That's pretty neat. Too bad most of SoCal's water is pumped in from halfway across the States, so even if they do keep their people, they'll have a water shortage along with much if the Western US.
80% of water usage in CA is agricultural, and over a third of that is for water-intensive crops like nuts and alfalfa.
Add on top of that that half of all domestic water usage in CA is for watering lawns and it becomes obvious that multi-family housing is severely not the problem. Apartment-dwellers use drastically less water than single-family homeowners, but it all pales in comparison to the terrible land use decisions made by Central Valley farmers and enabled by the state.
I just finished reading Cadillac Desert which went over all that and more. And yes, the agricultural shit-show in California an issue in its own right, but as someone from a State that CA is stealing water from, I'm a little salty (pardon the pun).
That's pretty neat. Too bad most of SoCal's water is pumped in from halfway across the States, so even if they do keep their people, they'll have a water shortage along with much if the Western US.
80% of water usage in CA is agricultural, and over a third of that is for water-intensive crops like nuts and alfalfa.
Add on top of that that half of all domestic water usage in CA is for watering lawns and it becomes obvious that multi-family housing is severely not the problem. Apartment-dwellers use drastically less water than single-family homeowners, but it all pales in comparison to the terrible land use decisions made by Central Valley farmers and enabled by the state.
I just finished reading Cadillac Desert which went over all that and more. And yes, the agricultural shit-show in California an issue in its own right, but as someone from a State that CA is stealing water from, I'm a little salty (pardon the pun).