As most environmentalists know, the "drought" in the Colorado River watershed is really closer to the basin's long-term normal. Now, the lack of water in the overappropriated, overdammed river is starting to have fallout.
Boulder City, Nev.,and other smaller communities south of Vegas are finding hydropower from Hoover Dam is harder to come by. At the same time, they're finding that their current supplemental supplier is too expensive.
Of course, the real story is the explosive growth of Boulder City, Laughlin and other cities that are in the middle of a freaking desert! The city's use of dam power has dropped from 80 percent to 50 percent in the last 15 years.
And so, you white folks retirees slumming at small-town casino cities are getting hoist by your own capitalist petard.
Once again, I quote Ed Abbey: "The desert always wins."
Retire in Mississippi, where there's water, and hit one of the oceanfront floating casinos if you have to. (And, get more schadenfreude from more Class 4-5 hurricanes, maybe.)
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Showing posts with label Hoover Dam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hoover Dam. Show all posts
February 18, 2011
February 12, 2008
Lake Mead could be dead in a dozen years — pop your champagne corks now
Lake Mead dry by 2021? Like Ed Abbey, were he still alive, I would soooo cry, NOT, if this actually happens:
Oh, and if you think this is a worst-case scenario, the authors say, not at all:
If you allow for today’s waterflow and an earlier start to global warming, here’s what the results actually could be, they say:
Speaking of Abbey, can we get the Monkey Wrench Gang to blow up Hoover Dam instead of Glen Canyon Dam at that point, since there will no longer be a need for it?
What are the chances that Lake Mead, a key source of water for more than 22 million people in the Southwest, would ever go dry? A new study says it’s 50 percent by 2021 if warming continues and water use is not curtailed.
“We were stunned at the magnitude of the problem and how fast it was coming at us,” co-author Tim Barnett of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography said in a statement. “Make no mistake, this water problem is not a scientific abstraction, but rather one that will impact each and every one of us that live in the Southwest.”
“It's likely to mean real changes to how we live and do business in this region,” added co-author David Pierce, a Scripps climate scientist.
Oh, and if you think this is a worst-case scenario, the authors say, not at all:
The researchers also noted that their estimates are conservative — in other words, the water shortage is likely to be even more dire than they estimate. The conservative approach included basing their findings on:
• The premise that warming effects only started in 2007, though most experts consider human-caused warming to have likely started decades earlier.
• Averaging river flow over the past 100 years, even though it has dropped in recent decades.
If you allow for today’s waterflow and an earlier start to global warming, here’s what the results actually could be, they say:
• A 10 percent chance that Lake Mead could be dry by 2014.
• A 50 percent chance that reservoir levels will drop too low to allow hydroelectric power generation by 2017.
• The system could still run dry even if recently proposed mitigation measures are implemented.
Speaking of Abbey, can we get the Monkey Wrench Gang to blow up Hoover Dam instead of Glen Canyon Dam at that point, since there will no longer be a need for it?
Labels:
Abbey (Ed),
Desert Southwest,
Glen Canyon Dam,
global warming,
Hoover Dam,
Lake Mead,
Monkey Wrench Gang
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