Re: California Drought

2001-06-25 Thread Louis Proyect

>If I understand the global warming models correctly,
>this situation will be normal in California within a
>decade or so. Sending bottled water to farmers may be
>"nice" but it's no way to run an economy. Farming is
>dead in the far north, for good, apparently.
>
>tim

This is exactly the sort of thing that symbolizes the deepening
environmental crisis. You have the following things interacting with each
other:

1. growth of cities in what amounts to desert conditions (Phoenix, Las
Vegas, etc.) requires water-based energy to be diverted into air
conditioning, lawn sprinklers, golf courses, etc.

2. such cities are car-based by their nature. SUV's, the car of choice in
such yahoo locales, were responsible for 15 percent of the increase in
greenhouse emissions last year.

3. food supplies to such cities involves agribusiness suplies from
out-of-state either in California or Mexico. by their nature, crops are
subject to pesticides, chemical fertilizers and irrigation, all of which
seriously degrade the environment.

4. water diverted to hydroelectric dams and irrigation causes rivers to dry
up, thus leading to the extinction of valuable fish.


What a fuggin mess.

Louis Proyect
Marxism mailing list: http://www.marxmail.org




Re: California Drought

2001-06-25 Thread Doug Henwood

Tim Bousquet wrote:

>If I understand the global warming models correctly

Forget about global warming! Alex Cockburn reassures us there's 
nothing to worry about: 
.

Doug




California Drought

2001-06-25 Thread Tim Bousquet

If I understand the global warming models correctly,
this situation will be normal in California within a
decade or so. Sending bottled water to farmers may be
"nice" but it's no way to run an economy. Farming is
dead in the far north, for good, apparently.

tim


Siskiyou County running dry
Scott, Shasta river conditions are life threatening to
salmon
Redding Record-Searchlight - 6/23/01
By Jim Schultz, staff writer

YREKA - Siskiyou County, caught in the grips of its
worst drought since
1936, is a county under siege.

"It's getting horrible," Siskiyou County Supervisor
Bill Overman of 
Yreka
said Friday. "It's drier than the dickens."

With no end in sight, 44 wells have gone dry in Scott
and Little Shasta
valleys in north central Siskiyou County, and others
are close to being 
dry,
he said.

"We fear there will be a lot more before summer's
out," Overman said.

Earlier this week, Grizz Adams, head of the county's
Office of 
Emergency
Services, told supervisors that he expects that the
Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) may soon step in to help fund
emergency 
relief operations.

But, Adams said Friday, he's not sure exactly what the
nature of that 
aid
would be.

"I have no idea," he said. "It's kind of the
million-dollar question."

Adams said the county may have to step in to ensure
that residents have
water.

"But it could get to the point where we might have to
hire water trucks 
to
get water to people," he said, adding that such help
would present a
"nightmare" of logistical problems.

In the meantime, the county has agreed to waive a
variety of fees so 
those
with wells that have gone dry can be deepened, said
Overman.

Meanwhile, two Mount Shasta water bottling companies -
Crystal Geyser 
and
Dannon - have donated 48 pallets of bottled drinking
water for those 
whose
wells have failed.

"They have been very generous," Overman said.

Last month, Siskiyou County was declared as a state
and federal 
disaster area due to its drought conditions, but a
presidential 
disaster declaration has yet been issued, said Adams.

Adams, who noted that the Klamath Basin has been
reeling since 
irrigation
water was nearly cut off to farmers by the U.S. Bureau
of Reclamation 
to
protect endangered fish, said he's trying to treat the
Klamath Basin 
and the
water emergency in the Scott and Little Shasta valleys
separately.

But, he agreed, Siskiyou County's drought will only
get worse in the 
weeks
and months ahead, and perhaps longer, noting that the
small community 
of
Etna has contacted him for water conservation
information.

"It's just started," said Adams. "I'm not sure what
we're going to do."

Meanwhile, state Department of Fish and Game officials
told the San
Francisco Chronicle that irrigation by Siskiyou County
ranchers is 
decimating salmon and steelhead populations on
California's second 
biggest river system, but they are not implementing a
state law that 
could stop the diversions.

Ranchers have diverted most of the flow of the Scott
and Shasta rivers 
in
Siskiyou County to irrigate alfalfa fields and
pastures, leaving 
thousands of young salmon and steelhead without enough
water and 
facing imminent death.

But agency officials say they are being told not to
cite offenders 
out of concern that cooperative restoration projects
between the 
state and ranchers
on the Scott and Shasta Rivers would end instantly if
the law were 
enforced.

"We've got five or six thousand steelhead trout dead
on the Scott, and 
(dead
juvenile steelhead) everywhere on the Shasta," Warden
Renie Cleland 
said.

The Scott has been sucked dry, and the Shasta reduced
to a trickle at 
its
juncture with the Klamath.

Temperatures in the river have reached or exceeded the
level considered
lethal for salmon species, which favor cold water.
Thousands of fish 
have died and thousands of others face imminent death.

"Everything has died," Fish and Game Captain Chuck
Konvalin said of the
Scott River, according to the Chronicle. "The system
has been dried 
up."#

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