in 10 years time is creating ejection craters. not many so far but it started being officially reported.

      @JosephNordenbrockartistraction@JosephNordenbrockartistraction9 ай бұрын
  • The Rocky Mountains did get above average snow pack this last winter, so it has helped bring up the water levels in the lakes.

    @Mikenorma@Mikenorma9 ай бұрын
    • shhhhh. dont tell anyone else this or you will get a visit from the climate police for thinking against the narrative

      @perry92964@perry929649 ай бұрын
    • But this video isn't about how the water levels are increasing, instead it's about drought, so your comment is technically off topic. 😁

      @StephenGillie@StephenGillie8 ай бұрын
    • A drop in the bucket.

      @bzdtemp@bzdtemp8 ай бұрын
    • Look up Laguna Salada. When it’s full and evaporating at the fastest rate on the planet, the Colorado River watershed gets 15% more precipitation than years it’s dry. Agrees has a plan to circulate Gulf of California water (9 ft tides) north on the eastern edge of Laguna Salada and back south on its west side. Lake Powell rose 41 ft this year and Lake Mead rose 60 !

      @brucearterbury1856@brucearterbury18568 ай бұрын
    • @@brucearterbury1856 So water evaporates at Laguna Salada and then rains down across the Colorado River watershed? Very interesting - and since this area is being drawn downward due to the San Andreas fault, it should be less-complicated to manually flood.

      @StephenGillie@StephenGillie8 ай бұрын
  • Isn't this year's season really good? Lake Powell and lake Mead levels are increasing, not yet reached their hay days but getting there and with the projected mega El Nino in the coming year or two, the Colorado and the water table should gain a lot of what it's lost. Here's hoping.

    @bluceree7312@bluceree73128 ай бұрын
  • Saint Goerge Utah's growth is due to people escaping California, I just went to Irvine to pick up a car and it took me 3 hours to go 64 miles adding a lot of time to my return to Oregon, When there is no traffic people in Sacramento and La race to the next traffic jam, I saw people going 90-100 mph no wonder the accidents are real bad and insurance rates are so expensive, I am glad I left that place 16 years ago.

    @craphittingthefan2360@craphittingthefan23608 ай бұрын
  • I mean...how did the farmers not see this as a possible outcome? They farm in the desert

    @taylorclark6233@taylorclark62339 ай бұрын
    • They don't care. They will farm things they have no business growing right until they literally can't

      @Praisethesunson@Praisethesunson9 ай бұрын
    • I'm sure they didn't care.

      @stevensilver1679@stevensilver16798 ай бұрын
    • In California, agriculture accounts for 80% usage of available water, yet, agriculture accounts for less than 3% of GDP. The number one agricultural use in California is alfalfa which goes to feed cows. Agricultural use of water in California will fortunately have a self correcting solution; milk is something like 97% water the other 3% of proteins will be genetically duplicated. Alfalfa and cows will shortly will have far less demand shortly but crops like rice and tomatoes should be grown out of state where there is plenty of water.

      @shepherdsknoll@shepherdsknoll8 ай бұрын
  • Why do we have basins with NO greenery. No trees, no shrubs, no plants. We have techniques and technology to re-green degraded land and improve water capture. We NEED this done ASAP.

    @ReviewBoard-uy5nv@ReviewBoard-uy5nv9 ай бұрын
    • more green brings more moisture and less desertification

      @randomstuff463@randomstuff4639 ай бұрын
    • To have green vegetation in the arid west you need water. Not enough of that falls from the sky. That’s what this is all about.

      @COSolar6419@COSolar64199 ай бұрын
    • The Basin and Range is an enclosed hydrological system. All the water that falls in those mountains stays in those valleys because no rivers leave the Basin and Range. So if things aren’t growing there it’s natural and part of that elevated dry, very hot and very cold ecosystem. It’s not like water is being pumped out of Nevada and nothing grows for that reason it just sucks to be a plant in Nevada.

      @alexburke1899@alexburke18999 ай бұрын
    • It's called a desert for a reason.

      @Firedog-ny3cq@Firedog-ny3cq9 ай бұрын
  • Watering lawns should stop immediately. They need to limit some of its use.

    @diannaleefolkers-sarber2393@diannaleefolkers-sarber23938 ай бұрын
  • Grass Lawns in the middle of a desert climate are a frivolous waste of water. 🤦🏼‍♂️ You need to replace that with either rocks or astroturf. Precious resources shouldn’t be wasted on decoration.

    @matthewscott1091@matthewscott10918 ай бұрын
  • WHY ARE WE FARMING AND BUILDING GIANT CITIES IN THE DESERT?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!??!?!?!

    @MrMountainchris@MrMountainchris9 ай бұрын
    • 🇺🇲 = 🙈

      @CHIEF_420@CHIEF_4209 ай бұрын
  • The city of Scottsdale has banned, grass front yards from being planted towards the end of this year. The city of Phoenix is located in Maracopa County and is still one of the fastest growing counties in America. That’s pretty crazy.

    @dusty7264@dusty72648 ай бұрын
    • Why is it crazy?

      @RobertMJohnson@RobertMJohnson8 ай бұрын
    • @@RobertMJohnson No water available to sustain it with.

      @oldtimergaming9514@oldtimergaming95148 ай бұрын
    • Didn't scotttsdale, az havr to cut water off to a neighborhood along the hills/mountains recently?!

      @dwjoseph59@dwjoseph598 ай бұрын
    • @@dwjoseph59 yes, Rio Verde, they were told by the city of Scottsdale twenty years ago that Scottsdale was going to supply them water for a while 20 years I think but they were going to have to figure out where they were going to get their water from, because their was a cut off date. They didn’t do anything about it.

      @dusty7264@dusty72648 ай бұрын
    • Maricopa*

      @dylanfield7098@dylanfield70988 ай бұрын
  • Dialing back demand isn't going to work, but is necessary in the interim. Desalination plants of massive scale constructed along the California coast will be necessary in the future.

    @daviddelaney363@daviddelaney3638 ай бұрын
  • I love that we have the Colorado River water sharing project but at no point did any of these states across the basin, who all depend on it, millions of gallons of water for agriculture, power, and drinking water, never came together to build nuclear power plants that run at full power, to operate desalination plants on the coast of California and Texas, to send that water back upstream to recharge both the river and underground aquifers across the region. It’s just a numbers game and you don’t need huge massively expensive power plants, a series of small modular reactors that cost $100 million a piece to build, will allow you to scatter them across all of the states, so that there isn’t a huge shock to the system if one goes offline. And there is nothing happening in any of these states to do anything about this in any way. Demand isn’t going anywhere, so you need to increase the supply by the way I have described above.

    @Da__goat@Da__goat8 ай бұрын
  • I’m curious how much water is lost to evaporation with all those long, open-air canals!

    @Gringo_Lingo@Gringo_Lingo8 ай бұрын
  • this isnt due to climate change, this is due to people living in these areas... millions more than they can handle.

    @epnuzuluaga766@epnuzuluaga7668 ай бұрын
  • As a former farmer I don't think 150 acres is that much to give up. For a grower as big as that guy appears, it is a drop in the bucket

    @madbug1965@madbug19659 ай бұрын
    • Again? Another report ignoring the fact that Colorado is stealing the Colorado river. There are over 400 Tributaries of the Colorado River being diverted away to the eastern side of the Rockies feeding the farms of Colorado. That is over 400 creeks, streams, and rivers diverted from the Colorado River watershed to Denver and its surrounding cities and farms yet no one reports on this major theft. 60 Minutes, you failed! It is surprising that they showed flood irrigation and sprinkler irrigation, the 2 worst and wasteful irrigation types and barely talked about conservation techniques. Not to mention they showed cotton and alfalfa fields, which are the worst water consuming crops. I have never seen anyone eat either of those yet they wanna claim they feed country? They are cash crops and nothing else But while people get all bound up about woke or tRump, they ignore the problems that need to be solved and allow themselves to be distracted enough to continue to steal the wealth of America

      @cehii9514@cehii95148 ай бұрын
    • As a current small rancher/farmer 150 acres is a LOT of land and I find it sad that anyone would support the loss of someone else's land & property rights in America, but some people never care about other folks' property as long as it does not cost them anything~! That is why the US is doing so "great" these days BTW! Be careful of the trickery of the corrupt government and mainstream media because the Colorado River has not been a real "river" that reached the gulf for over 50 years~! This is a bogus gas lighting story to trick folks! M

      @mikeheath7551@mikeheath75518 ай бұрын
  • Lakes and rivers water levels lowering are in large part due to bottle water sold in almost every business on the planet. Thats where the water is.

    @AnotherOverTaxedTaxPayer@AnotherOverTaxedTaxPayer8 ай бұрын
  • Colorado has had a lot of rain this Summer, enough to take the entire state out of drought, yet I'm sure farmers and municipalities feel they can take even more now. California should be cut completely out of the pact.

    @markbosky@markbosky9 ай бұрын
    • I agree

      @49lucky@49lucky9 ай бұрын
    • @@49luckyYou agree that water that comes from North of Nevada should terminate at Vegas? Not your water.

      @eleventy-seven@eleventy-seven9 ай бұрын
    • Making agriculture and golf courses work in Arizona deserts is idiotic

      @rbrookeb@rbrookeb9 ай бұрын
    • So why should California be cut out completely when Arizona and Nevada wast 5 times the amount of water? Let's not forget St George Utah and their golf courses and green lawns using 100s of millions of gallons every year.

      @trollhunter7764@trollhunter77649 ай бұрын
    • @@trollhunter7764 because California already has boundless resources, especially water. Not to mention that the entire state is growing ridiculously water-intensive, highly profitable crops like nuts in the central valley using free inputs.

      @markbosky@markbosky9 ай бұрын
  • The recent rains are missing because this 60 minutes episode was released on 14 Aug 2022.

    @scoria1755@scoria17559 ай бұрын
    • 60 minutes has an agenda!

      @andydeniseposey426@andydeniseposey4269 ай бұрын
  • I can't believe the guy with a farm full of green grass is shocked he's gotta give the water up 🤣🤣🤣

    @CHITOWN8072@CHITOWN80728 ай бұрын
  • Avocados use a lot of water compared to other crops. More than 12 times as much as tomatoes. One way to conserve water is by sticking to crops that use less water and cutting out crops like avocados.

    @fefferryerr1818@fefferryerr18188 ай бұрын
  • They shouldn't let anyone move to these states anymore. Let alone companies or even sports teams. They should have a high water tax for eveyone to stop this. I'm glad the massive relocation to Texas and other states has begun.

    @jaycup9621@jaycup96219 ай бұрын
    • Unfortunately people are also moving in droves to states like AZ.

      @Michilar@Michilar9 ай бұрын
    • I'm sure some of us in these states could find reasons to ban you from your state....

      @mikethomas7138@mikethomas71389 ай бұрын
    • That is a bit of an overreaction. There is a difference between the overuse of water by many huge water consumers (which is what is happening) and having too little water to support residents. People love to do amateurs extrapolation and jump to the catastrophic scenario but the truth is rarely that extreme.

      @andrewlm5677@andrewlm56779 ай бұрын
    • @@andrewlm5677 Thank you for a rare comment of sanity. You are so dead on with the "extrapolation" part of your comment. The ignorant statements people make...good grief.

      @Bouncer-id1rh@Bouncer-id1rh9 ай бұрын
  • If agriculture along the Colorado had eco-sustainable farming practices twenty-five years ago this wouldn't be any issue for agriculture there yet.

    @darinbauer8122@darinbauer81229 ай бұрын
    • Yes it would, the international demand for Ag produced in the growing districts of the Colorado is off the charts. It's why NOAA's actual drought designations from the late 90's are Agricultural & Hydrological drought. Virtually everyone thinks it's been meteorological drought, including this program. The meteorological designation wasn't added until 2019, and is likely to be repeal this year when the final numbers come out soon. But we;ll see on that.

      @Bouncer-id1rh@Bouncer-id1rh9 ай бұрын
  • Look to the east. Pipeline water from Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Indiana across the Great Plains to the rain shadow regions on the eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains. Oh and, by the way, make sure corporations such as Nestle pay their fair share to water rights. As part of the common need, businesses must pay up.

    @Reciprocity_Soils@Reciprocity_Soils8 ай бұрын
  • Contradictory to popular belief, ag uses 40% of Cali water and 60% is residential. Ag developed B4 the population exploded. Ag water use is stable despite greater output. Arizona and Nevada ALL need YEAR-ROUND water restrictions and tiered water bill based on usage. If you live in the desert, you need to comsume water like you're in the desert.

    @whaaat3632@whaaat36328 ай бұрын
  • Stop filling swimming pools, and watering golf courses, and irrigating crops in the middle of the desert

    @jonmunch3298@jonmunch32989 ай бұрын
  • Ironically, one of our presidents sent a scientist to study the practicality of agriculture west of the Mississippi River. His research showed “ agriculture was NOT practical west of the Mississippi River due to “inadequate annual rainfall” We should have listened to him. 🙄😩😱😳

    @liberatedwoman@liberatedwoman9 ай бұрын
    • LOL. So true. Politicians listen to Money and sometimes voters. Not so much logic and data. National Debt?!?!

      @blitzegron4848@blitzegron48488 ай бұрын
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