http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jqxENMKaeCU&feature=player_detailpage#t=570sI linked to this video at about the 9:30 mark, but feel free to begin it whenever you wish.My point:Why are we wasting our water to extract energy from hydraulic fracturing and tar sand oil?[Edited on June 30, 2012 at 5:29 AM. Reason : Thre!ad]
6/30/2012 5:26:10 AM
Because Obama is a socialist.
6/30/2012 7:30:14 AM
Because the extracted fuels are worth far more to us than the resources it took to extract it.
6/30/2012 8:40:40 PM
yeah, natural gas will be worth more than water in a disaster situation. fuck necessities for life, we need to power this grill.you are dumb.
7/3/2012 9:37:03 AM
I watched 10 seconds of the video and gave up when I got to "air and water are inseparable" and something about everything is connected.Oh nature.
7/3/2012 10:29:07 AM
i love how it's gotta be "we're ruining all our water by doing this" v. "if we don't do this we won't have heat this winter"pick an extreme side, or get out of the way
7/3/2012 10:40:47 AM
so under what scenario can humans get by without water? i can think of ways to combat cold that don't involve natural gas.
7/3/2012 11:33:24 AM
So when NC faces another drastic yet inevitable drought, are we going to tell the natural gas companies to go frack themselves to ensure that we have adequate clean water supplies? Eventual contamination aside, the amount of water used in a single well is mind boggling.
7/3/2012 12:20:52 PM
^^^^Do you disagree that everything's connected or do you just think the concept has been played out?I think the idea that everything's connected is pretty awesome, and I'd like to better understand your distaste for it.
7/3/2012 6:22:04 PM
People don't like being confronted with the notion of taking responsibility for their actions/lifestyle to which they feel entitled to.
7/3/2012 7:15:24 PM
7/4/2012 10:19:36 AM
I appreciate the perspective, but I may have misspoke when I suggested that everything is connected. I was thinking that you were discussing just nature, not politics.With regard to the video, are you implying that you turned it off after ten seconds due to the technicality about water and air being inseparable?A minute and a half later, the video mentions that coral is born from the marriage of algae and shells; would you have been as equally perturbed by the broad use of the word "marriage"?
7/5/2012 12:55:50 AM
There is rock on Earth that hasn't moved for several billion years. In fact, it's quite common that something falls into some place and just stays there for 100s of millions of years. The Appalachian mountains are half a billion years old, which is more than a full super-continent cycle.Sure, there are certain parts of the biosphere that fairly rapidly recycles materials, but if we were so convinced about the impressiveness of our biosphere's dynamics we wouldn't be building landfills. Furthermore, the vast majority of the universe doesn't give a flying flip about a few Carbon atoms. Earth's geology generally proceeds irrelevant of what happens with life. When the Milky Way collides with Andromeda in a billion years we don't even know if it will destroy our solar system.The biosphere is connected to itself, yes, that is true. Our breath comes from some organisms and our food comes from another. Even the evolution of our own genetics is frequently affected by intrusions of viruses and such.The problem with the word "marriage" is that it's non-specific. Nature has a number of types of relationships that repeat over and over again, that being competitive, predatory, parasitic, and others. What is the relationship between the algae & shells to the overall coral? I would argue it's neutral because even if it's symbiotic eventually no particular organism of algae or shell has anything to gain or lose by having their remains recycled. The evolution of particular species simply doesn't care what happens after they die unless it helps their offspring.Saying something is a marriage is probably to imply a symbiotic relationship. There's nothing wrong with using it, but let's not mistake poetry for education.
7/5/2012 12:06:53 PM
Hey man, the water and the natural gas are already connected, so what's the big deal?
7/5/2012 2:15:10 PM
7/5/2012 2:22:50 PM
No scientific predictions point to less total rainfall in the future. The problem is the water table changing in a way not very nice for life, which means being more sporadic, polluted, and retaining less water.
7/5/2012 3:28:39 PM
and more people. and more plants and livestock to feed the people. and more golf courses.
7/5/2012 3:38:05 PM
It doesn't matter if total rainfall is the same, if climate shifts result in it not falling where we've grown accustomed (and built immense infrastructure to support) growing our crops.[Edited on July 5, 2012 at 3:46 PM. Reason : .]
7/5/2012 3:45:56 PM
We can overuse available water sources, but it's a self-replenishing resource. We won't literally run out of water in the sense that we don't have any more water in the future.
7/5/2012 4:26:09 PM
Replace 'water' with 'economically feasible to obtain and distribute potable water'.Also, did this thread's title run out of water?
7/5/2012 4:35:30 PM
Sure, if we could desalinate the atlantic ocean and then pipe it straight to all of africa, then 10s of 1000s wouldn't die from a lack of water. If we could pick-up icebergs in antartica and drop them off in nevada, we wouldn't have a problem.
7/5/2012 4:38:49 PM
Capture a comet.
7/5/2012 4:44:17 PM
Or we could stop living in places that don't have water and never did. People in Nevada need to stop crying about how hard it is to get enough water for Las Vegas (which last I checked was the fastest growing city in America, Charlotte is pretty close though), it's a desert, stop moving there.
7/5/2012 4:47:41 PM
7/5/2012 5:00:09 PM
Private Well FTMFW
7/5/2012 10:46:08 PM
Unless your aquifer gets contaminated of course.
7/6/2012 8:52:48 AM
I never said it's not possible or even likely to use water at a rate that it depletes reservoirs and aquifers enough to not maintain the current level of population. But if we stopped using so much water, it would all come back by itself. It's impossible to say that we're going to literally run out of something when it will come back automatically by doing nothing. It's not something where we can say "if we don't stop using water now, there won't be any for our children!" because no matter what we do now our children will determine for themselves whether they have enough water.As for it being contaminated, that's just theoretical at this point, no? Obviously we shouldn't do anything that pollutes our water supplies.
7/6/2012 10:26:45 AM
According to these two sources: hydraulic fracturing in Pennsylvania uses roughly a million gallons of water a day, and tar sands extraction in Alberta uses roughly 123 million gallons a day (unless my calculations are incorrect or I missed something).http://wri.eas.cornell.edu/gas_wells_water_use.htmlhttp://www.capp.ca/getdoc.aspx?DocId=193756&DT=NTV
7/6/2012 4:24:05 PM
7/6/2012 5:07:26 PM
You can get water from the ocean to make up for depleted aquifers.Desalinization ain't exactly rocket science.
7/6/2012 9:23:09 PM
So you're saying that it's feasible to (very expensively) desalinate water and then pipe it to the piedmont and further inland? wonder why folks haven't thought of that before?while searching for long water pipelines, i came across this on wiki:
7/7/2012 12:34:55 PM
Raleigh charges for water by the CCF, or 100 cubic feet. The price varies depending on the specifics of your use and how much the government likes you, and that price ranges from about $2 to $5 per CCF. That comes out to $0.71 per m^3 to 1.77 per m^3.Costs for large scale desalination today are claimed to be about $0.50 per m^3 by more than one source on Wikipedia.That said, the fact that Kuwait can deliver water at a lower cost than what the Raleigh government can probably doesn't have much to do with the energetics of the process, and whatever inefficiencies (or legislation) that make water so expensive in Raleigh are unlikely to be eliminated by building a massive plant and pipeline taking water from the coast to Raleigh.The pipeline itself is also unlikely to be an economic breaker. I don't have any numbers for this right now, but pipeline transport is quite cheap.I came here to say that it's ridiculous for Raleigh to use desalinated water, but reading about it seems to have proved me wrong. The only problem is that we don't have a very good identifiable reason that it is currently so expensive for consumers to get water. Maybe someone in government just decided that it's good to conserve water so we should charge a lot for it. Environmentally, there's nothing really bad about desalination other than the energy use.
7/8/2012 3:26:52 PM
7/8/2012 3:59:39 PM
7/8/2012 7:31:51 PM
7/8/2012 11:14:28 PM
7/9/2012 9:51:55 AM
If by "difficult" you mean "large scale"
7/9/2012 10:03:04 AM
Well yeah, and large-scale things are generally difficult to construct, maintain, and coordinate.[Edited on July 9, 2012 at 10:15 AM. Reason : .]
7/9/2012 10:15:31 AM
^^^difficult? Well, no. It's not difficult at all. I've worked on desal plants, and while they can be expensive due to their proximity to the ocean and the pumps required, their complexity pales in comparison to wastewater treatment plants. It is a pretty simple process to filter seawater from the ocean and heat it up.You're right that it is somewhat energy-intensive. At current energy prices, it is simply cheaper to pump water out of the ground than extract it from seawater. However, that's not the case everywhere. In the middle east, oil-rich nations have been using desal plants for decades. California has a handful of desal plants in operation. So does Western Australia. Some of these newer plants use membranes to filter out salts, instead of pure heat to extract the water. Economies of scale dictate that desal will become cheaper as the technology matures. Desal is but 1 of many solutions if groundwater aquifers are depleted. The reality is that there is an over-abundance of h2o on the surface of our planet. Supplying potable water to the masses is a logistics and technology issue similar to providing electricity to every home. Prices will fluctuate and we'll undoubtedly see bottlenecks during droughts, but we will never have a true shortage of water.[Edited on July 9, 2012 at 10:27 AM. Reason : 2]
7/9/2012 10:26:53 AM
7/9/2012 10:33:15 AM
For "forward-thinking" individuals, progressives can be awfully nearsighted when it comes to future technology.Couple the desal plant with a solar-power plant, since desal makes the most sense in sunny, arid climates. Problem solved, with the added bonus that you don't add any greenhouse gas emissions.[Edited on July 9, 2012 at 10:58 AM. Reason : 2]
7/9/2012 10:57:12 AM
Sorry, you really try to make it sound like you've got it all figured out, but your ideas seem quite idealistic. Sure, they're possible. But practical or feasible (economically and politically)? Why aren't these industries booming?[Edited on July 9, 2012 at 11:24 AM. Reason : ]
7/9/2012 11:22:50 AM
If only we had infinite energy everywhere, we could do whatever we wanted.
7/9/2012 11:28:49 AM
7/9/2012 11:36:05 AM
7/9/2012 12:21:56 PM
There are only a handful in the US, it's places like the Middle East that they keep building them. Lowering costs have also increased demand. The Wikipedia article talked about it growing 12% in a year. Other than that I would have to read more myself.
7/9/2012 1:23:03 PM
7/27/2012 1:50:58 PM
^lolThis episode of Frontline is a little different than the discussions above, but it's relevant enough:http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/alaska-gold/
7/27/2012 4:17:45 PM