Showing posts with label water supply. Show all posts
Showing posts with label water supply. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Fresh Clean Water – A 2017 Infrastructure Crisis

Water is a requirement for life on Earth. Most water on the Earth is not fresh water, but brackish or saline, and as such, not generally usable by humans.

Humans can only exist for a few days without fresh drinking water. Almost all animals and plants on Earth require fresh water in some form or another.

There are three basic reasons for having clean fresh water. They are:

    • 1. Basic needs such as drinking, cooking, washing etc.
    • 2. Agriculture and food production including raising livestock
    • 3. Other uses such as transportation, power generation, recreation, fire protection etc.

The World Resources Institute (WRI - http: //www.wri.org) estimated the percent of people worldwide with chronic water scarcity (lack of fresh water for basic needs) as follows.

Year – Percent of world population lacking water for basic needs

  • 2000 – 3.7
  • 2025 – 8.6
  • 2050 – 17.8

In addition, the global water supply infrastructure is aging. For example, much of the infrastructure in the United States, and other developed countries, was installed over 50 years ago, and some over 100 years ago. These systems are currently at or exceed their engineering life. This puts even more of the world’s population at risk of water scarcity.

Clearly, in 2017, based on the figures presented above, things are not getting better but worse. In part, this is due to the increase in global population. However, in many cases this is due to poor water management, aging infrastructure and/or lack of infrastructure resources to create or maintain water supply systems.

For more information about our current global water crisis and what you can do to help in your locality, check out my newest book in EPUB format entitled Water, Our Most Precious Resource.

Sincerely,
H. Court Young
Geologist, author & publisher
Promoting awareness through the written word
Blog: http://hcourtyoung.blogspot.com
Amazon: Water Our Most Precious Resource

Thursday, November 24, 2016

Have Things Changed - 2016?

 

As the 2016 United States Presidential election fades into history, I wanted to pose a simple question to my readers. Have things changed in 2016?

The answer to that question, clearly, has many levels. While we must wait for answers in relationship to the presidency of Donald Trump, there are things we need to be aware of and watch for. For instance, President-Elect Trump made his campaign about “making America great” again. One of the ways he has proposed doing it is to rebuild Americas infrastructure.

What does this look like and what is included? As I have watched previous administrations throughout my lifetime make the same type of commitment (using different phrases), what happened was significantly different than what was truly needed. What do I mean by that statement, you ask?

We all notice the obvious upgrades and repairs which take place. Road and bridge repairs are easy to spot. These are transportation related facilities, and, as noted in many of my previous blogs, are easy for the politicians to spend money on. The expense is subsidized by the ever increasing fuel and vehicle taxes and more importantly the completed repairs are obvious. We see and “feel” the results. It is a good feeling when you drive on a newly paved street or highway. We know that something is being improved with the money we spend in taxes.

While the transportation infrastructure connects our society, and is necessary, there are two even more critical infrastructures. As I have in written several books, as well as, numerous blogs, these two critical infrastructures are the water supply system and the electrical grid. Without these two interconnected infrastructures, our modern, global society would rapidly devolve into chaos. In the extreme, without fresh water, life would cease to exist.

However, both the water and electrical infrastructures are relatively complex. With respect to the water infrastructure, most of it is below ground, out of sight (and seemingly out of mind – except to a relative few). There is no simple way for the “public” or “average American” to assess what progress is being made with respect to these two infrastructures. They can’t point to a newly installed water pipeline, electrical transformer or electrical transmission line, like they can with a newly paved highway or newly built bridge.

The interconnectivity between these two infrastructures can be demonstrated with a simple example. Water and wastewater systems both require an extensive array of electrical powered pumps, filters, and processing equipment to just process and move water from one place to another. Conversely, power plants require cooling water and steam to turn generators to produce that same electricity. These are two very symbiotic infrastructures, without one the other could not exist on a national or global basis. In addition, modern agriculture requires water to be pumped, both for irrigation, and in processing the food we eat.

One article in Water Technology magazine (July 2016) entitled “The Aging US infrastructure” by Louise Musial gives several sobering statistics about our water infrastructure. For example, the author notes the following about the cost:

“According to the American Water Works Association (AWWA) study, ‘Buried No Longer: Confronting America’s Water Infrastructure Challenge,’ if the country is to maintain even the current levels of water service, restoring existing water systems and expanding them to serve a growing population will cost at least $1 trillion over the next 25 years.”

To put the relative cost in perspective:

“Even though water is an essential part of everyday life, residents pay much less for it than cable television or any other utility. The current water rates do not accurately reflect the actual cost of supplying clean, reliable drinking water or wastewater management and discharge to the U.S. population.”

The current state of our water infrastructure is noted as follows.

“In the most recent report by the American Society of Civil Engineers, the U.S. earned a grade of D for its water and wastewater infrastructure. It is not surprising that many of its most neglected water treatment systems are in need of maintenance and repairs and have not been upgraded in decades.”

This annual grade of “D” by the American Society of Civil Engineers has persisted through several United States presidential administrations (both Republican and Democrat) and numerous Congresses. A good example is the recent water challenges faced by the City of Detroit.

Given this background, what can you do as a water consumer? How can you begin to be part of the solution to the challenges faced by these “out of sight” critical infrastructures?

First, you can become knowledgeable. One relatively easy way to do so is to read. It is for this reason, I am making my newest book available in electronic format as a digital eBook. This 100-page eBook entitled Water, Our Most Precious Resource gives an overview of the water challenges we face. It explains the relationship between the water and electrical infrastructure in simple, understandable terms.

The introduction presents my focus in this book.

“Humans can only exist for a few days without fresh drinking water. Almost all animals and plants on Earth require water in some form or another. Water, a combination of hydrogen and oxygen, is essential for life.

Even though 70% of the Earth’s surface is covered in water, fresh water is still a scarce resource. The water in the oceans is saline, unusable for agriculture and drinking.

The largest use of water on Earth is not for drinking but for growing our food. We use it to grow our crops and our livestock. Much of the agriculture water is diverted from rivers and lakes onto fields through irrigation ditches, canals and pipelines. In semi-arid sections of the world, like southern Arizona and California, we divert large quantities of water through large open canals hundreds of miles to irrigate crops.

Much of the world still lacks water for basic needs such as drinking and sanitation. In many cases this is due to poor water management or lack of infrastructure resources.

This book, Water, Our Most Precious Resource, explains some of the issues we face due to past poor water management and lack of infrastructure. In addition, it explains some ways these challenges can be remedied and what role each of us can play in the solution to an ongoing global water crisis.”

The following link gives you access to this informative digital publication on Amazon.

Water, Our Most Precious Resource

Second, you can get involved. Attend local water board meetings. Talk to the water board members. Many water boards have outreach programs. There are also numerous educational programs at universities and colleges. One very good program is exemplified by the following.

Metropolitan State University of Denver – One World One Water

While “time will tell” about the new Trump administration in its effort to “Make America Great,” time is against us with respect to the water and electrical infrastructure. The water lines, purification plants, pumping systems, electrical transformers, generators, electrical towers and power lines are all aging. Many are past their “engineering life.” For example, a significant number of water lines in the United States with an estimated engineering life of 50 years are more than 100 years old.

We, as a society, as well as, part of a global community, face a huge challenge. Clearly, the political landscape and focus needs to change on many levels. Governments, corporations, businesses and individuals all need to be involved to redirect efforts from “business as usual” to “these things need to be done for our society to be a sustainable entity.”

Its obvious, the politicians alone, given their dismal track record cannot be depended on to remedy these immense challenges (they clearly prefer the “business as usual” model). In my opinion, the answer to my question, “Have things changed,” is a resounding “No,” as of 2016 with respect to these very critical infrastructures. This does not bode well for either our water infrastructure or the electrical grid.

It is past time for you, my dear reader, to take some time and educate yourself, then get involved. Your future, and that of future generations, is at stake.

Sincerely,

H. Court Young
Author, publisher, speaker and geologist
Promoting awareness through the written word
Research, freelance writing & self-publishing services
Facebook: HCourtYoung
Phone: 303-726-8320
Email: tmcco@msn.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/hcourtyoung
Twitter: http://twitter.com/hcourtyoung
Blog: http://hcourtyoung.blogspot.com

Sent by Windows 10

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Windows 10 and Emerging Technology

 

As the excitement of our political conventions wind down, I turn my attention to an issue that is far more relevant to our daily lives and certainly more entertaining to me. Microsoft is rolling out its new Windows 10 Redstone Edition on August 2, 2016. It brings new capabilities and possibilities to computing and the internet. Along with the new software, new hardware is making an appearance. We are on the cusp of a variety of exciting new emerging technologies in both hardware and software.

We can get a glimpse of this technology by using the new Windows Hello functionality in Windows 10. This allows us to log in to our computers, phones and tablets with a finger print or facial recognition. Microsoft notes the following about this new technology.

“Windows Hello is a more personal way to sign in to your Windows 10 devices with just a look or a touch. You’ll get enterprise-grade security without having to type in a password.” -- Source: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/17215/windows-10-what-is-hello

I have been using this technology since the July 29, 2015 release of the first Windows 10, and find it works very well. As a member of the “Windows Insider” program, I reviewed the evolving technology as for the last year or more. Microsoft continued development and the result is this August 2, 2016 release to manufacturing (RTM) software, known as Windows 10 – Redstone Edition.

The idea of signing into a computer without using the “time-honored” password is fascinating to me, especially as I get older. Microsoft noted that it wants to have this technology apply across platforms (Android, Apple and Windows) and across websites. If Microsoft has their way, you can use the same technology to sign into all the other websites you normally use a password login for (your bank, Amazon, Google, etc.), as you do your computer. Think of never having to remember a password again. However, this is just the tip of the iceberg with respect to technology.

Go back in time with me. Using bio-metrics such as facial recognition, voice recognition, iris recognition and finger print recognition has been the stuff of science fiction over my lifetime and through out the 20th century. Conversing with a computer has been a goal for a long time. Examples of this technology have been immortalized on the movie and television screen.

“Since the 1950s, when artificial intelligence (AI) first got serious funding, media and industry hype has fueled the belief that someday there will be an entity such as Hal, the sentient computer in the classic sci-fi movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, or, more recently, the array of artificial in the computers and “Humanich” androids in the current TV show Extant.” – Speech Technology, Speech Technology in the IoT Era, Nancy Jamison, Winter 2015

Speech technology, now known as conversational technology or conversational computing, can also be seen in one of the most viewed movie and television series of all time – Star Trek, which has long been a favorite of mine. I have a hard time forgetting the scene in Star Trek VI – The Voyage Home, when Scotty {the Engineer] tries to use a computer at an industrial facility. The Starship Enterprise and crew have gone back in time to present day Earth. The Star Trek engineer tries to talk to an IBM computer, using the mouse, in a parody of the way he normally does on the ship, clearly, to no avail.

It is hard to conceive of the Internet of Things (IoT) and a connected world without the use of conversational technology. The scope of this technology is noted by Ms. Jamison:

“The Internet of Things (IoT), made up of everything from wearables to connected health and the connected home, has led hundreds to companies to work on and deliver products that automate tasks and use and generate data. Indeed, Frost and Sullivan forecasts that the “connected living” concept, comprised of the connected home, connected work, and even connected cities, will be a $731.79 billion market by 2020. Speech and voice technology will undoubtedly boast a major slice of it. Vendors such as Amazon are backing projects to develop voice control of everything from kitchen appliances to home security systems.”

As the Microsoft Windows Hello technology spreads, along with the introduction of new computer hardware, appropriate cameras, scanners and readers to take advantage of the software capabilities, more people will discover, as I have, that “logging on” with a glance or by touch is so much easier and faster. There have been several times when, as a Windows Insider, using the pre-release builds of Windows 10, that I have had to think for a few minutes to remember what my logon password was. I had gotten so used to using my pin (a four letter password), fingerprint or a glance at the screen, that my password seemed like a thing from the past. When I turn on my Surface Pro 4, the camera lights up and a “smiley face” comes up to log me on. A glance at the screen is all it takes.

As futuristic as this technology is, there is a global downside. Even though you are probably thinking “security,” this is not the real core issue. Security can be problematic, but there is a much deeper issue which goes to the foundation of our global society.

The idea of faster, easier and more human-like interaction with our connected devices presents two basic challenges. One is the extreme proliferation of data, rapidly expanding from terabytes to petabytes to exabytes. This data expansion is the prime driver of “the cloud.” Without “the cloud”, (huge data centers of thousands of computers) to store the data, along with the ability to process immense amounts of data, progress in this connected technology would be difficult at best.

However, beyond data storage and processing, there is a second, far more serious challenge presented as this technology progresses. These connected systems and required “cloud” are stressing the basic infrastructure of our global world, but probably not in the way you might think. Most of the data centers being built today use renewable energy and are very self-contained.

Because of the proliferation of electrical devices in this IoT and connected world, we need a very stable electrical grid, both to charge and to operate all these devices. This is a huge concern. Electric transmission lines, relay stations, transformers and other critical system components were developed for a 20th century world, where there were a limited number of electrical devices in use. To be sure, a cell phone and many devices in use today are very energy efficient, however, they all require “always on” electricity in several different forms. For example, cell phones use batteries to operate, which have to be charged. But, they also need the “always on” electrical components in cell towers to relay signals.

Another key component of the electrical grid is the water infrastructure. Water is used not only to generate electricity, either via stream turbines or as hydroelectric turbines, but as cooling water for power plants, both conventional and nuclear. The water infrastructure is also under extreme stress due to overuse, climatic variations and growing population. It has also suffered badly from lack of maintenance, repair and upgrading.

Clearly, without a stable and “always on” electrical grid our technology would grind to a halt within a few hours or days. Chaos would reign. The more enmeshed we get into this wonderful, connected technology, the more vulnerable we become.

While I am far from a luddite, I am concerned. To this end, I present over 100 of these infrastructure and other challenges we face, plus some expert predictions in my downloadable EBook entitled World Collapse or New Eden, 2015 Edition.

So my question is, and has been, for the last twelve years or more; why haven’t we spent money, time and resources on strengthening this global infrastructure base upon which our emerging technology relies? After all, it is in our best interest on a global basis to do so. Why is this not the number one issue in our elections? How many of our political leaders, candidates and elected officials have you heard discuss these infrastructure issues in any meaningful way (beyond just platitudes)? As noted in previous blogs, we have no long term repair, replacement or upgrade policy for either the energy or water infrastructure. Even our discussion of the mix of our energy generation, coal, wind, solar, nuclear, is haphazard at best by those in the industry. Long term planning, in these infrastructures, which take decades to plan and build, is now defined by next month’s profit and loss statement.

The only long term policy for both the energy and water infrastructure seems to stem around money and power (no pun intended). “Let’s not spend any money, time or resources on repair, maintenance, installation, or replacement” is the mantra revolving around the basic infrastructure of today’s world. We seemingly don’t need educated people in the form of engineers and scientists, or even a critical thinking public, because they are not the people who are respected in our society. Clearly, it is the sports figures, actors, top CEOs and even the Wall Street financial programmers who are being raised up on a pedestal and rewarded financially.

A good example of this was my own upbringing in the 1960s. With the proclamation of the goal to reach the moon by 1969 by President Kennedy, many of my generation went into science and engineering. It was deemed “cool” to aspire to achieve that goal many of us wanted to be a part of something bigger than ourselves. Today, the development of “apps” and the creation of a firm around those apps, regardless of profitably or long term viability is the model. Just look at Twitter and Facebook (disclaimer - I use both for keeping in touch and marketing). Look at the incredible talent, in all fields, not just programmers, going into the financial markets of Wall Street to help develop “quants” and other market trading software, just to make money.

Sadly, our “leaders,” whether in elected public office, government or private corporations are not helping this crisis. They should be fostering discussions around the energy and other critical infrastructures but aren’t. They don’t appear to be looking for solutions either. They could, at the very least, like President Kennedy, be pushing for an expanded NASA, with goals to reach into the universe. This would at least say to the young generation that they need to think about goals beyond just enriching themselves. They could also be pushing ways to make education more affordable for our youth, as the discredited Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders did. The main goal of our elected and corporate leaders seems to be making the most money possible in the least amount of time and retiring at a very young age with huge benefit packages or stock options.

At the other end of the spectrum, the general public (read voter) apparently is more interested in the “side-show” of the recently ended “presidential conventions” or the Sunday afternoon football game (soccer in much of the rest of the world), than demanding discussions concerning these major issues, and many others, from those they aspire to elect. After all, while our leaders are in positions to make changes, they also realize that the general public can be very easily distracted by many things, and they are masters of distraction. Seemingly, to even hear a discussion involving these critical infrastructure issues, whether, energy, water, highways and bridges or communications, you need to go down to a very local level, with the people who are actually maintaining/installing/repairing the systems. Typically, these people have very little input with reference to direction or policy regarding their respective infrastructure on a national or international basis.

As I log in to my Surface Pro 4 using facial recognition or my fingerprint, I marvel at the possibilities. From Windows 10 to Microsoft’s new HoloLens, with its Holographic computing, the future is full of promise, in almost every human endeavor. The more I use the cloud for data storage and can access my data across my laptop, phone or tablet, the less chained I am to an office or even a specific device. Speech and bio-metrics, along with the cloud, are emerging technology and leading the way to an amazing “new” world, despite the daunting challenges.

As Ms. Jamison notes in her article:

“… it is an exciting time to be in speech technology and in technology in general.”

Sincerely,

H. Court Young
Author, publisher, speaker and geologist
Promoting awareness through the written word
Research, freelance writing & self-publishing services
Facebook: HCourtYoung
Phone: 303-726-8320
Email: tmcco@msn.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/hcourtyoung
Twitter: http://twitter.com/hcourtyoung
Blog: http://hcourtyoung.blogspot.com

Sent by Windows 10

Saturday, July 9, 2016

American Infrastructure – One of the Things Which Defies Logic

 

As America just celebrated its 240th birthday on July 4, 2016, I noted that I have been seeing an increasing number of articles about the state of the United States water and electrical infrastructure. As I reviewed these articles, both current and historic, a pattern which defies logic (at least in my opinion) is clearly apparent. Before I explain this statement, I need to present some background.

When I wrote and published my two books involving the water infrastructure (Understanding Water Rights and Conflicts, Second Edition, 2004) and (Understanding Water and Terrorism, 2010), I was very concerned with the state of America’s water and electrical infrastructure. These books were written with the intention of presenting a simple, easy to understand explanation of these two infrastructures and the relationship between them. Both books are available in EPub and Kindle format at the links above.

Following is a select list of a few of the many articles which I have scanned and organized since the years I published these two books. Note this list is not at all comprehensive but it does reflect the tone of the engineering, electrical and water professionals who understand the problem. It also reflects the variety of publications which touch on these very critical infrastructures.

Article Title

Publication

Publication Date

Denver Firm’s Mine Poisons River

Rocky Mountain News

August 23, 1995

The 138 Billion Dollar Clean Water Solution

NUCA Magazine

April 1997

EPA Forecasts Clean Water Treatment Needs

Environmental Marketplace News

October 1997

Nation’s Water Costs Rushing Higher

USA Today

September 28, 2002

Congress Trims State Revolving Funds

WaterWorld

Feb 2012

New Report Highlights Staggering Costs Ahead for Water Infrastructure

WaterWorld Magazine, Waterworld.com

April 2012

How a Smart Water system can save money

Water/Wastewater Magazine

April 2012

Troubled Waters

Christian Science Monitor Weekly

December 3, 2012

The Pending Water Shortage

Chemical Engineering Magazine

June 2013

The Power of Water

Net Zero Magazine, www.nzhmagazne.com

September 2013

Water Wise

Emergency Management Magazine

Sept/Oct 2014

Americans’ Deeply Concerned about Water Infrastructure

WaterWorld Magazine, Waterworld.com

March 2016

Billions Pledged to Improve US Water Infrastructure

WaterWorld Magazine, Waterworld.com

May 2016

Senate Panel Eyes Water Infrastructure Needs

WaterWorld Magazine, Waterworld.com

June 2016

Poor US Infrastructure Could Cost $1.4 Trillion in 10 Years

Material Handling and Logistics (NHL) Magazine, MHLNews.com

June 2016

National Infrastructure shortfall continues to grow

Logistics Management Magazine, Logisticsmgmt.com

June 2016

The June, 2016 Logistics Management magazine article entitled National Infrastructure shortfall continues to grow sums up the challenge very well. It states:

“An ongoing and ever-mounting deficit for U.S. infrastructure continues to be the norm., according to the most recent edition of the “Failure of Act” report by the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE). Lack of sufficient investment into infrastructure will result in U. S. businesses being less efficient, with business productivity and GDP falling, coupled with drops in employment and personal income. From a financial perspective, ASCE said that from 2016 to 2025, each U. S. household stands to lose $3,500 in disposable income annually because of infrastructure deficiencies, with that loss pegged to rise to $5,100 annually from 2026 to 2040 if not addressed. And if it goes unattended by 2025, the U. S. economy is expected to lose nearly $4 trillion in GDP with a loss of 2.5 million jobs. As for the current state of U. S. infrastructure, ASCE was clear that the U. S. infrastructure is not making the grade, giving it an average of D+.”

Given that this is the case, and that the ASCE gave the infrastructure the same “D” grade back in 2002, and before, things have not changed much. As I note in my book Understanding Water and Terrorism:

“Humans can live only minutes without air, several days without water and weeks without food. Yet, for most of us, the thought of not having “a drink of water” when we are thirsty is foreign. Very few of us would deliberately forgo a drink of water for even a day. The average amount of water used per person (depending on activity) is .2 to 15 liters a day (3.7 liters=1 gallon) with the average drink being .2 liters.

Because water is so important to our survival, our water supply systems were identified as one of eight critical infrastructure systems in Presidential Decision Directive 63 (PDD 63). This Directive issued on May 22, 1998, was intended to achieve and maintain the capability to protect our nation’s critical infrastructure from intentional acts of terror.”

However, even with numerous books and an increasing number of articles about these two critical infrastructures, the electrical grid and the water supply system, Americans don’t appear to comprehend the reality of the problem. The following is from my blog entitled Heightened Awareness presented in October 2006.

“Only heightened public awareness of issues like energy, water and terrorism will really make a difference to the survival of this country. While very few of us need to be experts, a good working knowledge about these extremely important topics allows us to exchange meaningful ideas and question the experts and leadership. For some reason our politicians are unwilling to lead us. So the general public needs to take the lead. Need we continue to be puerile about these issues?

Sadly, it seems to me that our country’s leadership actually reflects us very well. We all seem to want instant answers and quick fixes. It seems that both major political parties, Republicans and Democrats, are more motivated by self-interest than whether America survives as a country. The latest public outcry is often designed to deflect our attention away from key survival issues. The economic bottom line seems to be the most important issue in our lives and our society.

Worse, we do not seem to realize the need to know more about these critical survival issues. We seem to be satisfied with the information contained in 60 second sound bites, unwilling to make an effort to become informed to have meaningful discussions, find viable solutions and insuring that we can maintain our way of life.”

Clearly this problem of a rapidly declining infrastructure has transcended four, if not more, presidential administrations. Starting with the Clinton Administration, and continuing through the current administration, the ASCE infrastructure grade has remained at a level of “D.” This clearly is not a “Republican” or “Democratic” issue, since it spanned both types of administrations. The minor changes / improvements made over the last 30 years do not even begin to address the problem with either of these infrastructures. They don’t even keep up with the degradation due to the passage of time.

You might say the improvement / replacement of these infrastructures is purely in the hands of the utilities which own and operate them. If they were completely a private enterprise, that might be true. However, these utilities are public-private entities. They are governed by federal regulation and take “public money” for operation and maintenance. This quasi-municipal status puts them directly into the public arena, and subject to the whims of the political elite and ruling class.

So how do these two infrastructures defy logic? Let me explain.

Given that we need both the water and electrical infrastructure to survive (both personally and as a society), and that the decline of these infrastructures has been consistent and constant over the last four administrations, why do we keep electing the same class of people to both Congress and the Presidency? Yes, they may be different because they have an “R” or “D” behind their names, but they state the same old platitudes, positions and espouse the same policies. The people we have put into office (president and congress) over the last 30 years have clearly been totally ineffective with respect to leadership involving our water infrastructure and electrical grid.

These two infrastructures are critical to the survival and sustainability of our society, yet presidential administrations and congresses come and go, and there is no change. Waiting for them to make the necessary changes via their leadership clearly is not working. Things are actually getting worse, as the engineering life of the components are ebbing away. The majority of the water infrastructure is definitely beyond its engineering life of 50 years. The electrical grid is continuously being overtaxed due to the exponential advance of technology and the use of the cloud. How can we continue to re-elect the same people to “leadership” positions given the fact that they are unwilling to make the changes that are so critically necessary to sustain our society? It seems logical to me that we, as the electorate, would at some point in time, take notice that our survival is actually at risk, and demand change by putting people in leadership positions who have a chance of making the necessary changes in focus, or at the very least, actually talk about making changes.

Take the current election cycle for the U. S. President. Why are we, as a society, even thinking of electing someone who is a member of the “political class”, such as Hillary Clinton. She has been a “political insider” and member of the “1%” ruling elite since her husband was president. How can we truly expect any change beyond some minor fixes around the “edge” of the problem, with people like her in office? They seem to want to keep the “status quo” because they are being enriched by the current system and see no reason to change.

This is probably the best reason to vote for someone like Donald Trump or Bernie Sanders. Clearly they are not “political insiders,” nor have they been in political leadership. It stands to reason that, while we may not like their stated positions, there is a possibility that they may bring a new psychology to the top “ruling elite” and political class. Their election to office has a chance to slightly shift the course of this country. For example, both of these men espouse positions far different than that of the “political insiders.” This is clearly the case, otherwise there would not be the extreme push from the Republican and Democratic leadership, and their financial supporters, to have both candidates marginalized and discredited, in favor of more “traditional candidates.”

We have, for the last 30 years, been “shooting ourselves in the foot” with respect to our most important critical infrastructure components the water infrastructure and electrical grid. By electing and re-electing these same people to political office and leadership, we have lost time, expertise and opportunity to make the changes necessary for converting 19th century infrastructures into 21st century infrastructures. It defies logic to believe that anything will change with respect to the water or electrical infrastructure based on past performance, if people like Hillary, Jeb or Ted, as well as the many other “political insiders”, are kept in “leadership” roles in this country.

Sincerely,

H. Court Young
Author, publisher, speaker and geologist
Promoting awareness through the written word
Research, freelance writing & self-publishing services
Facebook: HCourtYoung
Phone: 303-726-8320
Email: tmcco@msn.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/hcourtyoung
Twitter: http://twitter.com/hcourtyoung
Blog: http://hcourtyoung.blogspot.com

Friday, October 16, 2015

IoT, the “cloud” and your Water Supply

 

A recent article in the September 2015 issue of Water Technology Magazine entitled The Internet of everything (even water) by Dave Eifert attracted my attention. It discussed how cloud-based monitoring, using the Internet of Things (IoT) can benefit the water industry.

The reason it was of interest, beyond the pure technology aspect, was that the water district which I am a “director emeritus” is embracing similar technology. 

Dave notes five issues facing the water industry. This new technology has applications in all of these areas.

  • Retiring personnel –reducing workforce and taking important knowledge with time [lack of continuity]
  • Reduced funding
  • Increasing regulations
  • Drought
  • Strategies to overcome water scarcity (such as reuse)

He further notes:

“With potentially fewer people to complete more complex work, looking to new technologies and service-delivery models to accomplish peripheral tasks makes sense. With this technology, water treatment professionals can focus on the main task [supplying clean, potable water]. …

IoT [Internet of Things] is new technology and a new service-delivery model that makes in-the-field devices smart and allows them to provide near real-time information to end users anywhere, as long as they have an internet connection.”

Smart meters and the “cloud” allow for faster acquisition and analysis of data. Dave uses the example of chlorine residual at the end of an existing distribution system. However, I would like to present a more critical issue which, in my opinion, impacts far more global water suppliers. It is especially relevant to smaller water supply systems.

As I have noted in numerous blogs, availability of clean potable water is critical to our survival as a species. Only about 7% of the water on Earth is fresh water in the first place; the rest is brackish or salt water, unusable by humans [in that state]. It stands to reason that water is one of our most precious resources.

As drought continues to encroach upon the western United States, the availability of clean, fresh water diminishes. More users with less water creates major challenges for both small and large water suppliers. California is an excellent example of the impact of major drought across all segments of society from homeowners to farmers.

Because of scarcity, the use of water in the western United States has become a complex regulatory nightmare. This is especially true of the states of Colorado, Utah, Nevada, California, New Mexico and Arizona. These states depend upon one supply, the Colorado River, as their major source of water. It should be noted that the headwaters of this mighty river is also the state with the same name. As an aside, it is estimated that 70% of the practicing water lawyers in the United States reside in my home state of Colorado. Clearly, the reason for the predominance of water lawyers is they want to be close to the source of supply.

There is both a legal [having the right to use available water] and a physical [is there water actually in the river] component to water in the states using the Colorado River basin. For example, there was a newspaper article several years ago about a rancher in Southern Colorado. He had the first priority [the number one legal right to use any water in the stream]. However, as shown on the photograph with the article, the stream was completely dry. The opposite can happen; the stream or reservoir can be full but if you have a very low legal priority you might not get any physical water. During droughts in Colorado, water becomes almost unobtainable at any price.

So how can these smart meters, IoT and the “cloud” be used to help with the challenge of scarcity? Two specific uses come to mind. While similar in purpose, these two uses function differently in the water supply scheme.

The first use is by the water supplier. Having more data faster allows the water supplier to operate the water infrastructure with increased efficiency. These increased efficiencies can be seen in everything from billing the consumers for water used to the physical operation of valves and fire hydrants. Technology can be used, as noted by Dave Eifert, to monitor such things as chlorine residuals to keep the water in the system safer. It can also be used to make sure all areas of the supply system have the correct pressure and availability of water or to detect high flows in the water mains or even customers homes.

In addition, using these smart meters and the “cloud” allows the water supplier to take advantage of newer and more efficient computer technology to monitor the water supply system in less time. This is an extremely valuable benefit for the majority of small water supply systems, such as the one I am involved with, as it saves time and effort for the very small staff involved with operating and monitoring the system on a daily basis. We use Badger Meters and National Meter and Automation, Inc. as our suppliers for the hardware and software technology.

The second, and more important, use is the identification of leaks in the system. This can manifest itself by a drop in pressure in a length of line, or an increased flow rate through a house meter. Leaks, which often do not show up on the surface of the ground can be discovered by flow and pressure data sensors in the metering system itself.

Leaks in the supply system take on increasing importance during a drought. The scarcer the resource, the more valuable it becomes. Conserving the amount of water which is available to your water supply system becomes critical, especially to small districts like the one I am involved with.

It’s obvious that fewer leaks in a water supply system makes more water available for consumers for a multitude of uses including drinking, cooking and even fire and wild fire protection. If the staff has more data, faster, then leaks can be detected sooner. This is the significant benefit to installing and using these “smart meters” and the “cloud.”

However, there is a more important benefit across the system. Using these new IoT systems, not only the water supplier staff can get the data, but the consumer can as well. Using a simple cell phone “app” or a laptop or desktop computer, the individual consumer can check usage on a daily or even hourly basis. They can even use email or text alerts to be notified when usage exceeds a certain rate. In effect, there are more “eyes” monitoring the system.

If the consumer is interested in saving money, they can monitor their own water use on a daily or weekly basis with these cloud-based systems. As more consumers monitor their water use, it takes the strain off the staff of water supplier. Consumers, as they monitor their usage, will typically notice unusually high flows and request help from the supplier. Leaks will be detected sooner, and repaired with less water loss to the system and cost to the consumer. The entire water supply system and all of the customers are the beneficiaries.

Understanding how critical water is to humans and our planet is the reason that I wrote my books about water. They are available on Amazon in downloadable digital format. Understanding Water Rights and Conflicts, Second Edition explains in easy to understand language the concepts and challenges of supplying a scarce resource to an increasing population. Understanding Water and Terrorism explains how vulnerable our water supply system is to disruption from not only humans but also natural events, such as earthquakes, and hurricanes.

As you can see, there is a significant benefit to using the “IoT” and the “cloud” to monitor and manage our water supply systems. As the small district I am involved with found out, the process of implementing new technology is challenging and expensive. But in the end, it is very rewarding for all water users involved.

We all need to think and act as if water is our most precious resource, because in reality, it is.

Sincerely,

H. Court Young
Author, publisher, speaker and geologist
Promoting awareness through the written word
Research, freelance writing & self-publishing services
Facebook: HCourtYoung
Phone: 303-726-8320
Email: tmcco@msn.com
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Blog: http://hcourtyoung.blogspot.com

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Smart Homes vs. the Grid

 

As I watched numerous technology conferences this spring, I saw the Internet of Things (“IOT”) come alive. The Internet of Things is defined by Gartner, Inc. as follows:

“Gartner Inc., defines the Internet of Things as ‘the network of dedicated physical objects (things) that contain embedded technology to sense or interact with their internal state or external environment. The IoT comprises an ecosystem that includes things, communication, applications and data analysis.’”

Smart Homes are now the “in-thing.” We are connecting our homes to the internet and cloud at an amazing rate. A recent article entitled “The Future of the Smart Home is Now at CES,” Security Dealer & Integrator magazine, February 2015 noted:

“My biggest take-away from the giant Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas was the ascension of the connected home.”

Additionally the article notes:

“It’s true that CES is showcasing the ‘future’ of technology, but for the smart home, it is obvious that the future is now.”

Another article entitled “A sensored landscape,” by Tracy Maple, Internet Retailer Magazine, June 2015, further amplifies this trend. The article notes:

“Sensors are being embedded in billions of everyday devices, allowing coffeemakers to order filters and printers to order ink, and providing brands and retailers with unprecedented levels of consumer data. Welcome to the Internet of Things.”

Further, as noted in the article, you will have the following to look forward to:

“There will come a day, and James McQuivey is not even kidding as he says this, when consumers will welcome cameras in their bathroom mirror and shower stall. They won’t worry about cameras in their closet either, or that their toilet is equipped to analyze their waste for possible health problems, says the Forrester Research Inc. vice president and principal analyst.”

So, if this is the new world, how does it work? It extends far beyond just computers, tablets and cell phones. Again the article, A sensored landscape, gives a glimpse of how the world is changing.

“The Amazon Dash Replenishment Service (DRS) enables connected devices to order goods from Amazon when supplies run low – like a coffeemaker that orders more coffee beans. Poppy, through invention company Quirky, Inc., is a new line of smart appliances that includes an artisanal pour-over coffee machine, a baby formula maker, and a pet food dispenser that will measure remaining supplies and place an order using DRS before running out.”

Retailers like Amazon and manufacturers like Whirlpool and Nest are easing consumers into the concept of a connected home environment according to Tracy. Home Depot is working to show consumers how they might benefit from connected appliances and devices as well. Best Buy features a line of connected lights and thermostats.

By now you should be getting the idea that replenishment (of goods and materials) is a very big market. Instead of going to the store and buying things we need, we can have it done via automation. This is just the next wave of taking advantage of a market which has always existed in a “faster” and “perhaps more efficient manner”.

Gartner estimated the potential number of IoT devices over the next few years, according the article, and the numbers are staggering (per the following table).

The Growth of Internet of Things devices

2013

2014

2015

2020

Number of consumer devices (in billions)

1.84

2.24

2.87

13.17

Total IoT units (in billions, all industries*)

3.03

3.75

4.88

25.01

*includes units intended for use in automotive, consumer, generic business, and vertical business areas.

What does this “wonderful new world” built on technology have to do with the “grid”, or more precisely the electrical grid? How interconnected are they? It goes far beyond just charging electrical devices. Two very recent events in my life should help bring this into focus.

I received a phone call from my daughter last week. She and her husband, Henry, were experiencing the “perfect storm” on that morning. The power (electricity) was out at their house, probably due to the recent heavy rains. As Henry is an IT person, working to keep our technology functioning, he often works from home and is “on-call” a significant amount of the time. His job requires that he be connected to the internet and that his laptops and modems be powered by the grid. On that morning, he could do neither.

Normally in this situation, he would have gotten in his car and driven to a local “hotspot” which had power and internet connectivity, had a coffee drink and continued to work. However, that same morning, the garage door spring broke, so he could not raise the door to get his car out. Hence, they called me. I picked him up and brought him down to our house where there was both electricity and internet connectivity. He plugged in his laptop and connected to our internet and went back to work (sadly without the coffee drink). While, in this instance, his garage door failure was mechanical, think what would have happened in this new IoT world when the car, smart home and garage door were connected to the internet and to each other (hint – the result could have been the same).

The second situation occurred as I write this blog. My internet went down and Comcast could not get a repair person out to our house for three days. I replaced the cable modem but to no avail. My internal network, wired and wireless works, but without connectivity to the internet or the cloud. Many of my documents are stored in the cloud, but fortunately I have them on hard drive as well (known as a hybrid storage solution). This lack of connectivity impacts both my wife’s business and my financial trading business. Fortunately, the Comcast system came back up a few hours later.

So as the number of connected sensors multiply, what will the impact of an interruption of either the electrical grid or the internet mean? As seen in the examples, it was an inconvenience but not an insurmountable challenge.

In the not too distant future, when you are living in your “smart home,” it might still be an inconvenience relative to your connected coffeemaker, crock pot, pet food dispenser or even your refrigerator and washing machine. But what about the other devices in our “smart society” such as connected heart monitors, dialysis machines or the sensors in your self-driving car and roadway? How about your job? Since many more of us will probably be working from home, how will you connect with your co-workers and management? What about the new self-driving semi-truck convoys, with their sensors, computers and wireless connectivity, which are projected to be in use in the next few years?

I discuss this type of a future in my EPub entitled “World Collapse or New Eden” through the predictions presented and followed from 2008 to today. There are many ways for this new future to enhance and bless our lives but only if our infrastructure is dependable and stable.

Current political discussion from both parties (I call them the “R”s and “D”s) pay only very distant lip service to the vulnerability of our modern infrastructure, especially the water supply system and the electrical grid. These are two infrastructure components which are absolutely critical to our society and way of life. For example, scientists have noted the possibility of major solar flares which could, if strong enough, could totally disrupt, if not, destroy our electrical grid. The solution is apparently reasonably simple and not extremely expensive. However, neither the politicians nor the corporate owners of the utilities are interested in bothering with a fix. In fact, over the last few administrations and corresponding Congressional sessions (regardless of party), I have noted that funding has been drastically reduced for both of these infrastructures.

It seems both the utilities and the politicians, mentioned above, are more interested in their bottom lines and portfolios than doing what is best to protect our infrastructure long-term. As more and more devices become connected, both in our homes and our workplaces, these challenges will continue to get more and more critical.

This is why I believe there is no significant difference (other than the bank account) between candidates named Hilary, Romney, Walker, Bush, Christy, Pelosi, Reid and essentially all the other mainstream candidates or potential candidates in the upcoming 2016 U.S. presidential or congressional races. The only exception in the presidential race, in my opinion, is Rand Paul. He is truly an outsider with ideas which will benefit the middle and lower classes, not the elites. Because the beneficiaries of Mr. Paul’s ideas are not the elites, he will be marginalized by all of those mentioned above, the main stream media (MSM) and the power structure manipulating the elections.

The challenge of the decaying electrical grid is real. It is both the fault of the political system and the utilities which own it. These quasi-private companies are unwilling to take a long term view of the grid, because of their bottom line. In essence, next quarters profits are more important than the well-being of the next generation. The political system, as mentioned above, has its own agenda which does not include what is best for the middle and lower classes or the stability of our infrastructure. In my own experience, I have noted over the years, whether “R”s or “D”s are in power, that funding for water supply systems are often “cut” (except to the largest utilities and districts) to make way for other more lucrative (for the political stakeholders) programs.

So what is to be done? Well, there are a few visionaries. One is Elon Musk with his battery storage/solar concept. In essence, he has made a business of equipping homes with solar panels and now wants to add storage batteries to the mix.

Net metering is the concept that owners of roof top solar systems pay for the panels and connections to the grid. Any electricity they produce over what they use is sold back to the utility at a negotiated rate. However, this reduces the amount of revenue to the utility as the owners of roof top solar panels apply electrical production towards their usage before getting paid for electricity. The theory is that if the owner of the panels is willing to invest in the system, this is money the utility does not have to spend for additional generation capacity. However, the utility does have to maintain the existing grid and its reserve electrical capacity.

A recent article entitled “Batteries Are Carving Out Space on the Grid,” by Thomas W. Overton JD, Power Magazine, May 2015 noted:

“Behind the meter storage has thus far been almost entirely confined to commercial systems designed to reduce demand charges. But storage paired with solar photovoltaic (PV) generation is drawing increasing attention.

… very few residential customers [with PV systems] pay demand charges, meaning there is no economic incentive to install storage.”

“That, however, may change rapidly because of the pressures on net metering and its effect on utility revenue. A possible harbinger of things to come occurred in late February [2015] when Arizona utility Salt River Project changed its rate structure to include a demand charge for customers with roof-top solar. While the intent was to close a revenue gap, observers noted that the move also opens the door to residential storage … Roof top solar firm SolarCity immediately sued to overturn the decision, but it is also poised to cash in on it through its partnership with Tesla – the two companies have paired to offer solar-plus storage systems.”

As you can see, the idea of having roof top solar owners pay a demand charge negates the principle of investing in the generation capacity of the utility. These owners would be better off by buying a utility bond than investing in roof top solar if there is a demand charge. However, in the long run, this is very counterproductive.

Adding battery storage counters this “demand charge” by allowing the solar users to use electricity darning very low rate hours (at night) for large applications such as washing machines, and car charging. Usage during the day would be minimal, with batteries supplementing large use applications such as air conditioning. The solar panels would recharge the batteries during the day, and very little electricity would be sold back to the utility. With enough batteries, and an efficient smart home, this would make the solar owner look “off-grid” to the utility with the grid tie used only for emergency periods.

These demand charges maintain the “status-quo” of a very centralized electrical grid, rather than a much more stable and efficient decentralized grid. The utilities retain their monopoly position of power and influence with very little regard for what is best for the future of this country or the global economy.

However, the fact remains that without significant insight, vision, discussion and investment in our electrical grid, the coming technological revolution will be slowed. The electrical grid is the life blood of this new technological revolution, and in my opinion, the patient is not doing at all well.

Just like internet access, which is becoming less and less affordable to many people, electrical energy may become available to fewer and fewer people due to global population increase, rising energy demand and lack of modern infrastructure. Think of going several days or weeks without connectivity. While you can certainly survive without your cell phone, taking “selfies” or texting, what about the billions of electrical sensors and chips in our increasingly automated, robotic factories, farms and societies? What about our water supply systems which increasing use smart meters and smart pumping stations to treat and deliver water? What about the very complex life giving medical systems in hospitals, which are part of what my son-in-law Henry helps maintain?

As you can see, these new smart homes with connected crock pots, coffeemakers, refrigerators, stoves and washing machines, not to mention the computers and cell phones, are very dependent on both the internet and electrical grid. The more computer conferences I attend or read about (most of which are on the internet by the way), the more concerned I am about the global future for my two granddaughters. This concern comes not because of the fascinating and innovative technology but because of the lack of significant vision, action, ideals and leadership from our political system as well as the absolute greed of our global corporate/government system which manages and controls the majority of the world’s resources.

Sincerely,

H. Court Young
Author, publisher, speaker and geologist
Promoting awareness through the written word
Research, freelance writing & self-publishing services
Facebook: HCourtYoung
Phone: 303-726-8320
Email: tmcco@msn.com
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Blog
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Sunday, May 17, 2015

Do You Have a Sustainable Water Supply?

 

Do you have a sustainable water supply? What is it and how do you know?clip_image002

In a recent article entitled Developing a Sustainable Water Supply for the Customers of Lookout Mountain Water District, I noted several concepts about sustainable water supplies which are applicable to water systems around the world. These ideas give a sense of the complexity of the question about how sustainable your water supply is. Before we can look at the sustainability of your water supply, we need some background about drought and water in general.

Many areas of the world are subject to drought, and nowhere is immune. One of the driest locations in the world is Antarctica, which is counter intuitive because of the snow and ice. Large areas of the Middle East, northern Africa and the Western United States are also drought prone. There are an increasing number of articles about fresh water supply and drought around the world. Northern and central Africa is especially hard hit by the lack of fresh water supplies, particularly if you include wastewater sanitation.

The current drought in the western United States and California is of concern because of the severity and length. The current California drought, which is into its fourth year, is definitely emphasizing the validity of recent drought studies.

In reference to the Western United States, a February 2015 paper entitled Unprecedented 21st century drought risk in the American Southwest and Central Plains by Benjamin I. Cook,1,2* Toby R. Ault,3 Jason E. Smerdon2, in Climatology Journal discusses historic droughts in North America.

“In the Southwest and Central Plains of Western North America, climate change is expected to increase drought severity in the coming decades. These regions nevertheless experienced extended Medieval-era droughts that were more persistent than any historical event, providing crucial targets in the paleoclimate record for benchmarking the severity of future drought risks. We use an empirical drought reconstruction and three soil moisture metrics from 17 state-of-the-art general circulation models to show that these models project significantly drier conditions in the later half of the 21st century compared to the 20th century and earlier paleoclimatic intervals.

This desiccation is consistent across most of the models and moisture balance variables, indicating a coherent and robust drying response to warming despite the diversity of models and metrics analyzed. Notably, future drought risk will likely exceed even the driest centuries of the Medieval Climate Anomaly (1100–1300 CE) in both moderate (RCP 4.5) and high (RCP 8.5) future emissions scenarios, leading to unprecedented drought conditions during the last millennium.”

Tree ring studies (dendrochronology), ice cores and paleo climatic studies are tools which provide a glimpse of past climates. Current data points to the fact that the above findings are typical of droughts in the entire western United States. The typical drought in the western United States during the 20th century has been relatively short, which corresponds with the rapid increase in human population and infrastructure development during that period of time.

“Dendrochronology (from δένδρον, dendron, "tree limb"; χρόνος, khronos, "time"; and -λογία, -logia) or tree-ring dating, is the scientific method of dating based on the analysis of patterns of tree rings, also known as growth rings. Dendrochronology can date the time at which tree rings were formed, in many types of wood, to the exact calendar year.” Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dendrochronology

Just like in the rest of the western United States, there have been numerous droughts of varying severity in Colorado along the Front Range (an area east of the Rocky Mountains which includes Fort Collins to the north, through Denver, down to Pueblo to the south). This has been and continues to be the center of population in the state.

The following paper by Thomas B. McKee, Nolan J. Doesken, and John Kleist, entitled A History of Drought in Colorado, Lessons Learned and What Lies Ahead, February, 2000 gives a good overview on historical drought in our state – (Source: http://ccc.atmos.colostate.edu/pdfs/ahistoryofdrought.pdf).

The following table shows Dry and Wet Periods for Colorado from the Fraction of Observing Sites – Precipitation for 24 month SPI

Date

Dry

Duration

Date

 

Wet Duration
1893-1905 X 12 years 1905-1931 X 26 years
1931-1941 X 10 years 1941-1951 X 10 years
1951-1957 X 6 years 1957-1959 X 2 years
1963-1965 X 2 years 1965-1975 X 10 years
1975-1987 X 3 years 1979-1996 X 17 years

It should be noted that this paper also states that:

“The most common droughts are short duration (6 months or less). They may be quite localized (especially during the growing season) or more widespread (especially during the fall, winter, and early spring). Depending on where and when they occur, they may have little or no impact on our lives. More widespread droughts do not necessarily have a tendency to become more long lasting.”

“Multi-year droughts occur infrequently.

Precipitation time series for weather stations across Colorado show that periods of two or more consecutive years with much below average precipitation (less than 80% of average) have occurred a few times during the 20th Century at most Colorado stations. Below average precipitation lasting three years in a row, however, is quite rare. Many locations have never had three consecutive very dry years, particularly over the northern half of Colorado. The only examples of four or more consecutive years with less than 80% of the long term average falling each year were found over southwestern Colorado near the turn of the last century (1899-1902), in southeastern Colorado during the dustbowl years (1933-1937), and over isolated areas of eastern Colorado 1952-1956. Based on SPI analyses, four droughts with a duration of at least four years (48 months) have occurred during the past century ….”

For most of the period between 1945 and the present, the “mini-droughts” tend to be short term. Because the major population increase and infrastructure development took place during this period, water suppliers prepared for what the historical water records and stream data depicted, which were these short term droughts. However, new data such as the information presented in the referenced paper show longer term droughts do occur.

As population increases in a region, pressure on the existing water supply goes up, often dramatically. It has been only recently that hard data regarding drought has been available due to the dramatic increase in computing and environmental sensing technology. Still, in reviewing articles and papers regarding drought which I have in my archive from the late 1960s, I note that experts have been warning about longer term droughts throughout that period. They warned, without having specific data, that water suppliers in Colorado (a drought prone state) should be prepared for longer droughts. Taking this a step further, I believe water suppliers worldwide should be required to think of drought as a district possibility and plan for it, especially with the emerging climate change data.

Not preparing for long term drought and maximizing existing water resources is, in my opinion, like living along the coast of California and not preparing for an earthquake, or living along the Gulf of Mexico coast and not preparing for a hurricane. No reasonable person would do such a thing. Even though most of California’s population has never been through a major quake, all the data suggests there have been major quakes in the past.

Speaking of California, look at the current drought they are having and project it on the water supplies of most of the cities and towns across the western United States. Clearly, a four year drought (so far) is very possible in the western United States. How would these water suppliers cope with a four year (and counting drought)?

Historically, due to the lack of human and financial resources, many smaller water suppliers had no choice but to concentrate on the “urgency of supplying water on a daily basis”. Just building a water supply infrastructure in arid regions is a major undertaking. Often, water needed to be stored in reservoirs and piped long distances for distribution to customers. As in the case of our small district, the original system was built over 100 years ago, by others, and was not maintained adequately during the period before it was taken over by our district. This is typical of many areas of our country and the world, where water and wastewater infrastructure is the last to be adequately maintained because of our “out of sight, out of mind mentality.”

It was only the drought of 2002 in Colorado which changed the focus of our small district, as well as that of most other water providers in the State to a large degree. Our district, as well as, suppliers across the entire state were required to take a longer term view of developing a sustainable water supply which went much beyond just the “day to day” physical supply and treatment of potable water. This included in depth water right regulation and administration, physical water metering and monitoring, and short term water storage administration. The State of Colorado also got much more involved in the regulatory process, via the State Engineer’s office. The Colorado State Engineer has the responsibility of managing and regulating the state’s complex code of water rights and decrees, as well as, water structures such as dams, pipelines and irrigation ditches. Other western states have similar regulatory agencies.

During the initial stages of a drought, the “ordinary” water consumer tends to think of the drought as a “nuisance” during which their lawn turns brown and they can’t wash their cars. However, water providers regard them as a major challenge. This is the reason large amounts of money (millions of dollars) are spent annually on water resource development and planning in Colorado and the western United States.

From the above referenced study, multi-year droughts are deemed as the worst scenario.

“Our study of past droughts has shown that the worst droughts are multi-year droughts. Vegetation dries up, soils blow, stored water reserves are gradually depleted, and wells go dry. What begins as a minor inconvenience can, for many people, end in the loss of revenues, property, and livelihoods.”

As water suppliers in California are discovering, not planning for a multi-year drought creates a situation where residents living in the state may end up with no water to drink. Industry and agriculture are suffering as well. Ground water from wells is being drawn out at a frantic pace, which traditionally has been the source of “last resort” and the “long term water bank. What happens when it is no longer available?

History shows that many water suppliers may be hard pressed to adequately guarantee a sustainable water supply for consecutive dry years with current water resources. There is no guarantee of the length of a drought. Only so much water can be stored, and mega projects like Lake Powell, and Lake Mead constructed in the 1930s by the Federal Government can run into problems if the drought is long enough.

One May 17, 2015 article, entitled America’s second largest reservoir – Lake Powell – is disappearing:

“As water levels plummet to 45% in America’s second-largest reservoir, new islands appear – and fears grow for a waterway that serves 40 million people.”

The immediate cause is the longest drought in a century.

“This 15-year drought that we’re in is the worst drought in the last 100 years,” said Davis. “But we also have tree-ring studies going back to the year 1075 and this is the fourth-worst drought since 1075. So the drought and weather cycles have a natural variability to them but we’ve got data on warmer temperatures and climate change making a difference” Source - http://www.rawstory.com/2015/05/americas-second-largest-reservoir-lake-powell-is-disappearing/

Yet, even if water supplies can be “stretched” to provide for residential use, what about industrial and agricultural use? How long will people stay in an area where there are no jobs, i.e. where the economy is non-existent? What happens when industry is forced to move to regions where they can operate? What happens when an area such as the Imperial Valley in California, which produces more than 60% of the United States’ winter time vegetables, can no longer irrigate crops?

These questions may be answered if the current drought in California continues for a few more years. But, what happens if the current California drought expands to include much of the western United States? As noted above with regard to Lake Powell, there is not a water supply system in the western United States that has been designed to withstand a 30 to 60 year drought, especially at current population levels.

Droughts also have a public safety aspect. Without an adequate water supply, fire protection for both residential use and wildfire mitigation is limited to non-existent. In longer term droughts, animals and humans can die due to lack of water. There is also the increased risk of water borne diseases as water supplies dwindle and become increasingly contaminated.

So is there a solution to making areas prone to drought, drought-proof? Why can’t water be “taken” from areas of “plenty” and delivered to areas of drought? After all, floods occur periodically throughout the eastern United States and along the Mississippi River, so these should be areas of “plenty.”

Getting water from areas of “plenty” is not necessarily as easy a solution for arid and drought prone regions as it might seem. There are several reasons for this, which are not completely intuitive.

A good example is the Great Lakes. These lakes hold an estimated 21% of the fresh water in the world (source www.epa.gov/glnpo/basicinfo.html). They should be able to supply much needed water to the western United States via pumping and pipeline, right?

This sounds like a simple technical solution, because we transport oil through pipelines around the world. It is certainly possible to do with fresh water. However, there are more complex issues behind the scenes.

The Great Lakes, however, have two major issues which prevent them from supplying water to drought prone areas. They both involve the way the Lakes are used. The first is that the Great Lakes are a major source of water for drinking, industry, shipping and agriculture for eight states and two countries. Because of the shipping potential of the Great Lakes, the area surrounding the Lakes is a major industrial hub in both the United States and Canada. The Great Lakes are connected to the St. Lawrence River, Erie Canal and Atlantic Ocean. This is a shipping and industrial corridor for the Northeastern United States, as noted on the following website:

“There are 15 major international ports and some 50 smaller, regional ports on the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Seaway system.” – Source http://www.great-lakes.net/teach/business/ship/ship_4.html

A large percentage of the population of the United States and Canada rely on these lakes for drinking water, jobs, recreation and food.

The second issue is the diversion from the Great Lakes to the Mississippi River.

“The Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal, historically known as the Chicago Drainage Canal, is the only shipping link between the Great Lakes Waterway (specifically Lake Michigan by way of either the Chicago River or the Calumet-Saganashkee (Cal-Sag) Channel) and the Mississippi River system, by way of the Illinois and Des Plaines Rivers.

The Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal is 28 miles (45 kilometers) long, 202 feet (62 m) wide, and 24 feet (7.3 m) deep. Prior to its construction, the shallower and narrower Illinois and Michigan Canal (1848) connected the same waterways for navigable shipping over the Chicago Portage.

Today, diversions from the Great Lakes system are regulated by an international treaty with Canada[citation needed], through the International Joint Commission, and by governors of the Great Lakes states.” Source - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_Sanitary_and_Ship_Canal

There have been suggestions about increasing diversion of water from the Great Lakes into the Mississippi headwaters to aid shipping down the Mississippi. But this issue is contentious. The Great Lakes Treaty passed in 2009 has strict controls on how much water the Great Lakes can supply to the Mississippi River flows. Some of the legal arguments are as follows:

“On December 21, 2009, Michigan State Attorney General Mike Cox filed a lawsuit with the U.S. Supreme Court seeking the immediate closure of the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal to keep Asian carp out of Lake Michigan. The state of Illinois and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which constructed the Canal, are co-defendants in the lawsuit.[19]

In response to the Michigan lawsuit, on January 5, 2010, Illinois State Attorney General Lisa Madigan filed a counter-suit with the U.S. Supreme Court requesting that it reject Michigan’s claims. Siding with the State of Illinois, both the Illinois Chamber of Commerce and The American Waterways Operators have filed affidavits, arguing that closing the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal would upset the movement of millions of tons of vital shipments of iron ore, coal, grain and other cargo, totaling more than $1.5 billion a year, and contribute to the loss of hundreds, perhaps thousands of jobs.[20] However, Michigan along with several other Great Lakes states argue that the sport and commercial fishery and tourism associated with the fishery of the entire Great Lakes region is estimated at $7 billion a year, and impacts the economies of all Great Lakes states and Canada.” Source - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_Sanitary_and_Ship_Canal

This treaty, entitled Great Lakes – St. Lawrence River Basin Water Resources Compact of 2008, was passed in part to stop various plans to export Great Lakes water to Utah, California or other drought prone areas via pipeline. There was even a proposal to pump Great Lakes water to Vancouver, Canada via pipeline and put it on transport ships for delivery to rivers in China.

“The Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River Basin Water Resources Compact is a legally binding interstate compact among the U.S. states of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. The compact details how the states manage the use of the Great Lakes Basin's water supply and builds on the 1985 Great Lakes Charter and its 2001 Annex. The compact is the means by which the states implement the governors' commitments under the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River Basin Sustainable Water Resources Agreement that also includes the Premiers of Ontario and Quebec.” - Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Lakes_Compact

While not an inter-state or international concern, the small water district I have been working with discovered this lack of intra-state water cooperation first hand. Many people do not understand that during a drought, water rights owners/suppliers do not want to and in many cases will not sell water to other entities, especially on an intra-state basis. Simply put, there is no guarantee that the drought won’t spread. During the 2012, the basin which supplied water to our small district was in severe drought while basins to the north had normal to above average river flows. Our small district did get some much needed relief from other, larger water suppliers but it was on a very short term basis, which did not impact the water supplies of the larger entities in any way.

There can be some intra-state cooperation during drought, water suppliers tend to be very cautious once a drought seems to be looming. As a result of past droughts, many water suppliers, states and countries are changing the way water is regulated. What may have worked, have been appropriate and legal before the drought might now be not possible or illegal.

But there is an additional issue that goes beyond drought and beyond the immediate urgency of the daily water, even beyond the issue of drought. That is increasing global population.

For example, in my home state of Colorado, the city of Golden and all of the other water suppliers along the Front Range, including Denver, realize that drought is not the only threat to existing water supplies. Increasing population is also a major issue with water suppliers from Fort Collins to Colorado Springs. If projections are correct, the population in the Front Range, according to the Denver Water Board, is estimated to increase by 50% (to over 5 million) by 2025. In addition, populations are projected to double on the western slope as well, which is currently the main source of water for the Front Range.

Even without the threat of drought, the projected population increase makes it imperative that water suppliers continue to develop their water resources and continue to improve its physical and legal supply of water. Clearly, more people using the same amount of water around the world, especially in drought prone areas, can’t benefit limited water supplies.

A November 9, 2004 article in the Rocky Mountain News makes this very real. Entitled “West warned of longer drought.” The following is noted.

“The governors’ association is pushing for adoption of the National Drought Preparedness Act, which failed to make it through Congress in 2002 and last year. The bill would name a lead federal agency for drought response. It would create and advanced system of national drought monitoring and forecasting.”

The above is noteworthy because it shows that even during an emergency drought situation our elected leaders, also known as the “R”s and “D”s, are unwilling to do what they were elected to do – lead. You can debate the usefulness of a bill such as the National Drought Preparedness Act, or even, if it is the best solution, however, you can’t debate that fact that our leaders do very little more than draw huge income streams from the public trough in return for headline making, public discussions about very trivial issues (for the most part). When is the last time you remember issues of energy or water being discussed in a meaningful way on a national level by any of our national elected “R”s or “D”s?

So how do you know if you have a sustainable water supply? This is a challenging question. As you probably know, water issues in arid and drought prone areas are intertwined and complex. Often, water suppliers, particularity the larger ones, are not very transparent, in my opinion. There are many conflicting issues within these entities, many of which center around money and power. Smaller water supply entities are closer to their constituencies but still the issues can be clouded.

For example, according to an October 2009 article in WaterWorld entitled “Repositioning the Water Industry for the Water-Energy Nexus,” a Brookhaven National Laboratory study notes the following.

“…the typical US household expends – 100 gallons/person/day of water for household use, however, requires 465 gallons of water for energy production and 510 gallons for food consumed (irrigation/livestock).”

According to the article, Sandia National Laboratory, on its website in 2009, succinctly stated:

“These two critical resources [water and energy] are inextricably and reciprocally linked; the production of energy requires large volumes of water while the treatment and distribution of water is equally dependent upon readily available low-cost energy. The nation’s ability to continue providing both clean, affordable energy and water is being seriously challenged by a number of emerging issues.”

While moving water from areas of “plenty” to areas of drought may not be a long term solution, one possible solution may be pumping and piping desalinated water from the oceans to drought prone areas. Over 90% of the water used by Saudi Arabia is desalinated. While there are significant technical and economic issues, I believe that future generations will find it necessary to pay the price of creating, pumping and piping this very expensive water to areas where water is scarce. This will impact both coastal areas, because of the desalination plants, and pumping stations, as well as, the routes along the pipelines.

Education about water issues, even in non-drought prone areas, is critical to our future on this planet. Without this education, most of our population, follows and parrots what the “mainstream media” preaches. A good example is the fracking debate.

The amount of water used in the fracking process is staggering. It typically ranges from 1 to 5 millions gallons per well.

“Recently, however, a small number of deep, directionally-drilled, high-volume, hydraulically fractured wells have been completed in the northern part of the Lower Peninsula. Those wells sometimes use several million gallons of water, and one Michigan well required more than 20 million gallons.” Source – Industrial WaterWorld, Sept/Oct 2013.

As a geologist, I am not against fracking. However, I am concerned that many millions of gallons of fresh water is being used and then injected back into the earth. Some is injected into drinking water aquifers which is clearly not helping maintain a sustainable fresh water supply.

However, much of the contaminated fracking water is injected into wells several thousands of feet deep. While that water probably does not impact the near surface freshwater supplies, it is removed from the hydrologic cycle, at least, in the immediate region. It is no longer available to immediate downstream users, which is normally the case. The story of fresh water use by humans is that it has normally remained in the hydrologic cycle. I believe that “short-term” profits have over-ridden the long term view in the case of fracking.

Clearly, I did not answer the question about a sustainable water supply. As global populations rise, the strain on existing fresh water supplies will increase dramatically. That is a given. Water suppliers in larger metropolitan areas may have larger budgets and more resources, but their systems are not necessarily any more sustainable than that of the small water district I am working with. A good example of this is the City of Las Vegas, which derives much of its long term supply from Lake Powell. The best answer regarding whether your water supply is sustainable, especially in drought prone areas, is educating yourself and becoming informed about issues and challenges.

I have numerous copies of articles from the past 20 years regarding global and regional water issues. Many of them are testimony to this lack of leadership on the national, state and local level. My book (now an EPub) entitled Understanding Water Rights and Conflicts, Second Edition, published by BurgYoung Publishing, references a significant number of articles such as those above in an attempt to make water an issue which can be understood by “non-technical” readers.

I recommend that water consumers and residents interface with their water suppliers, to learn about, discuss and clarify water challenges and issues. As you now realize, water is one of our most complex and precious resources, especially in drought prone areas, and probably one of the least understood by consumers. This makes public awareness an especially critical issue. The old adage about “if it is flowing from the tap, everything is OK” is clearly not sustainable in these times. The more aware the consumers, the more accountable the water suppliers, whether large metropolitan systems such as Denver or very small water districts like Lookout Mountain.

Sincerely:

H. Court Young
Author, publisher, speaker and geologist
Promoting awareness through the written word
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