Re: RE: CRIMINALIZE War !!
the caracal kid said:
that chart is not providing full information. simple, but not compete.
For Pete's sake kid, I realize people believe what they want to believe but sometimes you have to sit back and absorb all the information. We don't need to "steal" your water, turn off the leftist propaganda machine and turn on actual data.
Congress called for an assessment of the Nation's renewable resources in 1974, because they believed reliable information was necessary to properly manage those resources and make informed policy decisions. The need for reliable information on the status and trends of the Nation's resources continues today.
However, the emphasis has broadened from a solely economic concern with supply and demand to concern about resource conditions, ecosystem health, and sustainability.
The Forest and Rangeland Renewable Resources Planning Act of 1974 (
RPA) requires the Secretary of Agriculture to conduct an assessment of the Nation's renewable resources every 10 years.
Brown, Thomas C. 1999.
Past and future freshwater use in the United States: A technical document supporting the 2000 USDA Forest Service
RPA Assessment. Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-39. Fort Collins, CO: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, 47 p.
Water use in the United States to the year
2040 is estimated by extending past trends in basic water-use determinants.
Those trends are largely encouraging. Over the past 35 years, withdrawals in industry and at thermoelectric plants have steadily dropped per unit of output, and over the past 15 years some irrigated regions have also increased the efficiency of their water use. Further, per-capita domestic withdrawals may have finally peaked.
If these trends continue, aggregate withdrawals in the U.S. over the next 40 years will stay below 10% of the 1995 level, despite a 41% expected increase in population. However, not all areas of the U.S. are projected to fare as well. Of the 20 water resource regions in the U.S., withdrawals in seven are projected to increase by from 15% to 30% above 1995 levels. Most of the substantial increases are attributable to domestic and public or thermoelectric use, although the large increases in 3 regions are mainly due to growth in irrigated acreage. The most important and uncertain assumptions necessary to make these projections are those about future irrigated acreage. If irrigated acreage fails to drop in most Western basins, as assumed, withdrawals may be substantially above these projections.
This report does not include the desalination capacity of the US, which is second only to Saudi Arabia, of approximately 3 million cubic meters per day.
You can download the complete RPA report from this link - I think I'll go have a drink now