
	by Michael Snyder
	March 4, 2013 
	from 
	TheEconomicCollapseBlog Website
 
	
	 
	
	The world is rapidly running out of clean water.
	
	 
	
	Some of the largest lakes and rivers on the 
	globe are being depleted at a very frightening pace, and many of the most 
	important underground aquifers that we depend on to irrigate our crops will 
	soon be gone. 
	
	 
	
	At this point, approximately 40 percent of the entire 
	population of the planet has little or no access to clean water, and it is 
	being projected that by 2025 two-thirds of humanity will live in 
	"water-stressed" areas. 
	 
	
	But most Americans are not too concerned about 
	all of this because they assume that North America has more fresh water than 
	anyone else does. And actually they would be right about that, but the truth 
	is that even North America is rapidly running out of water and it is going 
	to change all of our lives. 
	 
	
	Today, the most important underground water 
	source in America, the Ogallala Aquifer, is rapidly running dry. The most 
	important lake in the western United States, Lake Mead, is rapidly running 
	dry. 
	 
	
	The most important river in the western United 
	States, the Colorado River, is rapidly running dry. Putting our heads in the 
	sand and pretending that we are not on the verge of an absolutely horrific 
	water crisis is not going to make it go away. Without water, you cannot grow 
	crops, you cannot raise livestock and you cannot support modern cities.
	
	 
	
	As this global water crisis gets worse, it is 
	going to affect every single man, woman and child on the planet. I encourage 
	you to keep reading and learn more. The U.S. intelligence community understands what 
	is happening. 
	
	 
	
	According to one shocking government report that was released 
	last year, the global need for water will exceed the global supply of water
	
	by 40 percent by the year 2030...
	
		
		This sobering message emerges from the first 
		U.S. Intelligence Community Assessment of 
		
		Global Water Security. The document predicts that by 2030 
		humanity's "annual global water requirements" will exceed "current 
		sustainable water supplies" by forty percent.
	
	
	Oh, but our scientists will find a solution to 
	our problems long before then, won't they?
	 
	
	But what if they don't?
	 
	
	Most Americans tend to think of a "water crisis" 
	as something that happens in very dry places such as Africa or the Middle 
	East, but the truth is that almost the entire western half of the United 
	States is historically a very dry place. 
	 
	
	The western U.S. has been hit very hard by 
	drought in recent years, and many communities are on the verge of having to 
	make some very hard decisions. For example, just look at what is happening 
	to Lake Mead. 
	 
	
	Scientists are projecting that Lake Mead has a 
	50 percent chance of running dry by the year 2025. If that happens, it will 
	mean the end of Las Vegas as we know it. But the problems will not be 
	limited just to Las Vegas. The truth is that if Lake Mead runs dry, it will 
	be a major disaster for that entire region of the country.
	 
	
	This was explained in a recent article
	
	by Alex Daley...
	
		
		Way before people run out of drinking water, 
		something else happens: When Lake Mead falls below 1,050 feet, the 
		Hoover Dam's turbines shut down - less than four years from now, if the 
		current trend holds - and in Vegas the lights start going out.
		 
		
		Ominously, these water woes are not confined 
		to Las Vegas. Under contracts signed by President Obama in December 
		2011, Nevada gets only 23.37% of the electricity generated by the Hoover 
		Dam. The other top recipients: Metropolitan Water District of Southern 
		California (28.53%); state of Arizona (18.95%); city of Los Angeles 
		(15.42%); and Southern California Edison (5.54%).
		 
		
		You can always build more power plants, but 
		you can't build more rivers, and the mighty Colorado carries the 
		lifeblood of the Southwest. It services the water needs of an area the 
		size of France, in which live 40 million people. 
		 
		
		In its natural state, the river poured 15.7 
		million acre-feet of water into the Gulf of California each year. Today, 
		twelve years of drought have reduced the flow to about 12 million 
		acre-feet, and human demand siphons off every bit of it; at its mouth, 
		the riverbed is nothing but dust.
		 
		
		Nor is the decline in the water supply 
		important only to the citizens of Las Vegas, Phoenix, and Los Angeles. 
		It's critical to the whole country. 
		 
		
		The Colorado is the sole source of water for 
		southeastern California's Imperial Valley, which has been made into one 
		of the most productive agricultural areas in the US despite receiving an 
		average of three inches of rain per year.
	
	
	Are you starting to get an idea of just how 
	serious this all is?
	 
	
	But it is not just our lakes and our rivers that 
	are going dry.
	 
	
	We are also depleting our groundwater at a very 
	frightening pace as a recent
	
	Science Daily article discussed...
	
		
		Three results of the new study are 
		particularly striking: 
		
		 
		
		First, during the most recent drought in 
		California's Central Valley, from 2006 to 2009, farmers in the south 
		depleted enough groundwater to fill the nation's largest human-made 
		reservoir, Lake Mead near Las Vegas - a level of groundwater depletion 
		that is unsustainable at current recharge rates.
		 
		
		Second, a third of the groundwater depletion 
		in the High Plains occurs in just 4% of the land area. 
		 
		
		And third, the researchers project that if 
		current trends continue some parts of the southern High Plains that 
		currently support irrigated agriculture, mostly in the Texas Panhandle 
		and western Kansas, will be unable to do so within a few decades.
	
	
	In the United States we have massive underground 
	aquifers that have allowed our nation to be the breadbasket of the world.
	
	 
	
	But once the water from those aquifers is gone, 
	it is gone for good. That is why what is happening to the Ogallala Aquifer 
	is so alarming. The Ogallala Aquifer is one of the largest sources of fresh 
	water in the world, and U.S. farmers use water from it to irrigate more than 
	15 million acres of crops each year. 
	 
	
	The 
	
	Ogallala Aquifer covers more than 100,000 
	square miles and it sits underneath the states of Texas, New Mexico, 
	Oklahoma, Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, Wyoming and South Dakota. Most 
	Americans have never even heard of it, but it is absolutely crucial to our 
	way of life. 
	
	 
	
	Sadly, it is being drained at a rate that is almost 
	unimaginable.
	 
	
	The following are some facts about the Ogallala 
	Aquifer and the growing water crisis that we are facing in the United 
	States. A number of these facts were taken
	
	from one of my previous articles. 
	 
	
	I think that you will agree that many of these 
	facts are quite alarming...
	
	 
	
		
			- 
			
			 
	The Ogallala Aquifer is being drained at a rate of approximately
			800 gallons per minute.   
- 
			
			 
	According to the U.S. Geological Survey, "a 
	volume equivalent to two-thirds of the water in Lake Erie" has been 
	permanently drained from the Ogallala Aquifer since 1940.   
- 
			
			 
	Decades ago, the Ogallala Aquifer had an average depth of approximately 240 
	feet, but today the average depth is
			just 80 feet. In some areas of Texas, the water is gone completely.   
- 
			
			 
	Scientists are warning that nothing can be done to stop the depletion of the 
	Ogallala Aquifer. The ominous words
			of David Brauer of the Ogallala Research Service should alarm us all... 
- 
			
			 
	According to a recent
			National Geographic article, the average depletion rate of the Ogallala 
	Aquifer is picking up speed.... 
				- 
				
				Even more worrisome, the draining of the 
		High Plains water account has picked up speed. The average annual 
		depletion rate between 2000 and 2007 was more than twice that during the 
		previous fifty years.  
				  
				The depletion is most severe in the southern 
		portion of the aquifer, especially in Texas, where the water table 
		beneath sizeable areas has dropped 100-150 feet; in smaller pockets, it 
		has dropped more than 150 feet.   
 
- 
			
			 
	According to the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the U.S. interior west 
	is now the driest that it has been
			in 500 years.   
- 
			
			 
	Wildfires have burned millions of acres of vegetation in the central part of 
	the United States in recent years. For example, wildfires burned an 
	astounding
			3.6 million acres in the state of Texas alone during 2011. This helps 
	set the stage for huge dust storms in the future.   
- 
			
			 
	Unfortunately, scientists tell us that it would be normal for extremely dry 
	conditions to persist in parts of western North America for decades.  
			  
			The 
	following is from an article
			in the Vancouver Sun... 
			
				
				But University of Regina 
		paleoclimatologist Jeannine-Marie St. Jacques says that decade-long 
		drought is nowhere near as bad as it can get.
				
				
				
				St. Jacques and her colleagues have been 
		studying tree ring data and, at the American Association for the 
		Advancement of Science conference in Vancouver over the weekend, she 
		explained the reality of droughts.
				
					
					"What we're seeing in the climate 
		records is these megadroughts, and they don't last a decade—they last 20 
		years, 30 years, maybe 60 years, and they'll be semi-continental in 
		expanse," she told the Regina Leader-Post by phone from Vancouver.
					 
					
					"So it's like what we saw in the Dirty 
		Thirties, but imagine the Dirty Thirties going on for 30 years. That's 
		what scares those of us who are in the community studying this data 
		pool."
				
			
		
		
			- 
			
			 
	Experts tell us that U.S. water bills are likely to soar in the coming 
	years. It is being projected that repairing and expanding our decaying 
	drinking water infrastructure will cost more than one trillion dollars over 
	the next 25 years, and as a result our water bills will likely
			approximately triple over that time period.   
- 
			
			 
	Right now, the United States uses approximately
			148 trillion gallons of fresh water a year, and there is no way that is 
	sustainable in the long run.   
- 
			
			 
	According to a U.S. government report,
			36 states are already facing water shortages or will be facing water 
	shortages within the next few years.   
- 
			
			 
	Lake Mead supplies about 85 percent of the water to Las Vegas, and since 
	1998 the level of water in Lake Mead 
			
			has dropped by about 5.6 trillion gallons.   
- 
			
			 
	It has been estimated that the state of California only has
			a 20 year supply of fresh water left.   
- 
			
			 
	It has been estimated that the state of New Mexico only has
			a 10 year supply of fresh water left.   
- 
			
			 
	Approximately
			40 percent of all rivers in the United States and approximately
			46 percent of all lakes in the United States have become so polluted 
	that they are are no longer fit for human use. 
	
	 
	
	The 1,450 mile long Colorado River is a good 
	example of what we have done to our precious water supplies. It is probably 
	the most important body of water in the southwestern United States, and it 
	is rapidly dying.
	
	 
	
	The following is an excerpt from an outstanding 
	article
	
	by Jonathan Waterman about how the once mighty Colorado River is rapidly 
	drying up...
	
		
		Fifty miles from the sea, 1.5 miles south of 
		the Mexican border, I saw a river evaporate into a scum of phosphates 
		and discarded water bottles. 
		
		 
		
		This dirty water sent me home with feet so 
		badly infected that I couldn’t walk for a week. And a delta once 
		renowned for its wildlife and wetlands is now all but part of the 
		surrounding and parched Sonoran Desert. 
		
		 
		
		According to Mexican scientists 
		whom I met with, the river has not flowed to the sea since 1998. If the 
		Endangered Species Act had any teeth in Mexico, we might have a chance 
		to save the giant sea bass (totoaba), clams, the Sea of Cortez shrimp 
		fishery that depends upon freshwater returns, and dozens of bird 
		species.
		
		 
		
		So let this stand as an open invitation to 
		the former Secretary of the Interior and all water buffalos who insist 
		upon telling us that there is no scarcity of water here or in the 
		Mexican Delta. 
		
		 
		
		Leave the sprinklered green lawns outside the Aspen 
		conferences, come with me, and I’ll show you a Colorado River running 
		dry from its headwaters to the sea. It is polluted and compromised by 
		industry and agriculture. It is over-allocated, drought stricken, and 
		soon to suffer greatly from population growth. 
		
		 
		
		If other leaders in our 
		administration continue the whitewash, the scarcity of knowledge and 
		lack of conservation measures will cripple a western civilization built 
		upon water.
	
	
	But of course North America is in far better 
	shape when it comes to fresh water than the rest of the world is.
	
	 
	
	In fact, in many areas of the world today water 
	has already become the most important issue.
	
	 
	
	The following are some incredible facts about 
	the global water crisis that is getting even worse with each passing day...
	
		
			- 
			
			Total global water use
			has quadrupled over the past 100 years, and it is now increasing faster 
	than it ever has been before. 
- 
			
			Today, there are
			1.6 billion people that live in areas of the globe that are considered 
	to be "water-stressed", and it is being projected that two-thirds of the 
	entire population of the globe will be experiencing "water-stressed" 
	conditions by the year 2025. 
- 
			
			According to USAID,
			one-third of the people on earth will be facing "severe" or "chronic" 
	water shortages by the year 2025. 
- 
			
			Once upon a time, the Aral Sea was the 4th largest freshwater lake in the 
	entire world. At this point, it
			less than 10 percent the size that it used to be, and it is being 
	projected that it will dry up completely by the year 2020. 
- 
			
			If you can believe it, the flow of water along the Jordan River is down to 
	only
	2 percent of its historic rate. 
- 
			
			It is being projected that the demand for water in China will exceed the 
	supply
	by 25 percent by the year 2030. 
- 
			
			According to the United Nations, the world is going to need at least
			30 percent more fresh water by the year 2030. 
- 
			
			Sadly, it is estimated that approximately
			40 percent of the children living in Africa and India have had their 
	growth stunted due to unclean water and malnutrition. 
- 
			
			Of the 60 million people added to the cities of the world each year, the 
	vast majority of them live in deeply impoverished areas
			that have no sanitation facilities whatsoever. 
- 
			
			It has been estimated that
			75 percent of all surface water in India has been heavily contaminated 
	by human or agricultural waste. 
- 
			
			Sadly,
			according to one UN study on sanitation, far more people in India have 
	access to a cell phone than to a toilet. 
- 
			
			Every
			8 seconds, somewhere in the world a child dies from drinking dirty 
	water. 
- 
			
			Due to a lack of water, Saudi Arabia has given up on trying 
	to grow wheat and will be 100 percent dependent on wheat imports
			by the year 2016. 
- 
			
			Each year in northern China, the water table drops by an average of
			about one meter due to severe drought and over-pumping, and the size of 
	the desert increases by an area equivalent to the state of Rhode Island. 
- 
			
			In China,
			80 percent of the major rivers have become so horribly polluted that 
	they do not support any aquatic life at all at this point. 
	
	So is there any hope that the coming global
	
	water crisis can be averted?
	
	 
	
	If not, what can we do to prepare?