
S2 E29 Back to Basics: Water
😍
Description
Episode discussion topics <ul><li>We're on the hunt for solutions and having access to clean and affordable water is critical to life. Although the drought is only striking the entire Southwest of the United States, everyone will feel it at the grocery store. We need bold new infrastructure using the latest in engineering to implement a better managed and more sustainable system than the one we inherited. One recommendation from Big Think proposes an <a href='https://bigthink.com/technology-innovation/an-interstate-water-system-could-fix-the-wests-water-woes'>interstate water pipeline system</a> asking the question, "We have pipelines for oil and natural gas. Why not water?" </li> <li>How will a pipeline help? It will enable us to collect water from across the central basin of the U.S. and pipe it over or through the Rockies (think Tesla style boring system) and we might as well put some dang high-speed rails down as we go along too. The method of collection will need to be fleshed out, but it could as simple as directing the flow of storm drains into natural subterranean basins that act as a first-line filtration system. This water, as the case with most water, would need to be additionally filtered or treated for drinking. Thanks to ProPublica for this nerdy interactive page on climate maps. Check out how the quality of life within our nation will be changing with the climate from temperature to wetness: <a href='https://projects.propublica.org/climate-migration/'>New Climate Maps Show a Transformed United States</a>. </li> <li>We mentioned several water management systems that aren't as effective as they once were. Albeit going thirsty is mostly a local issue in the west, the whole nation's food security is at risk because according to the <a href='https://www.cdfa.ca.gov/Statistics/'>California Department of Food and Agriculture</a>, "In 2019 California’s farms and ranches received more than $50 billion in cash receipts for their output. [...] California’s agricultural abundance includes more than 400