Many people see the effects of Global Warming as ocean waves lapping up to the front doors of their ocean front homes, 100 years from now. This is a nice frightening effect that may help the media sell advertising to the left that reads their outlets, and it may help explode heads in the right wing denialist alternative universe, but it misses the many, many other problems that Global Warming is causing, not a century from now, but right now!
While we in the U.S. are very concerned about the horrible drought the people of California are going through, the people of Brazil are about to experience something that will challenge what it means to be a massive city in a Global Warming world.
From the weather channel
Just two months after São Paulo's state-run water utility Sabesp refused to implement water rationing amidst the area's worst drought in eight decades, at least one government official is warning of "dramatic water shortages" and "collapse" for the residents of South America's most populous metro area.This is the Cantareira reservoir that supplies a large portion of the water to Sao Paulo.
“If the drought continues, residents will face more dramatic water shortages in the short term,” said Vicente Andreu, president of Brazil’s National Water Agency. “If it doesn’t rain, we run the risk that the region will have a collapse like we’ve never seen before."
Well if misery loves company, the people of Brazil might take comfort in knowing they are not alone. From NOAA's drought-monitoring people.Around 45% of São Paulo state -- home to more than 40 million people -- gets its water from a four-lake system known as the Cantareira reservoir. Back in August, a study from a federal agency predicted that São Paulo state could run completely dry in 100 days if rationing measures weren't implemented.
As Bloomberg now notes, water levels in Cantareira have dropped to just 3.3% of capacity -- the lowest levels ever -- after the water utility built a piping system to pump the last drops of water from the ailing reservoir. There's speculation amongst government officials that Cantareira will run completely dry in mid-November without rain, the Wall Street Journal reports. Things are not much better at the Alto Tiete reservoir, where water levels are at just 8.5% of capacity.
Brazil may be experiencing a historic drought this year, but in a few years the same area may experience biblical floods. Our climate is choking and convulsing on the noxious gasses we're shoving down its lungs. With the right leadership, we can still save the patient from what will be a pretty nasty sickness, but if we keep allowing Right Wing anti-science denialists to make decisions, our civilization will have the same chance of survival as an Ebola patient in Liberia.
Do you still think this election isn't important?
GOTV! GOTV! GOTV!
"Do you still think this election isn't important?"
ReplyDeleteNo. (s)Elections never change anything (haven't we all learned this lesson by now?). The Status Quo is maintained. It's just deck chairs now, move 'em around a bit, make it up to look different, but it's always more of the same.
So no. The (s)Election is utterly meaningless. Put the asswipe Republicans in charge (again)? Guess what? Nothing will change. More war, more resource destruction, more climate change, more denial, more corporate malfeasance - it'll be the same old story - no matter who gets into office by hook or crook.
So placing ANY hope on the (s)Election is a waste of life, a waste of time, a waste of expectations.
Looking to politicians for 'answers' or 'leadership' is another waste of life. Why? They're not very smart, most are pretty stupid. They're embedded with their corporate masters, lining their pockets as fast as possible.
This is not the place to expect change - as the past 100 years of our history has shown (I dare not go back further then that).
Change is NOT coming. This is a bald-faced LIE. Expect more of the same - only WORSE. ~Survival Acres~