Megadrought USA update
Andre Willers
23 Feb 2014
Hi ,
The ripple effects of this will be hitting the financial markets
soon .
This affects the Chinese credit system as well .
They have gone into debt to buy californian farms at huge premiums
and near zero interest rates.
But the debts still have to be serviced .
No water , no income stream . Default .
Chickens might fly home to roost , but vegetables have notoriously
poor aerodynamical characteristics .
A replay of 2008 , only worse .
andre
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Feds Withhold Water To California Farmers
For First Time In 54 Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on
02/21/2014 20:49 -0500
inShare6
The US
Bureau of Reclamation released its first outlook of the year and finds
insufficient stock is available in
California to release irrigation water for farmers. This is the first
time in the 54 year history of the State Water Project. "If it's not
there, it's just not there," notes a Water Authority director adding that
it's going to be tough to find enough water, but farmers are hit hardest as
"they're all on pins and needles trying to figure out how they're going
to get through this." Fields will go unplanted (supply lower mean
food prices higher),
or farmers will pay top dollar for water that's on the market (and those costs
can only be passed on via higher food prices).
Via AP,
Federal officials announced
Friday that many California farmers caught in the state's drought can expect to
receive no irrigation water this year from a vast system of
rivers, canals and reservoirs interlacing the state.
The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation released its
first outlook of the year, saying that the agency will continue to
monitor rain and snow fall, but the grim levels so far prove that the state is
in the throes of one of its driest periods in recorded history.
Unless the year turns wet,
many farmers can expect to receive no water from the federally run Central
Valley Project.
... the state's snowpack is at 29
percent of average for this time of year.
...
California officials who manage the
State Water Project, the state's other major water system, have already said
they won't be releasing any water for farmers, marking a first in its
54-year history.
...
"They're all on pins
and needles trying to figure out how they're going to get through this," Holman
said, adding that Westland's 700 farmers will choose to leave fields unplanted,
draw water from wells or pay top dollar for water that's on the market.
Farmers are hit hardest,
but they're not alone. Contractors that provide
cities with water can expect to receive half of their usual amount, the Bureau
said, and wildlife refuges that need water flows in rivers to protect
endangered fish will receive 40 percent of their contracted supply.
Contractors that provide farmers with water and
hold historic agreements giving them senior rights will receive 40 percent of
their normal supplies. Some contracts date back over a century and guarantee
that farmers will receive at least 75 percent of their water.
One of those is the San Joaquin River Exchange
Contractors Water Authority in Los Banos that provides irrigation for 240,000
acres of farmland.
The Water Authority's executive director Steve
Chedester said farmers he serves understand that
the reality of California's drought means it's going to be tough to
find enough water for them. "They're taking a very practical
approach," he said. "If it's not there, it's just not
there."
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