Somebody is moving back to Sinkapore because of California drought

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California restricts water as snowpack survey finds 'no snow whatsoever'

The governor of California has ordered unprecedented and mandatory water restrictions in the state as officials conducted a regular measurement of the Sierra Nevada snowpack and found “no snow whatsoever” amid the state’s ongoing drought.

“This was the first time in 75 years of early-April measurements at the Phillips snow course that no snow was found there,” the California Department of Water Resources said in a statement on Wednesday at the conclusion of a survey attended by the Governor Jerry Brown. It said readings from Wednesday put the state’s level of water content at just 5% of the historical average for the date.

“Today’s survey underscores the severity of California’s drought,” said DWR director Mark Cowin. “Water conservation must become a way of life during the worst drought in most Californians’ lifetimes.”

Brown on Wednesday ordered the State Water Resources Control Board to reduce statewide water use by 25%. The action – the first time ever state officials have imposed mandatory water restrictions – is expected to save 1.5m acre-feet of water by the year’s end.

Experts say a massive response is needed to confront California’s punishing dry spell, now languishing into a fourth year and exacerbated by scorching temperatures.

Saying “a distinct possibility exists that the current drought will stretch into a fifth straight year in 2016 and beyond,” Brown’s order requires city and town water suppliers to reduce per capita usage.

Brown’s order would also:

prohibit watering ornamental grass on public street medians;
require new homes to use water-efficient drip irrigation system for landscaping;
direct urban water agencies to set up a new pricing structure to maximize water conservation;
require urban water and agricultural agencies to report more water usage information to the state.

“It’s a different world,” Brown said. “We have to act differently.”

Brown made the announcement while standing on a patch of brown grass in the Sierra Nevada, which would have historically been covered in snow.

“This historic drought demands unprecedented action,” Brown said in a statement. “Therefore, I’m issuing an executive order mandating substantial water reductions across our state. As Californians, we must pull together and save water in every way possible.”

The 1 April snowpack survey is an important indicator of the amount of water the state will have in its reservoirs as the state’s wet historically wet season winds down. “In what were considered normal precipitation years, the snowpack supplied about 30 percent of California’s water needs as it melts in the spring and summer,” the DWR said in a statement on Wednesday.

California relies on a few big storms during the winter months to drop snow on California’s mountain ranges. During the spring and summer months the snowpack melts and fills the state’s reservoirs. Historically, 1 April marked peak snowpack for the year. This year, the mountain runoff will be just a trickle.
David Rizzardo, chief of snow surveys for the California Department of Water Resources, said the previous driest condition on the 1 April was 25%, which occurred in 2014 and 1977.

“We’re not only setting a new low, we’re completely obliterating the previous record,” he said on a conference call with reporters. “And this is the supply of 30% of the state’s fresh water.”

To conduct the survey, the state’s water agency dispatches researchers to measure the level of snow manually at 250 separate sites in the Sierra Nevada, Rizzardo said. Additionally, the survey includes readings from 130 automated snow sensors. An official count will be released on Wednesday afternoon.

Last week, Brown signed into law a more-than-$1bn plan to fast-track emergency relief to drought-stricken cities and communities, including food aid and drinking water. The proposal also includes hundreds of millions of dollars to fund long-term projects, involving water recycling, conservation awareness and flood control projects. At the signing, Brown said the plan was part of a wider effort to prepare California for an “uncertain future”.

The package followed action by the state water board this month to pass what has been described as the most restrictive water conservation measures in state history. The plan limits the number of days residents can water their yards, and requires bars and restaurants to ask customers if they would like a glass of water before serving it.
 
yes, 25% cut back, and there are plans underway to turn sai chwee to tap water, sinkie-style. even a large, rich, and resourceful state such as cal has to follow sg's lead. told you that pap and sg are the best! :D
 
yes, 25% cut back, and there are plans underway to turn sai chwee to tap water, sinkie-style. even a large, rich, and resourceful state such as cal has to follow sg's lead. told you that pap and sg are the best! :D

not likely. its cheaper to buy water from other states that have them in abundance. say washington state or oregon.
 
yes, 25% cut back, and there are plans underway to turn sai chwee to tap water, sinkie-style. even a large, rich, and resourceful state such as cal has to follow sg's lead. told you that pap and sg are the best! :D

Time for you to move back and suck up to the Pinky.
 
If PAP was in charge of california instead of some useless redneck, the yankees would have NeWater to drink, instead of their own unprocessed piss. We are lucky to have PAP, instead of the Democrats or Republicans to rule us.
 
If PAP was in charge of california instead of some useless redneck, the yankees would have NeWater to drink, instead of their own unprocessed piss. We are lucky to have PAP, instead of the Democrats or Republicans to rule us.

Stop smoking pot lah. What does SINKapore have that the US doesn't? US produces Nobel Prize winners. Sinkapore gives us Kee Chiu, Petty Thief, Hari-kiri Buddhist etc - a bunch of overpaid idiots. US have world-class companies ...sinkapore has ????.

Please put you head in the toilet bowl and flush.
 
not likely. its cheaper to buy water from other states that have them in abundance. say washington state or oregon.

are you telling me i have no clue about my subject matter expertise? while counties in the bay area are already buying water from out of state (they still have to be piped in, and in many cases, the infrastructure is not there for pipe delivery), orange county in socal is already turning sewage into drinking water. no wonder the folks from the south are so foul-mouthed.

http://bluelivingideas.com/2009/03/...nty-turning-sewage-water-into-drinking-water/
 
If PAP was in charge of california instead of some useless redneck, the yankees would have NeWater to drink, instead of their own unprocessed piss. We are lucky to have PAP, instead of the Democrats or Republicans to rule us.

san jose is already doing it, thanks to reverse osmosis technology from sg. sg and the pap are da best!
 
san jose is already doing it, thanks to reverse osmosis technology from sg. sg and the pap are da best!

Pretty dumb of the Americans to trust Sinkapore technology than the French. The French water companies have been in business for decades compared to the sinkee company.
 
and of all places, right in my backyard in silicon valley, san jose has already opened a plant to convert sewage to drinking water in 2013.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/...nced-water-purification-center_n_3647426.html

They don't trust shit water after all.

But though the water might be clean, it won't be coming out of your tap anytime soon. Instead, it will be used for irrigation, landscaping, industrial processes and other uses typically reserved for recycled water.
 
i'm very proud to announce that the silicon valley advanced water purification center is completed in october 2013 and started operations in 2014. folks in santa clara county and the city of san jose are already drinking recycled sai chwee. thanks to sg and the pap for taking the lead and showing the way! :D

http://www.valleywater.org/SVAWPC.aspx
 
and of all places, right in my backyard in silicon valley, san jose has already opened a plant to convert sewage to drinking water in 2013.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/...nced-water-purification-center_n_3647426.html


Californians are more fortunate than Sporeans. Look at this part:

But though the water might be clean, it won't be coming out of your tap anytime soon. Instead, it will be used for irrigation, landscaping, industrial processes and other uses typically reserved for recycled water. The reason? Public perception.
 
Californians are more fortunate than Sporeans. Look at this part:

But though the water might be clean, it won't be coming out of your tap anytime soon. Instead, it will be used for irrigation, landscaping, industrial processes and other uses typically reserved for recycled water. The reason? Public perception.

Holy Goh drank it once publicly. Thereafter, he drinks only imported bottled water.
 
They don't trust shit water after all.

But though the water might be clean, it won't be coming out of your tap anytime soon. Instead, it will be used for irrigation, landscaping, industrial processes and other uses typically reserved for recycled water.

you've been bamboozled by false reporting or politically-correct official bs to thwart public panic and lawsuits. last i checked with the city, there's no separate plumbing for portable (drinking water) and grey (recycled) water. the water i use for irrigation, car wash, lawns, toilet flushing is the same water from the same mains. building a separate piping system throughout the whole valley is a little too late, too disruptive, and too cost-prohibitive.
 
you've been bamboozled by false reporting or politically-correct official bs to thwart public panic and lawsuits. last i checked with the city, there's no separate plumbing for portable (drinking water) and grey (recycled) water. the water i use for irrigation, car wash, lawns, toilet flushing is the same water from the same mains. building a separate piping system throughout the whole valley is a little too late, too disruptive, and too cost-prohibitive.

Aiyoh, it means they are not sending the water for residential use lah. The sell it to those water trucks lah.

I think you need to come back to sinkapore. The PAP needs you. You want Pinky to personally escort you back?
 
Pretty dumb of the Americans to trust Sinkapore technology than the French. The French water companies have been in business for decades compared to the sinkee company.

without my waterwise 8800 distillation system, i'll be drinking mineral water from san pellegrino, italy everyday.

from my other fridge in the garage....
image.jpg
 
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Californians are more fortunate than Sporeans. Look at this part:

But though the water might be clean, it won't be coming out of your tap anytime soon. Instead, it will be used for irrigation, landscaping, industrial processes and other uses typically reserved for recycled water. The
reason? Public perception.

it's the usual pr bs. don't get bamboozled. only folks who have fixed broken pipes or problems with their water mains will know what i'm talking about. that's the problem with sinkies, so spoilt by the pap and the convenience of sg, that you don't get your hands and feet dirty fixing your own massively dirty problems, such as cars, pipes, plumbing, roof leaks, electrical short, power trip, rewiring, re-landscaping, etc.
 
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