A
car sits in dried and cracked earth of what was the bottom of the Almaden Reservoir (Getty images) |
Feb 2, 2014 | The Daily Sheeple | Chris Carrington
California officials have warned that tap water may not be delivered to local agencies that distribute it to homes in the state. Two thirds of residents in the state and more than a million acres of farmland get part or all of their water from the California Department of Water Resources.
Mark Cowin director of the Water Resources Department said in an interview with Bloomberg:
“This isn’t a coming crisis, this isn’t an evolving crisis. This is a current crisis.”This is the first time in the departments history that it has predicted what it calls ‘zero allocation’, a situation that will affect about 25 million people.
The water originates in the Sacramento-San
Joaquin River Delta and from there is is distributed to local water
agencies via a system of aqueducts, reservoirs, pipelines and pumping
stations.
From this point forward, local distribution agencies will have to rely on other sources such as stored water and groundwater to try and keep their customers supplied.
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Contributed by Chris Carrington of The Daily Sheeple.
Chris Carrington is a writer, researcher and lecturer with a background in science, technology and environmental studies. Chris is an editor for The Daily Sheeple. Wake the flock up!
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