- Mexico City could run out of drinking water by June 26, an event locals call “Day Zero.”
- Three years of low rainfall and high temperatures have worsened the city’s water crisis.
- The Cutzamala water system, which provides water to millions, operates now at 28% capacity.
Oh wow the water wars are starting a few years earlier than I anticipated.
As Bo said, “Twenty thousand years of this, seven more to go.”
Mankind better watch out. Next it’ll be air.
Oh, it’s already being sold.
Those things are awesome. They weigh next to nothing, the small ones have 60 inhales in them, and a single hit is night and day when running at high altitude. A buddy didn’t have time to acclimate before a race, so we got him one as a joke, and it unironically helped him a lot
The year is 1325. Some Aztecs see a snake getting eaten by an eagle out on an island of a vast lake. They take this as a sign from the gods that they should build their city here.
2025: this once vast lake is now a metropolis with routine water shortages
The aztecs knew how to manage it properly. It was the dumbass Spaniards that fucked everything up and drained all the water away.
Texas should get ready for a ton of people heading north. Give a person a choice of dying from no water or going where there is water and we all know what will happen.
As a Canadian I am scared shitless for a future when a deranged America threatens us for our fresh water.
The world is fucked. This is just the beginning. Europe is also prepping for an increase in migrants from northern Africa.
People are going to die in the millions and unfortunately a lot of them will be poor and brown which means collectively we won’t give a shit.
This will probably happen on a global scale. The southern hemisphere will be too hot at some point.
Is the Southern Hemisphere hotter than the North?
Yes. Well no, but yes. Hemisphere on the whole? No. Land in the hemisphere? No. Land in the hemisphere that isn’t Antarctica? Yes, it’s much more likely to be located closer to the equator. Of the 6 inhabited continents 3 (North America, Europe, and Asia) are entirely located in the northern hemisphere.
You have some areas like Patagonia that are akin to somewhere like europe, but the equator is lower on every continent it passes through than you probably think. The equator in South America is found in the Amazon basin. In Africa it’s in in the Congo and a bit above Nairobi (Johannesburg is the northernmost major city in Africa below the southern tropics). In the Asian sphere it passes through Indonesia. About half of Australia is tropical.
For another comparison the top of the Tropic of Cancer (northern one) is in the middle of the Sahara, below New Delhi, right above Hong Kong, and about in the middle of Mexico.
The Southern hemisphere gets more extereme seasons. Earths orbit is eliptical and the point where its closest to the sun lines up with southern hemisphere summer making it hotter (and making northern hemisphere winter milder) The same goes for winter with the earth being furthest from the sun roughly during winter in the southern hemisphere. As the earths axis proceeds this effect swaps hemispheres every now and then. (5000 years iirc?)
They are: haven’t you noticed how much of a hard-on they’ve got for shooting and/or imprisoning border-crossers?
If Mexico implodes this summer, this could help the presidential candidate who works towards more CO2 emissions. Ironic.
I see nothing wrong with this speculation, from a US point of view: A wave of Mexican climate refugees from Mexico City could fuel the Republican propaganda machine tar Biden as being soft on the border, and help Trump. Even though sadly Republicans in the Senate are blocking a bipartisan Senate border security bill.
Although Mexico is having a presidential election too, which makes the statement somewhat ambiguous, although Mexico’s election day is really soon on June 2nd, which is well before summer.
Ah, I remember back when idiots thought climate change meant the world would be under water. Turns out it actually means a lot less water will be available.
Less water where you need it and more where you don’t want it.
Oh, places will be underwater.
It will be salt water.
It will be either too much water or no water.
Edit: i just went to check how my country is doing water wise:
Germany is one of the regions with the highest water loss worldwide. Since 2000, the country has lost 2.5 cubic kilometres of water per year. In the years 2019 to 2021, record low groundwater levels below the long-term lowest groundwater levels were recorded at the measuring points in many places.
Seems we already know
Some areas will be under more saltwater than now, like Florida and the Netherlands. Some areas will be inhospitable due to consistent heat and lack of FRESHwater like Mexico, Northern Africa, India, etc.
There is also a mix: salty water that won’t submerge land permanently, but that will reach more and more inland across rivers during high tides. River Mekong comes to mind, along which rice is cultivated and that already now suffers from this phenomenon. Salty water on land means you will not grow anything there anymore. The Mekong delta produces rice that is used to feed an incredibly high number of people in Asia.
I’d have been scrambling to build desalination plants and asking for help from the US.
Thirsty Thursday will take on a whole new meaning on June 27th.
Desalination on a small scale is fine.
Desalination on a large scale would be its own form of environmental catastrophe.
TBH transporting the water uphill from the sea would take an ungodly amount of power.
Maybe instead of powering AI with nuclear power, we power desalination plants and pumping infrastructure.
All AI will give is recipes made with glue and poop knives.
Water stops thirsty hordes from breaking down your gates.
Nuclear power has been declared double plus ungood by Greenpeace so if you try it they will sue you until you give up.
Oh for sure, I’ve been advocating AI have to cover their own power as if it weren’t subsidized by the government. We could just turn it off and that would be cool with me. I want it to be well known that this was my stance long before the water issues.
I don’t know what covering their own power is supposed to mean.
They “foot the bill” capische? The cost goes to them. They pay money equivalent to the true cost of the goods they consume, above the rate at which a regular citizen pays for a good produced under a system of government subsidy and/or control.
So this is the Warning from Mexico I’ve been hearing about.
Those poor axolotls.