The $1BN Megaproject to Save California
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- čas přidán 5. 12. 2023
- Meet the new infrastructure tackling California's water crisis.
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The Central Valley is far-and-away the country’s most significant region that almost never gets any attention. With almost 7 million people living here generating a third of the nation’s fruits, nuts, and vegetables, it’s high time we get megaprojects like this one and CAHSR (no matter how slow they’re moving). Thanks B1M for bringing eyes to the Valley!
exactly! Lived in Kings & Tulare Counties most of my life and no one talks about what dominates the interior of this state. everything is always about SoCal or the Bay Area, never what connects those 2 places.
@@aneagleinyourmind2415 dude nobody gives af. And they would be perfectly fine without you. Apparently you didn’t know that Oxnard is the Strawberry Capital of the World. THAT is where they are grown year round. And Santa Maria is number 2. That’s SoCal in case you were wondering. More strawberries are grown there than anywhere else in the world. Salina’s is the only town in the Valley with any real strawberry production and even that pales.
And just an fyi. Florida is the biggest producer of melons in the USA so none of the foods you mentioned will be missed by them if the CV suddenly got nuked out of existence. And most moms in the states are grown in China anyways. You must be from out there. Valley people always have an oversized sense of worth.
I live in patterson, California and i love it here. So calm and peaceful. We're about 55 min away from Frisco
Thirty years ago the Central Valley produced three quarters of the nations produce.
@@aneagleinyourmind2415ummm I live in NY and my neighbor has 180 acres where he grows nothing but strawberries. So yeh, where do you get your information?
This makes me, as a person living in a country with abundant fresh water, realize and appreciate how lucky I am.
I mean technically the US has loads of fresh water… it’s just the parts of California do not.
“This is your fucking country dude 👀🤮 America is clearly number 1” -true words
This is all propaganda
@@word42069 Not just California. Much of the region that relies on the Colorado River is experiencing some level of water rationing which will only get worse. Over 40 million rely on the river in seven states.
Same here, as well as being a food exporting nation, my country never really had any food shortages. Still yet to find another country that sells a bottle of water at the equivalent of 0.20 USD, with multiple local brands to choose from at that!
I'm working on a rehabilitation at a plant in Sunnyvale not to far from Sacramento (very similar project on a smaller scale). A lot of people don't regularly think about where the water goes after the toilet is flushed. The water infrastructure all around California is built in the 60s and 70s and its all past its service life and falling apart. WATER IS IMPORTANT
Sunnyvale is my home town. SHS 1981.
@@LaureanoSantandercrypto is dead. That advertisement isn’t related to the video in any way. Go spam your ai dell doroto nonsense elsewhere.
No worries screwsome has it taken care ok.
But not so important they let most of that record rain from last year flow to the ocean.
Right by the Home Depot ?
As a native Sacramentan, thank you for this video! I had no idea how important these water treatment plant upgrades were until watching this!
They are not important at all, wastewater will degrade quickly leaving mostly just the water behind. Waste of money. You want to keep the water in California? Start Planting dense forests. 70% of Earth is water, if you don't have water, you created the situation you are in. It's really that simple
Only Native Americans are native. You're a local.
@@jasonhaven7170 The Oxford English Dictionary's definition of the word 'native', when being used as an adjective: "Of a country, region, etc.: that is the place of a person's birth and early life; that is the place of origin of a plant or animal. Occasionally with…"
As I am both a person and an animal (humans belong to the Kingdom Animal in the biological classification system), and Sacramento is a region that was the place of my birth, this choice of wording stands. Stop trying to be cute and go away. All people like you ever accomplish is to drag any chance of meaningful discourse on the Internet right into the gutter.
@@jasonhaven7170 Which ones? Apaches?
Jason, so cringe.
I still can't wrap my head around the fact that they came in $400 million under budget
Newsom probably wasn't envolled with " friends " building it.
Please continue to focus on infrastructure projects like this.
with all the regulations? have had reservoir projects planned for decades & not built
@@lovly2cu725 I want the channel to focus more on infrastructure than vanity projects. What are you talking about?
The plant I worked, Duffin's Creek Water Pollution Control Plant, is a larger processing facility with the same technology from like 10 years ago. The sheer scale of the site mainly is coming from the large additional settling ponds. Additionally using chlorine is a bit old fashioned, still works fine but there isnt the need anymore.
so what do they use to kill the bacteria at the end of the process ? UV light ?
UV light is expensive, they would not be able to stay under budget with that technology, chlorine is the goat@@r3dp1ll
@@r3dp1ll maybe Efficient Micro-organisms. It's not drinking water. But others saying conceivably ozone.
@@r3dp1llthey switched to sodium hypochlorite over chorine gas for security concerns
Ozone and UV were piloted prior to construction. UV was no-go due to lack of transmittance and both UV and Ozone were unacceptable due to the unusually long effluent manifold (3+ km) where regrowth occurs. That generally leaves hydrogen peroxide (expensive) and sodium hypochlorite (not chlorine, as stated - they're different).
I worked in the Project Management Office for this program for about 3 years. Great experience working with everyone.
That's nice to hear, considering how many State offices are not great to work in. Some even toxic.
Part of the groundwater issue is the restriction of the rivers in the valley that historically would flood across vast areas, completely saturating the ground and adding to ground water. The rivers are now damned and channelized by levees. So it’s likely that the drought is irrelevant to the issue of subsidence
so why arent u managing the states water if ur so smart
czcams.com/video/-4OBcRHX1Bc/video.htmlsi=UvZZm8TMPgkzmiRT
@@cerebrumexcrement This is genuinely one of the silliest, most childish comments I've ever seen, to the point where I'm afraid that posting this comment means I'm probably bullying an actual child who accidentally found their way onto their parents iPad instead of their regular, child-locked one.
You seem unaware of the extensive ground-water pumping that goes on, especially when surface water sources are unavailable. Those big wells are in competition with one another in their race to the bottom. If allowed, they will pump every drop, and the future be damned. Salt water intrusion has already fouled traditional fresh water aquifers. And land subsidence eliminates aquifers as well.
@@cerebrumexcrementYou look really pathetic with this comment
As someone who lives in Elk Grove and drives past this facility on the way to downtown Sacramento, it's kinda nda cool to know what all the construction equipment was for. Also kinda cool to see a @TheB1M video cover something so close to home!
Driving sucks. The light rail system is way better.
Come on down for a tour, we hold them regularly.
Hello from Galt
Very cool video! I've had the pleasure of working at the SRWTP for over a decade (since the EchoWater Project's inception), and it's really neat to see the enthusiasm shown in this video! Us engineers geek out over this kind of stuff, but seeing it translated in a way that relates to the public is quite refreshing. I'll need to share this with my friends and family so they see there is a lot more to it than the "poop plant" that they all envision in their minds :)
Such an amazing life you live I love your lifestyle
I work in a different sector of Civil but I always liked my WWTP courses so this video was cool to see!
"WE" are the actual poop plants. Remember to flush twice.
I’m amazed at the number of negative comments on this video. Did those commenters even watch it? There is nothing but good news in here. The project was successfully completed and under budget allowing another water infrastructure investment to be made.
it looks like the video has triggered the magas!
Good comment and you're right. These attitudes seem to be ubiquitous in current political climate if not the either-world where every uninformed knucklehead feels the need to be heard.
@@kenmunozatmmrrailroad6853 hi knucklehead
California is that one US state that everyone just loves to blindly hate and mock, all because of politics.. There's your answer.
@@malahammer any mention of California is likely to be met with poliitically-motivated anger and outrage from them. just look at that evil grifter Nick Johnson.
Cool to see you doing a video on sewage treatment. You should try and do one on Beckton in the UK - largest treatment works in Europe and constant huge cinstruction works going on. Also the end point for tideway
Such an amazing life you live I love your lifestyle
I live in the IE, and I'm always trying to help the environment in any way possible, I started by removing the lawn all around my house and replacing it with stone and pea gravel cactus and other desert plants, by doing this I was able to reduce my home water consumption by 50%, plus, I don't have to mow the lawn every two week's 😊😊
I always recommend food not lawns. Cost of farmers markets are a major cost offset, and if you are like me with a project like that, although I currently do not garden, you can have year long greens at least, and if you pickle, year long supplies such as tomato sauce can occur. Your yard is typical, lots of people are doing that, & that's amazing @ -50%. We need larger scale data relative to *food not lawns* ASAP. [In many regions rain capture is legal.]
Besides the self evident content, the comments show how substantial the contribution of this channel is. What a wonderful achievement! Keep up the good work! And a big thank you!
Please post more of videos like this one. I love infrastructure content especially when you create a content like this.
I work at new PCB manufacturing facility, in the last 2 years we’ve been running we have learned so much about recycling our waste water. We reuse 100% of the liquid waste and seeing the amount of water we process every day I’m sure regulations should be tightened up to control all industrial manufacturing plants. Our humidifiers alone(just infrastructure of the building) can use thousands of gallons per day and we are now reclaiming that water and using in our manufacturing processes. Aside from people that need to maintain their sprinklers and are watering the street I would assume businesses are the biggest water users and knowing the laws that they have to abide by so much water could be getting wasted. Breaks my heart to think of the world we are leaving for our children. Great video B1M!! Important topic!!
Bro just said we reuse all of our pee
Projects like this are going to become more and more necessary over time, but if we keep treating them as bespoke systems designed to the specific needs of the host region, they will remain fantastically expensive. We need to standardize the systems used, layouts of plants, methods of construction, etc. Allow room for scaling up or down the size of the plant, but that should be just about all that ought to be customizable.
💯
Use this knowledge to help us🙏
Wastewater treatment plants is a good start, but I’m thinking more of giant reservoirs to stock up meltwater from the mountains.
Why not focus on groundwater re-charge? There is huge potential underneath the surface to store water without building above ground reservoirs.
@@SDGreg That can work too.
That would be too easy. Instead, lets build a train!
Maybe 60 years ago. There's already a ton of reservoirs around the state, and getting the environmental clearance to build a new one would be a nightmare at this point.
@@LonecloneProductions Okay, how about refilling up groundwater like @gregbrance5705 said?
I live in SoCal but originally from Chicago. When I moved here I found out that all the treated waste water was released into the ocean. As dumb as I am I found this idea stupid especially since we live in a desert, no matter the green lawns and trees. Only recently has the treated water been recycled for irrigation in parks as well as purple hydrants for fighting fires. Tho I'm sure there is still billions of gallons being released anyway.
I live in a water abundant area (Seattle) and all the waste water here is treated back up to drinking level standard then release back into the ocean as well. I appreciate that the water is cleaned for the wildlife, but I also wonder if its a bit silly to not recycle it. Better to release clean water than dirty water.
There is unfortunately a very good reason such a large amount of water is sent back to the delta: because the delta is literally holding back the ocean. If we diverted all that fresh water to other uses, the water level in the delta would get low, which would allow Pacific Ocean water to come up the straits and into the delta. Ocean water is salt; it would wreck that ecosystem. And even if you don't care about that, once the delta goes salty, it'll get into human water supplies. You can't water crops with salt water.
A possible alternative would be a reverse-flood control system, basically damming the Pacific Ocean to keep the salt water from backing up. That would still devastate the delta ecosystem by drying it out, but it could potentially let humans use that water elsewhere. But I have to assume that would be a megaproject to end all megaprojects....
This wasn't supposed to be the case. There was a large project 20 or 30 years ago to clean and recycle this water. Fortunately for the NIMBYs, there was an even more massive activist political campaign to shut the project down and see that nobody ever tried again. It was 100% successful. Search for "toilet to tap" to find lots of info on this.
Such an amazing life you live I love your lifestyle
They release it into the ocean?! But they're basically draining the local water table that way! No wonder the droughts there are so severe and seem to get worse every passing year...
The San Joaquin Valley, the southern part of the Great Valley, needs projects like this even more. What was once productive farmland was turned into desert during the Great Drought. Once the Bay/Delta replenishment quantities are met, the remainder can be used for ground-water recharge.
i burst out laughing when you said apparently Sacramento is the best place to live😭 its not even close to the level Santa Barbara and San Diego are at
For water?
Obviously you can't hear him say apparently
NorCal and Sacramento are the gateway to huge playgrounds for fishing, water sports…you name it and we’ve got it within the Sacramento/American River delta (>1,000 miles of water ways chock full of bars/restaurants to the foothill lakes to the North American Crown Jewel…Lake Tahoe for year round outdoor activities. The Pacific is 1.5 hours away. San Diego/Santa Barbara have their haughtiness and the ocean and surrounding hills….and 4x >population. No comparison.
@@luisvazquez2738apparently it might have gone over a non britt’s head 😂
Somebody didn’t watch or listen properly huh 😂
Only someone who has not done real engineering work would consider a Wastewater plant upgrade to not be a big deal. It's water. If anything goes wrong, the whole city or county loses water, or gets an outbreak, or has to pay for tanker and bottled water. It's super critical and extremely time sensitive. As important as running a multichannel 24 hour banking system or airline flight management or ticket booking system. Logistics, civil engineering, control systems, mechanical engineering, chemical engineering, and electrical engineering. Not to mention management of finances.
To have it done at less than the budgeted cost is an incredible achievement. Kudos 👍
I find it interesting that the US still uses chlorine to disinfect water instead of ozone, which is just as effective but leaves zero toxic residue.
There is chlorine in sea water. Lots of it.
That is what’s used in more modern facilities these days across the US.
Just don't breath it.
@@word42069 Not in this one, clearly.
ozone is used most of the time. I'm surprised they said chlorine
After 4 years of drought approaching desperation in 2022, CA experienced record rainfall.
More projects like this in every part of the world !!
Even though I’m not a fan of our winters here in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada (I have to write that out in full to avoid confusion with Ontario CA (California), we are blessed with the Ottawa River, perhaps “the” major tributary of the St. Lawrence River. It meets our drinking water needs, and with good sewage treatment plants in place, provides beaches safe for swimming in the summer months.
The waste water in Ottawa is mostly floating downstream towards the East. Our luck. Wastewater is still a big issue in Ottawa. There were plenty of episodes of waste overflow., and many in 2023. Just type “Sewage Issues Ottawa Ontario” in your browser. Our reality is as bad as other big cities.
I grew up in Ottawa, on the river actually, Lac Duchenes.
One thing I want to note is that I notice big money tends to settle around Capital cities. 🙂
I miss skating on the lake, and the cold winters.
Such an amazing life you live I love your lifestyle
California would have plenty of water if it weren’t for the fact that we have more people than the entire nation of Canada, and are the lead food supplier in the USA (and even significant food supplier globally). California really is a country unto itself.
Thank you for a feature on my home area. I live in Sacramento county. It is an important project especially here. Great video footage of the area too. Keep up the good work. JV
Such an amazing life you live I love your lifestyle
I applaud this for being an USA project that is finished under budget alone. Also great news for better groundwater in the future, I'm currently traveling to Jakarta and afaik thet really really need this.
I’ve seen this treatment plant on satellite maps for years but had no idea about the scale and the positive implications this project has. This is a great report!
Nice little surprise to see my home city on your channel, thanks! Another cool project in the area is the rail yards down town expansion.
Such an amazing life you live I love your lifestyle
This was so interesting. It's the first wastewater treatment video I've seen from y'all, and I hope to see more of this critical topic. It was my favorite of all your videos. Thanks for the great docs.
The Digital Twin is impressive. I can see that used on more projects in the future.
Under budget and on time? What earth is this?
especially in California lmfao
BIM/VDC
SoCal, Utah, Colorado...it's almost like living in a desert makes it hard to find water for hundreds of millions of people
But those people "identify" as people who have access to water. And in California, that's the same thing.
@@MickJonesHogSmacks Pfft... that stuff isn't even made from REAL gators! I had the same problem with the Girl Scout cookies I bought.
It is desert
so cal & az Nm & parts of UT ARE deserts, not ALMOST
All of Utah is desert if all of SoCal is desert by what you say here.
This is the first time where I could understand that digital twin software could really make a significant difference in the “real world “ to project management & operations. I hope this gets used more in future
Such an amazing life you live I love your lifestyle
So the farmer spray pesticides and fertilizer on the crops, they take water from the ground sinking the land and meaning they don't have to pay water bills and then they have the average person who gets water has to pay over $1bn to remove the fertilizer and pesticides from the drinking water! Surely the farmers should be paying for this?
you would think so but doing that would probablt bankrupt every farmer in the vicinity
Or farmers could stop trying to grow almonds and other water heavy crops in a F#CKING DESERT!
Or California could just stop letting all it's rain water run into the ocean down concrete rivers like they're currently doing! Plot twist: Water doesn't get "used up". Most cities reuse the same water again and again! They also have more ground water AND more rain because other cities are allowed to water their lawns! Those other cities also have fewer "gender reveal" related brush fires BTW.
But you're forgetting one thing: Californian's ENJOY paying more for things! They BRAG about how much they pay in taxes for some reason. They're proud of it! They over pay for housing, for gas, for everything basically! They'll happily pay a million dollars for a crack house that needs to be torn down and rebuilt! But that's not surprising given their tap water has more lead in it than Flint, Michigan and no one's even talking about it!
AFAIK farmers have to pay some kind of tax to be allowed to use ground water.
The vast majority of farms are downstream of Sacramento in the Central Valley, where the water is pumped through a massive series of canals. The ammonia being filtered out is just a result from sewage. Those farmers do, in fact, pay for their water, but whether they pay enough for such a scarce resource is another question, idk I'm not a farmer. It's cheap enough to the point where nearly the entire world's supply of almonds (a very thirsty crop) is still grown in California, being its most valuable crop export.
I live in British Columbia, Canada, the City I live in was one of the first in North America to do this. They started back in the 80's by building a huge reservoir up on a hillside where the treated wastewater is pumped up to, and then it's gravity fed all over the place. It's used for irrigation of Farmers fields, sports fields, and many other things. We are close to living in a Desert climate here, so it helps immensely.
Amazing that a communist country can do such a thing.
BC is far from desert climate. Lol not even close to a desert climate.
@@Lobonova clearly you've never heard of the South Okanagan. It is considered by weather experts to be a desert climate.
Very enjoyable as always 👍
Growing up at Lake Tahoe from 1959 on, I discovered that Lake Tahoe in particular South shore before it was a city had one of the world's most advanced water reclamation plants! It literally took sewage and converted it to freshwater. When I took a tour of the plant in grade school, we were able to sample the water which was every bit as good as the water coming right out of the lake itself
I know it's easy for anonymous internet users to blindly hate anything associated with California for purely political/ideological reasons, but any new water project that gets built is a step in the right direction.
You should do a video on the Groundwater Replenishment System (GWRS), Orange County, California. Orange County is taking up to 100 Million Gallons of waste water a day that is treated back to drinking water standards and injecting it back into the ground to replenish the aquifer under Orange County.
oc has an aquifer?? lived there 32 years & never heard that
Love your videos and I live in the area so was upset excited to watch it!
Worked on the echo water project!
You explained it well. If these projects are finished, it can really help California
No it can't. Recycling water doesn't create water. It removes water that would otherwise flow down river to other communities leaving them less water.
It's actually the most stupid thing humans can do when they don't need to. It's a huge expense that doesn't CREATE new water.
Water flows into a community. Water is pulled for consumption, but consumption creates waste water. Community treats water puts it back into that flow.
So, flow out of a community typically =
flow into the community - Water consumed + water recovered from waste and treated
Recycling cause the flow out of the community to be
flow into the community - Water consumed
You are no longer putting water back into the flow.
And this is why you really NEED to do this AND there's a very thorough analysis of what happens to communities down river of the one that's recycling water.
For the problem that was brought up other than the lack of water, which is land subsidence, this does absolutely nothing to resolve that problem.
California has ONE good solution and a handful of others. The ONE good solution is monitor aquifers and don't allow pulling from ground water faster than the rate it can be recharged. That's the ONLY solution that will stop ground subsidence. That would end up killing a lot of agriculture in the state but that's OK. There are plenty of places in the US for agriculture.
You can't raise the food for 300 million people in a desert. Science can't overcome that one. LIES can be told to people about what can be done to "fix" the problem, and right now California is more interested in the lies, to the tune of tens of billions of dollars.
We love the B1M, water infrastructure videos too!
I worked on a ground water pump crew which serviced new and existing installs. This was in Phoenix Az. in the 1970's. What is alarming and everyone sits around and watches and that is the ground water table and how it's dropping. We would work in a farmers field and some had started their farms in the 1950's and used a shovel to go down about 8 ft. to hit the water table and at the time in the 70's the same table was down a few hundred feet!!! I cannot image how deep these wells are today!!!
We need to create a massive lake in the valley to help restore aquifers and it would also help cool the valley slightly and act as a reservoir dedicated to agriculture irrigation. It would flood some farm land, but also improve production on everything else. The past 2 years of massive rainfall in CA shows it can get a ton of water sometimes. We need to store that better for farming and pump more of it into aquifers in preparation for long dry periods.
This project is great but I wish the US would invest more in desalinisation and water recycling
This is water recycling...they are using it on farm fields and wetland restoration but its recycled water once we treat it and don't bump it back in the ecosystem...
Out of the content, I love you guys because of the subtitles you made in every video.❤
Thank you video brilliant compliment
Hi, I have a question to ask The B1M I sure they can used the ocean/seas but the cost of doing that opt is costly but at lease you have water as well as others side of the country too you think?
and of course, not growing water-intensive cash crops or watering golf courses in water-scarce regions never came up for consideration.
🤣🤣🤣🤣 or not building any new dams in 50 years while the population doubled.😳golf courses 🤣🤣🤣you funny
@@JamesDavis-mb1jwbuilding new dams won't increase the total amount of water, it evaporates faster when not flowing.
It does seem irresponsible not to mention this. If anyone is interested, Dr. Sarah Taber's podcast Farm to Taber has a few episodes that talk about this issue through the lens of resource mismanagement. Highly recommend further study of the topic--not every issue is an engineering problem.
They've been working on that for years. In fact, California's pushed forward for years on water conservation, which is why millions of people are still there.
golf course water is reclaimed & has been for DECADES
During the summer I lived in Davis, a little west of Sacramento, I heard moaning and groaning time and again by people who were complaining that their water service would be metered. O.O That was 1990. I was shocked that ANY place in California had unmetered water service, which meant it was pretty much free, when so many of us in other parts of the state lived on permanent rationing rates.
Yep. Grew up in NorCal. We had county water with no meter the whole time I was growing up.
I Cannot Get Enough Of Your Content! Thank You For Producing The Best That’s Out There!!! ❤
Such an amazing life you live I love your lifestyle
Listening, living in Wa State and working for a Pre-treatment facility ages ago. These facilities are very important keeping our drinking water clean.
This project in the video would be hard-pressed to stop subsidence. It's concentrated water to a small area, an has little effect in recharging stores of in-ground water.
In India whereever they have installed dense, onsite rainwater harvesting structures, it has increased the number of successive crops they can grow to 2-3 times previous numbers; lengthened flows of rivers to year round; improved personal wealth and resiliency; raised aquifers, watertables, brought back year-round rivers, etc. It also reduces downstream flooding; reverses ground subsidence and building damage, among other things.
California needs to reduce water lost to evaporation to better supply its needs.
Brad Lancaster wrote Rainwater Harvesting in Drylands and Beyond and lays out the many ways people can improve water resiliency cheaply. He has done some of these at his at his home simply and cheaply as a way to show people the most basic ways of accomplishing this, but one can go quite sophisticated regarding appearance in set ups (though I love his work).
He also shows simpler, more valuable ways to recharge rural and urban landscapes through bioswales and raingardens, as well as bunds, checkdams, and the rest.
Agree. I saw a CZcams video with an idea of placing solar panels above the CA Aquaduct. It would not only generate clean energy, it would help reduce a lot of water evaporation as it travels down to So Cal. Don’t know the cost of that, but a cool idea that addresses dual needs.
@@curtd2741
They could use bifacial panels to create shade while leasing the surfaces open, they could also use them near highways...
As someone who lives in California, I believe people have a misconception about us: we are a by-water desert. We have always been in a drought because deserts are literally always in a drought. This problem is exacerbated by the new people migrating but we’ve always had these problems and always will
A enviro writer called California A Cadillac desert. Pity he died in his 40s from cancer. Reisner was his name
@@gaygeek truer words literally have never been written
Our family here in SoCal has pretty much stopped using water. We've moved straight to beer.
I forgot; did B1M do a video on the thorium MSR-driven desalination idea?
The digital twin seems like something every construction company should use. I’m surprised it’s not used as much, especially in todays age
Meanwhile in California, the state releases 17 million acre feet of water a year into the Pacific so they can keep their allocation from the Colorado basin.
That's horrifying 😮😢
You favor the alternative of placing a dam across the Sacramento River?
lol that’s not how it works.
I've been watching you channel for a while, I;m from Sacramento, great to see something local.
I love these dives into infrastructure projects
I know this video is about NorCal, but a lot of water from the north is redirected in canals to the south to provide for agriculture there.
The socal cities need to implement water conservation methods like Vegas has, in order to preserve our food supply and agriculture output
Although I haven't studied it, I'm almost completely certain that no Sacramento River water is being redirected to SoCal. Doesn't make much sense to me, the need is immediate in the Sacramento area and it's near the end of the water flow nearly at sea level. Makes more sense to me if you're going to pump water uphill that you do it from a reservoir at a higher elevation.
@@tonysu8860 yeah but at the time the north just had so much more water it was worth it to pump and canal:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_Aqueduct
@@tonysu8860i haven’t studied it either but if you drive on the 5 you’ll see the California aqueduct for parts of the road. Then there’s a huge part before the hill that separates the valley from la where they have massive pipes running up along the highway. Hope this gives you something to go off of for research
The reason the farmlands went fallow that you mentioned at :45 is because they decided to save the Delta Smelt instead of using the water to irrigate farms.
I live less than 2 hours away from Sacramento but didn't know about this project until now lol
as a Californian a very Simple solution would be to cover the water canals that run down the state with solar panels.
30% of water is lost due to evaporation, and by covering and adding solar panels to an already in use area, it becomes a double win.
I thought this was going to be about a desalination plant.
I'm not a huge fan of AI but I think it would be perfect for organizing a project like that.
Cadillac Desert, written in the 1980s, explains why the Western US will inevitably run out of water. A pretty good science fiction novel called the The Water Knife was based on the Cadillac Desert predictions (BTW, nothing to do with climate change).
Dire predictions always leave out sustainability plans, like Arizona's massive reservoir system. These systems can always be expanded to meet new water demands.
Never thought I’d see Sacramento on this channel. I live not too far from the project, and I had no idea. BTW it is a nice place to live, especially being close to many outdoor activities and SF and Tahoe only a couple hours away.
California needs to get the Sites project going as well.
There is no water crisis. There is a lack of will to develop a clear water plan.
which results is a water crisis.
@malahammer which has been going on for centuries.
There is no water crisis. 70% of the world is filled with water. If there is any problem its that there is merely an energy conundrum to solve to turn the water potable which with our current tech is no biggie at all. Its just a matter of will.
Desalinated water is the most expensive water you can get...it is far cheaper to reduce waste and consumption to make the water we have go further...also, to satisfy demand for even 10% of CA's water demand would require 100s of not 1000s of plants across the entire coast...most of which is not really ideal locations...so we would actually be doing it in the same places that most of the people are...ie where most of the most expensive land is thus increasing the cost of said water even more...
@@triaxe-mmbyou can do both / all. Desalination could be powered by nuclear (clean energy) facilities. The big challenge is the brine produced, which can harm the ecosystem if it is all released into the local water. They would need to run a long pipe far into the ocean, releasing that brine along the way, so it is properly dispersed.
Wow you actually announced the sponsorship when you first talked about it... Not quite perfect but leagues ahead of what you normally do. I'm impressed.
We were in a drought for years.. but Nestlé can pump millions of gallons of water a month, and sell it in one time use plastic..
But my back yard garden is the problem..
It is really a water problem or is it in fact a people problem?. Unless we can start drinking sea water.
Or build a desalination plant like we have in south Australia, to make sure a city like Adelaide with population of 1.4 million people has water during long droughts like we get in Australia...
Some people have made the argument htat California should stop doing agriculture because water isn't unlimited, but this simply is not an option because California is the single largest agricultural producer on the planet. Our soil and climate is nearly without rival on the planet. The solution is not to stop farming, but to make more efficient use of our water and develop new ways of procuring water.
We have an abundance of solar power, there is no reason we can't start industrial desalination projects.
No, people argue that California shouldn't be giving cheap water to farmers that exclusively grow water intensive crops that largely get shipped off to foreign countries. Tree nuts, alfalfa etc. The also argue on the scale of the livestock industry here and how water intensive that is as well.
I think the argument is that we shouldn't be growing things that are as water intensive as we have been doing...
Desalinated water is some of the most expensive water you can get... We won't be able to afford the nuts and produce grown with it...
@@triaxe-mmb Desalinated water is only expensive because it isn't subsidized or externalized the way groundwater is. Groundwater is "free" to whoever has inherited the rights to pump it.
@@specialagentdustyponcho1065 that may be true but it is the situation we have to deal with...also reservoir water, surface water rights, etc...
End of the day desal is not the savior - it's reducing our waste (covered canals, in ground storage to reduce/eliminate evap loss, consumption wastes like growing nuts and alpha alpha in a desert type climate, lawns and such, and dumping the expensive recycled water we generate back into the ocean rather than into aquifers or basins...among many others...desalination is the sexy solution but it is not the best IMO
I laughed out loud when the headline stated that the "mega-project" was to 'save California '. I thought that would mean replacing all of their politicians.
Building a pipeline from the Pacific Ocean to Death Valley, with oxygenation of the water in the resulting lake and a desalination plant (and ancilliary salt industry) would substantially change rainfall patterns in California.
There is plenty of water. Just not where it’s needed or in the form that is useful. Easy to solve with capital investment.
Yeah, if only it worked like that... Instead of looking at water rights, water usage, absurd agricultural usage and waste of it... lets try to pipe water from elsewhere, because that will resolve the issue...
We should also naturalize our rivers by not letting them to be straight, lifeless canals
They should let water seep back into the groundwater from the plant. I also wish more focus would be placed on water capture on the land to prevent flooding and runoff. It would be so much better for everything involved
This is very impressive, another great video.
We've always had cycles of drought here. The problem is that our population has quadrupled since 1950, but a major dam hasn't been built in over 40 years. So much water is just released in to the ocean also. Many times the officials expecting a big rain storm releases huge amount of water to lower the water levers, but then the storm doesn't come. And since at least the 70s, every time we try to build a dam, these wacko activists will do anything to get it stopped. Back in the 90s people were asking how were we going to keep up with the growth. New reservoirs would bring more water and increase the power supply.
Isn’t this just a new sewage treatment plant? Why is it being presented as a some kind of ‘giant leap for mankind’.. ?
This is a commercial for the sponsors of the video. BM1 is doing more of this lately. This is not a good development.
Bingo. Propaganda.
Built in the early 1970's, essentially just tripled in size and removed nutrients and solids from the effluent. 15NTU to .5NTU. Giant leap for Elk Grove!
Big question is what happens to things like microplastics and PFAs when they go through the treatment plant
Oh, I've done work there a couple times
I don’t understand why California doesn’t create water storage and distribution systems in the north of the state and then bring that water to the south to avoid northern flooding.
that would thank state incitiv and a alot of land acquisition and probably would be a temporary solution as well
California already pumps billions of gallons of water from the north to Los Angeles in the south. The flooding that you are referring to is local in nature and not a huge deal to the economy.
Because the flooding of floodplains is vital for the habitat of northern California. It's how the region evolved over millenias.
California needs more than water to save it.
We know, dude, we know
This is easy thing to fix, relatively speaking and for not that much impact. I mean it's really good they did it, good waste water treatment is essential for any modern city and it seems like this needed to be upgraded anyways.
But bigger issue is that too much freshwater and groundwater is being used by industries, mostly farming. Use by humans for drinking and day to day stuff is very little percentage wise.
I said it's easy because while it's expensive project, you just need to reserve small plot of land and build it. On other hand making changes to numerous farms and industries is going to be hard. But that's only thing that's actually going to do something.
With current tech, realistically best solution for this issue is probably something like drip irrigation so you can deliver precisely needed amount of water to places that need it. It's just all around much better method.
Las Vagas drawn most of its drinking water from Lake Mead. It has rations on how much mater it is allowed to draw.
Las Vegas dumps its (treated) sewage water into Lake Mead, and the amount dumped is added to its allocated water rations. So in effect it can draw much more than its basic allocation.
One probem: people watering lawns is lost water since it does not go back into sewage system so Vegas has very strict rules on lawns (new homes can't have lawns).
supposedly, they claim, they use less water than California due to reclaiming
Lots of water. Don’t let them fool you. Remember the oil shortage that’s been happening for the last 100 years 😅
Oh dear, looks like you've missed EVERYTHING the last 40 years. Open your eyes and do a bit of factual reading.
Here come the conspiracy morons 🙄Oil is underground and out of sight to most common folks. Water bodies and droughts are already visible!
Commiefornia (as my American friends call it) should invest in solar desalination. It has lots of sun and with the price of solar panels going down, it could use excess peak power for reverse osmosis, or directly evaporating and condensating seawater.
Commie? Your friends? At least California isn't maga like you and your deluded friends.
Thing is where the sun is shining and where the water is over a whole mountain range (coastal May Gray and June Gloom are famous here). Plus there's limited options to affordably dispose of the hypersaline brine that results, there'd need to develop industrial applications for super-salty seawater so that not all of the RO waste has to be rediluted for dumping.
Nobody calls it that. :)
I agree, but your friends are a-holes.
Lol, my buddy works at this plant. They’re also building (might be done by now) a cogeneration plant that will use the combustible gas byproducts from the treatment as fuel in large diesel engines to produce power and heat.
As a retired commercial construction foreman. I wish they had this system when i was working. I work and was born and raised inbthe cali bay area. Ive seen almond orchards being ripped out because theres not enough water. Sad hope this projects takes some stress off the system
Golly Gee…how did they ever complete the Hoover dam without a “digital twin”?! 😂
Drawings, by thousands of draftsmen. Digital twin is just the modern version of drawings, and you get better responses from design to analysis.
With a lot more difficulty and a lot more people.
btw, the reason CA is behind w/ water is that Jerry Brown canceled all the planned projects in the 1970's
Great video and great topic! You should focus more on environmental project like this :) Why disinfecting water with chlorine and not UV lights though? It’s way cleaner!
6:12 That background, with the blue dots moving over the grey background... Is that the Starlink satellite orbital map, showing the satellites being maneuvered into their orbital positions?