Can desalination solve the global water crisis?

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2024
  • We have the desalination technology to transform seawater into freshwater. So why are we not using it to solve the global water crisis?
    We're destroying our environment at an alarming rate. But it doesn't need to be this way. Our new channel Planet A explores the shift towards an eco-friendly world - and challenges our ideas about what dealing with climate change means. We look at the big and the small: What we can do and how the system needs to change. Every Friday we'll take a truly global look at how to get us out of this mess.
    #PlanetA​​ #Desalination #WaterCrisis
    0:00 Water shortages around the world
    1:54 History of desalination
    2:25 Types of desalination
    3:15 Reasons for water scarecity
    4:33 Desalination plants today
    7:11 The problem with brine
    8:50 Potential of desalination
    9:46 Cape town today
    Read More (Links):
    Historic background of desalination and renewable energies:
    www.sciencedirect.com/science...
    The state of desalination and brine production: A global outlook:
    www.sciencedirect.com/science...
    More on water scarcity:
    worldwater.io/
    Special thanks:
    Special thanks to Air Water™ South Africa and Adam Spires for their footage of the Theewaterskloof dam
    Reporter: Christian Caurla
    Camera: Christian Caurla
    Video editor: Christian Caurla
    Supervising editor: Joanna Gottschalk

Komentáře • 4,6K

  • @e2m514
    @e2m514 Před 2 lety +4978

    Dude if our species die from a shortage of water in a planet that's 75% water, i swear....

    • @justinmuca8842
      @justinmuca8842 Před 2 lety +167

      Well scientist must do something and start to study now because it can become emergency.

    • @ricomotions5416
      @ricomotions5416 Před 2 lety +445

      @@justinmuca8842 eeeehh well be fine humans work really well when in a state of necessity

    • @kupoe
      @kupoe Před 2 lety +299

      The Rich will be fine, so our species will survive, its just that due to how they select their partners (aesthetics rather than ability) we are in danger of the resultant society being an idiocracy.

    • @marceloflores3111
      @marceloflores3111 Před 2 lety +148

      you mean: "a planet whose *surface* is 75% water" there is a huge difference...

    • @justinmuca8842
      @justinmuca8842 Před 2 lety +10

      @@ricomotions5416 yeah that's true but when we're late we can't do nothing against nature's fury🤷

  • @Harzexe
    @Harzexe Před 2 lety +2541

    There was a documentary somewhere on CZcams about one man who converted a piece of completly dry tarain into a grassy land with some trees smaller plants - so he basically created a microclimate. When this grass and plants grown up enough a few tiny rivers suddenly appeared as well because thanks to plants water was stored longer in the ground. The only downside: it took him 40 years.

    • @SMBH-M87
      @SMBH-M87 Před 2 lety +597

      It's not a downside. It's the most ergonomic, efficient, and harmless way of sustaining ourselves. People need to stop thinking so small, short-term. It's always about Me Me Me and this lifetime, when our successors are already here.

    • @vitalis
      @vitalis Před 2 lety +142

      @Houssain Al ahmafi Yes, and that's a byproduct of western governments where we prioritise short term projects. That is one of the reasons why China has been able to improve so much quicker over the years. They have a long term vision and plan decades ahead. One example is what they are doing with the Gobi desert.

    • @CaulkMongler
      @CaulkMongler Před 2 lety +47

      On a small scale, workable. I don’t have faith that huge populations can work together long enough to do that.

    • @fabineffe6375
      @fabineffe6375 Před 2 lety +21

      Could u please tell us the name of the documentary?

    • @nikolabari68
      @nikolabari68 Před 2 lety +5

      Reminds me of Dune novels

  • @InspireMatrixx
    @InspireMatrixx Před 2 lety +903

    I live on an Island ( Aruba) in the Caribbean and our water plant uses desalination process, water has the best taste. It is cleaned and purified thru reverse osmosis filters and other small processes. At last it goes thru some minerals. And it’s in our tap at home! Look it up greatest tasting water on the planet besides glacier water. (Edit: we have the 2nd largest desalination plant in the world)

    • @JelloFluoride
      @JelloFluoride Před 2 lety +15

      That's awesome

    • @bhavpreetsingh007
      @bhavpreetsingh007 Před 2 lety +24

      Great, how do you handle Brine ?

    • @InspireMatrixx
      @InspireMatrixx Před 2 lety +30

      @@bhavpreetsingh007 Do you mean in the water? I explained above they use reverse osmosis process on the Island because there is no fresh water source so we basically drink from the sea. But we have a great water purification plant!

    • @bhavpreetsingh007
      @bhavpreetsingh007 Před 2 lety +35

      @@InspireMatrixx hi, understood the process. I was inquiring about the Brine which is the extremely salinated output of this purification process. Do you pour the Brine back to the sea ?

    • @InspireMatrixx
      @InspireMatrixx Před 2 lety +36

      @@bhavpreetsingh007 I understand now what u asked, If I am not mistaken the brine that stays in the filters is recycled or goes thru a process after the filters are changed out but, they don’t throw it back in the sea tho.

  • @JasonB808
    @JasonB808 Před 2 lety +181

    My family has been doing something that seems a bit silly at first, but it can save hundreds of gallons of water every year. We noticed that it takes a bit over a minute for hot water to start flowing when we take a shower, gallons of fresh cold water was just going down the drain. We decided to collect the cold water in buckets and use the water to water plants in the yard. We have a decent sized yard. Image if millions of people could do this, it would be hundreds of millions of fresh water saved every year and we wouldn’t need to really change our water usage, just getting over the awkwardness of collecting cold water in a bucket when you shower.

    • @aetvrna
      @aetvrna Před rokem +11

      I didnt know other people also do that!

    • @spartanalphamode2987
      @spartanalphamode2987 Před rokem +7

      You’d be better off using that cold water to bathe yourself with it. Cold shower first and then warm to hot shower. Most of us do that and it’s normal.

    • @freebobafett
      @freebobafett Před rokem +11

      Residential water use accounts for about 6% of total water use by humans. Homes saving water in the way you suggest might bring our water use down by .25% at most. A better way to save water would be to reduce our beef consumption by at least 80%. About 1/3 of the total water we use goes to producing feed for cattle. Reducing beef consumption by 80% would save 25% of our fresh water supply. So, we can not shower, not flush out toilets, not water out lawns, etc, and save 1% of the water we can save by heavily reducing beef consumption.
      I understand dropping beef consumption at all is a losing effort, but let your cold water go down the drain. You're not saving enough water to matter in the slightest, even if you convinced every other person in America to follow suit.

    • @freebobafett
      @freebobafett Před rokem

      @@jessh4016 not in ariOna

    • @peamutbubber
      @peamutbubber Před rokem +2

      U realise water still exists when it goes down the drain, it just goes back through the system and into someone else's tap

  • @The_original_Silu
    @The_original_Silu Před 2 lety +1304

    I like how at the end of the video they tell us, regular people to use water responsibly... When in reality who should be using water responsibly are private companies and governments by consuming responsibly, fixing and modernizing water infrastructure on cities and factories.
    Edit: Don't be dumb, of course we have to take care of how and how much water we, it is pretty obvious but let's be honest, those who are responsible directly is most governments for not stablishing proper sanctions and private companies for wasting insane amounts of water and contaminating sources; use your comon sense. Are we responsible as a society? YES! but governments are to blame for not stablishing sanctions to us and companies equitable to usage and companies are also to blame for pushing agendas, or are we gonna pretend that companies are all angels made of pure light?

    • @ChristianCaurla
      @ChristianCaurla Před 2 lety +63

      You have a good point on private companies. But I wanted to leave you with a positive outlook and highlight that how we use water is as important as the technology we develop.

    • @blairmyers6833
      @blairmyers6833 Před 2 lety +95

      I like how the lady at the end says no one should be showering more than twice a week… don’t flush the toilet as much. After 3 days she probably smells of BO and her house probably reeks of urine and poop.

    • @The_original_Silu
      @The_original_Silu Před 2 lety +29

      @@ChristianCaurla First of all, thank you for noticing my comment it's a honor, you're a great narrator, editor and camera man, and this is a great great work.
      And also yeah, don't miss understand me, it's a great message, at the end of the day we're all here, we all contribute to this problem, it's just that some harm more the environment than others and bigger changes need to be done by all of us, in my opinion of course.
      Thanks for replying :)

    • @ChristianCaurla
      @ChristianCaurla Před 2 lety +8

      @@The_original_Silu thanks a lot! Glad you liked the video and thank you for your insights

    • @gonzalodiaz9326
      @gonzalodiaz9326 Před 2 lety +23

      It's the same with recycling. I don't pollute shit, it's the big ass industrial companies in Asia who do that.

  • @bushweednever
    @bushweednever Před 2 lety +1989

    With all the sh!t being poured and thrown into the ocean, being salty is the least of its problems.

    • @thedevilsadvocate5210
      @thedevilsadvocate5210 Před 2 lety +43

      MIcro plastic particles from the over use of masks

    • @ishid_anfarded_king
      @ishid_anfarded_king Před 2 lety +339

      @@thedevilsadvocate5210 mask waste is nothing compared to the shit we put in the water in the last century

    • @Actiontime70
      @Actiontime70 Před 2 lety +65

      @@TheaKaSaToRi you it’s check your facts, here in kuwait my friend we all drink desalinated water, it tastes exactly like normal river/lake water and there are special desalination plants where there is clean ocean water to desalinate.

    • @McYeroc
      @McYeroc Před 2 lety +74

      I think your severely underestimating how dangerous the brine is when it's poured back into the sea.

    • @corchem
      @corchem Před 2 lety +9

      @@ishid_anfarded_king That is a bogus argument. If I kill 100 people this year, can I brag that it is better than the 1 million I killed last year?

  • @landlord5552
    @landlord5552 Před 2 lety +125

    We drinking desalinated seawater every day here on Åland Island (Finland). A bit expencive, but very good taste.

    • @CamAteUrKFC
      @CamAteUrKFC Před 2 lety +1

      @@niteshchoughule7395 That such BS. De mineralized water is not unhealthy lmao

    • @nofameculture
      @nofameculture Před 2 lety +2

      Thanks Finland for showing it can be done 👍

    • @sweetheartnineotwoneo8542
      @sweetheartnineotwoneo8542 Před 2 lety

      Ok Keep enjoying it Bye

    • @christinalaw3375
      @christinalaw3375 Před 2 lety +1

      @@niteshchoughule7395 Yes, tell that to Israel with the healtiest and smartest population.

    • @solidfuel0
      @solidfuel0 Před 2 lety

      Why not dig for ground water

  • @nighthawk7450
    @nighthawk7450 Před 2 lety +60

    I work on a fishing vessel and this is how we "make" our water out here.
    I always assumed energy consumption was the problem with doing it on a larger scale.

    • @randomdogger5278
      @randomdogger5278 Před 2 lety +9

      Actually it’s big corporations like Nestle that’s the problem. They want to push their bottled fresh water and also causing a big plastic pollution problem.

    • @rafinha7081
      @rafinha7081 Před 2 lety +6

      I'm sure we could use energy from the sun for this.

    • @sleepyearth
      @sleepyearth Před rokem

      Yes it is.

    • @sleepyearth
      @sleepyearth Před rokem

      @@randomdogger5278 The problem is your govt selling fresh water areas to corporations like Nestle and allow them to claim humans are not entitled to water right.

    • @sasagrcevic475
      @sasagrcevic475 Před rokem

      What energy consumption? If you need something then everything is free. People come together in villages and dig a fucking well, cost free cause they all need it. We have solar power in this day and age, wind turbines, nuclear, etc. Relocate resources to do what they are supposed to do: make lives easier and normal. People who tell you it takes a lot of energy are corporate shills. Sun will never run out of energy and water wont stop flowing until we all die and then some lol. Those "costs" are actually money they see wasted on public service. Money they could take and put in their pockets.

  • @taipan8021
    @taipan8021 Před 2 lety +687

    Kind of reminds you of that saying watching this " You Never miss the Water until the Well runs Dry" . The things we Humans' take for granted is Astonishing .

    • @donaldadams4826
      @donaldadams4826 Před 2 lety +2

      That song wasn't about water my friend. Its about losing your fringe benefits😜

    • @JasonGamingForever
      @JasonGamingForever Před 2 lety +5

      Our well once broke down and we went 2 years without running water. Man the things you think of. I actually dreamed of running water a few times.

    • @taipan8021
      @taipan8021 Před 2 lety +1

      @@JasonGamingForever On to the next saying "Those who feels/Lived it Knows"

    • @hellatze
      @hellatze Před 2 lety +1

      Its habit. So pur mind wont get confused by a lot of task

    • @mix3k818
      @mix3k818 Před 2 lety +6

      Water wells and oil wells are being depleted faster than they can be replenished by nature. This should not be a surprise.

  • @gaywizard2000
    @gaywizard2000 Před 2 lety +2793

    Desalination!.? You know what that means? The world will never run out of salt!!!

    • @alon4039
      @alon4039 Před 2 lety +14

      lol

    • @tachyontee3877
      @tachyontee3877 Před 2 lety +406

      Higher blood pressure for everyone. Yay!

    • @vinyllpreviews9462
      @vinyllpreviews9462 Před 2 lety +16

      Top Secret

    • @Iceyfire12
      @Iceyfire12 Před 2 lety +31

      David Reads they shouldn’t release it back to the ocean!

    • @unstoppableExodia
      @unstoppableExodia Před 2 lety +152

      @@Iceyfire12 with advanced processing technology brine could be used to harvest useful materials rather than dumping it into the ocean

  • @lolam161
    @lolam161 Před rokem +30

    I live in Alaska where freshwater is abundant and easily taken for granted. Knowing water is scarce in certain parts of the world and watching this really makes me reconsider letting that faucet keep running in between brushing my teeth.

    • @boombox3819
      @boombox3819 Před rokem

      As if that water would have gone to poor countries anyway

    • @BossOfAllTrades
      @BossOfAllTrades Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@carlosedwin1the system itself promotes wasting water but somehow the system is correct and should be applauded

    • @BossOfAllTrades
      @BossOfAllTrades Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@boombox3819alright well might aswell empty out my whole kitchen cause it doesn't go to those starving anyway.

    • @boombox3819
      @boombox3819 Před 10 měsíci

      @@BossOfAllTrades ?

    • @BossOfAllTrades
      @BossOfAllTrades Před 10 měsíci

      @@boombox3819 billions of year of evolution for this lack of comprehension its astonishing.

  • @chrislive1586
    @chrislive1586 Před rokem +1

    Amazing video, fantastic information, narrator had a soothing, clear voice. Thank you for sharing! I learned a lot and will share in the future!

  • @Fernando-nz3gm
    @Fernando-nz3gm Před 2 lety +1689

    Hopefully technology and management will catch up before the water wars.

    • @generatorjohn4537
      @generatorjohn4537 Před 2 lety +38

      So much truth in your statement.

    • @carlrodalegrado4104
      @carlrodalegrado4104 Před 2 lety +91

      We were successful on avoiding the "Malthusian trap" where we might run out of food due to overpopulation due to the progress of science and scientific innovations our crops yields were so high we can manage more than 7 billion people the only problem was the logistics which still made some food prices and world hunger a problem on some areas but more people die overweight or obese like diabetes and old age than being underweight.

    • @rashidhumine
      @rashidhumine Před 2 lety +25

      Sadly I have a feeling before our Fresh Water needs become a problem, World War 3 will happen.. all it takes is 1 person to get p*ssed off enough to Press the Red Button to Launch the Nukes out, and the others will respond with sending out Nukes themselves.. The End.. I'm sure some of us Humans will survive.

    • @nogrecords
      @nogrecords Před 2 lety +5

      @@rashidhumine and we came DANGEROUSLY CLOSE between Jan 2017-Jan 2021❗

    • @idkt-t9214
      @idkt-t9214 Před 2 lety +18

      @@rashidhumine well yeah but not every country, from my understanding most countries that have nukes need multiple people to confirm before launch, to prevent something like this from happening. The one I'm not too sure about is North Korea, but I'm assuming all people with this kind of power understand it's game over for humanity if they use it, so they don't.

  • @evandowns9661
    @evandowns9661 Před 2 lety +529

    There needs to be MAJOR funding in desalination, there should have been more funding for decades

    • @Fultonfalcons86
      @Fultonfalcons86 Před 2 lety +40

      Maybe what is needed is for humans to be more responsible with what we have instead of starting to drain our oceans when there has been toxic dumping for years.......

    • @angle434
      @angle434 Před 2 lety

      yep

    • @jojbenedoot7459
      @jojbenedoot7459 Před 2 lety +5

      Best time to plant a tree and all

    • @ragingshibe
      @ragingshibe Před 2 lety +35

      This is another reason why we need nuclear energy. The reason desalination plants are so expensive is because they require huge amounts of energy, and nuclear will compensate for that due to producing high amounts of energy quickly and efficiently, and that will in turn make desalination more efficient.

    • @evandowns9661
      @evandowns9661 Před 2 lety +18

      @@Fultonfalcons86 keep dreaming bud, we need practical solutions to solve the problems we created for ourselves, and human responsibility is not practical

  • @syiridium703
    @syiridium703 Před 2 lety +9

    This is a great video because it shows multiple sides of the problem. A lot of video, whether here on YT or "standard" documentaries on TV, often only show one side of the problem - i.e., "look, here is the solution to our problem". The better documentaries show also the downsides of the technology. But here, not only is the up and down side of the technology shown but also alternatives. I really liked the ending with "desalination didn't saved Cape town, using less water did".
    Excellent work!

  • @sjenkin88
    @sjenkin88 Před 2 lety

    Fascinating video. Thanks for putting this together and for putting this out there; I’ve certainly learnt a lot.

  • @loganreidy7055
    @loganreidy7055 Před 2 lety +363

    Nuclear plants should include desalination plants, they literally compliment one another

    • @benjaminnorris5540
      @benjaminnorris5540 Před 2 lety +44

      Just ignore the radiation

    • @mysteamvideos6320
      @mysteamvideos6320 Před 2 lety +43

      We do that already

    • @notinterested8452
      @notinterested8452 Před 2 lety +26

      It's just a trick so that you can evolve into a ninja turtle...

    • @himbalodzodenever
      @himbalodzodenever Před 2 lety +219

      @@benjaminnorris5540 You know that nuclear plants don't release any radioactive water right?
      It has two different water loops

    • @benjaminnorris5540
      @benjaminnorris5540 Před 2 lety +6

      @@himbalodzodenever Do you not understand sarcasm or jokes? Does it have to be pointed out to you?

  • @AnthonyLopez23456
    @AnthonyLopez23456 Před 2 lety +440

    If we drink the ocean, we can finally explore the Marianas trench. Let's gooooooooo

    • @PistonAvatarGuy
      @PistonAvatarGuy Před 2 lety +30

      Because the water is going to leave the planet somehow?

    • @AnthonyLopez23456
      @AnthonyLopez23456 Před 2 lety +59

      @@PistonAvatarGuy it's leaving that lake because everyones piss is going to some random sewer

    • @PistonAvatarGuy
      @PistonAvatarGuy Před 2 lety +6

      @@AnthonyLopez23456 And where does the sewer go?

    • @AnthonyLopez23456
      @AnthonyLopez23456 Před 2 lety +58

      @@PistonAvatarGuy oh my god....the ocean! You're a genius!

    • @AnthonyLopez23456
      @AnthonyLopez23456 Před 2 lety +45

      Oh no....oh no, but how will we see the trench now!?

  • @alfredoserranoquinones7398

    Countries should invest more in this technology. Politicians especially in the US should stop taking bribes from industries that deny global warming.

  • @ahmxd.fauzii
    @ahmxd.fauzii Před rokem +5

    love this educational content, I didn't know I have a desalination house in my country until this video, surprisingly we have! thank you for making this video!

  • @ottawapop
    @ottawapop Před 2 lety +125

    I went to Aruba for a vacation. They are extremely proud of their desalination plant. And they should be, drinking a glass of water without thinking about it in a foreign country is awesome.

    • @liamcooper5202
      @liamcooper5202 Před 2 lety +6

      Just dont try to swim in the ocean. Its a bio hazard zone that nothing can live in it because the salt level is too high from the desalination plant

    • @Dularr
      @Dularr Před 2 lety +13

      That glass of water was made by burning heavy fuel oil. So your vacation has a significant carbon footprint, air pollution from energy, water pollution from salt and chemicals such as sulfuric acid.

    • @ottawapop
      @ottawapop Před 2 lety +29

      @@Dularr couldn’t care less, go hug a tree.

    • @Jimusmc0311
      @Jimusmc0311 Před 2 lety +23

      @@Dularr the solar dome requires no fuel.. it's solar... you are uninformed... look up solar dome

    • @grumpycalenzana7514
      @grumpycalenzana7514 Před 2 lety +1

      Are they proud of the fact that they never found that little girl and let the maggot get away ?

  • @maluuukas
    @maluuukas Před 2 lety +217

    Brine “waste” can also be used to produce chlorine and/or hypochlorite essencial for water treatment. This way you will have total circularity and zero environmental impact.

    • @faisal19951
      @faisal19951 Před 2 lety +20

      I agree, Saudi Arabia use brine to produce Minerals like mageisum, lithium, sodium, etc.

    • @markschrull6132
      @markschrull6132 Před 2 lety +4

      get busy!

    • @tonyvelazquez8677
      @tonyvelazquez8677 Před 2 lety +16

      Every action has an equal and opposite reaction. It is more likely that the full environmental impacts of these additional processes have not been disclosed or accounted for.

    • @aydan0161
      @aydan0161 Před 2 lety +5

      @@tonyvelazquez8677 so what then, we live in the dark ages instead? Where you also will still create a carbon footprint...

    • @amancealexis7360
      @amancealexis7360 Před 2 lety +3

      @@tonyvelazquez8677 The Einstein quote makes no sense here. You can't just throw it out randomly to try and sound smart.

  • @nancylaplaca
    @nancylaplaca Před 9 měsíci +3

    Thank you for this great video - I’ve been following desalination for 20 years and it’s good to hear there are folks working on local, non-fossil-fueled solutions. GREAT WORK DW 🎉🎉🎉

  • @alexb.5641
    @alexb.5641 Před 2 lety +1

    As a Civil Engineer major, videos like this are inspirational…now to add these to future city’s of tomorrow with renewable technologies…

  • @joshuamentzos4436
    @joshuamentzos4436 Před 2 lety +329

    I have been a reverse osmosis technician for my entire naval career. I can tell you that it is very effective, but does require a lot of expensive consumable resources including plastics, filters and minerals such as calcium hypochlorite, and bromine. It’s basically like using K cups instead of brewing a pot.
    Evaporators require a heat source, but are extremely effective and efficient at demoralizing water, but the aspect of adding minerals and chemical treatment still exists.
    Singapore has created a type of reverse osmosis facility that transforms all of their waste water back into drinking water. The end product is very pure and healthy water and is very efficient.
    IMO, we could take a lesson on that for our coast lines. However, due to the consumerist/capitalist nature of our economy, I would think these types of facilities would put a huge tax on drinkable water.
    The man has to get paid after all

    • @mobbs8229
      @mobbs8229 Před 2 lety +4

      these are all great insights!
      Question please: I live in a hot country where temperature rarely goes below 30 C, if I point several magnifying glasses at water, wouldn't evaporate? (and so I could just stick a tube out of the container to get distilled water)
      Magnifying glasses make fire within seconds in this temperature.

    • @peasant8246
      @peasant8246 Před 2 lety +1

      >"Evaporators require a heat source, but are extremely effective and efficient at *demoralizing* water" lol.

    • @urbanfarm3071
      @urbanfarm3071 Před 2 lety +2

      @@peasant8246 what has happen is, fir centuries, we only have used good water for agriculture, i have designed a system that uses sea water to grow any crop in coastal areas, this will stop usiing aquifers for irrigation, is cheaper to pump sea water than deeper wells,

    • @elaborat6314
      @elaborat6314 Před 2 lety +16

      @@witoldschwenke9492 Reverse Osmosis removes hormones and chemicals. Microplastic can be removed by filtering or destillation. The bigger task seems to be psychological.

    • @Rig0r_M0rtis
      @Rig0r_M0rtis Před rokem

      @@elaborat6314 Good point.

  • @bestentertainmenr6679
    @bestentertainmenr6679 Před 3 lety +130

    Domestic use of water is much lesser than industrial use so they have come with a plan to save water

    • @elwoodblues9613
      @elwoodblues9613 Před 2 lety +1

      Have any scientists determined the difference when industry & agriculture use salt water instead of fresh water?

    • @notinterested8452
      @notinterested8452 Před 2 lety +27

      @@elwoodblues9613 well if you water land with salt water then you will never see another plant grow, even worse than Brawndo.

    • @notinterested8452
      @notinterested8452 Před 2 lety +6

      Same with industrial use of electricity...

    • @seadkolasinac7220
      @seadkolasinac7220 Před 2 lety +14

      agricultural use is more than both. People need to stop eating beef

    • @tomfuelery2905
      @tomfuelery2905 Před 2 lety +19

      @@seadkolasinac7220 That's it!!!
      You've solved the problem!
      We'll just stop eating and then we'll have plenty of water!
      Perfect!

  • @ziapsp4167
    @ziapsp4167 Před 2 lety +6

    i feel hopeful and positive after watching this. awesome job.

  • @DeeOne88
    @DeeOne88 Před 2 lety +6

    Not only is it salty, it's polluted from all the waste we have dumped in it.

    • @BlackStarSymphony
      @BlackStarSymphony Před 2 lety

      I wonder if you could put the desalinated water through a water plant we have for fresh water at that point? To get rid of all those chemicals. That would be pretty good if it was possible.

  • @ranger2316
    @ranger2316 Před 2 lety +95

    Lets start with Reclaimed water. We use it in Florida to irrigate our gardens and lawns. Works great.

    • @gizmoapangalook121
      @gizmoapangalook121 Před 2 lety +5

      Ok let’s give them our sewer water. Could you be more condescending?

    • @CriticalRoleHighlights
      @CriticalRoleHighlights Před 2 lety +23

      @@floored_4x490 Every first world nation does. With a purification process that creates reclaimed water with 99.9996% purity, one would think everyone would be smart enough to do this.

    • @ranger2316
      @ranger2316 Před 2 lety +20

      @@gizmoapangalook121 Miss the point much? Why the snarky response? Reclaimed water is a well-thought-out, well engineered system that is entirely separate from the potable water systems. It is perfectly fine for irrigation and gardens. It's widely used throughout Florida. Previously, this reclaimed water would have been treated and dumped back into the aquafer, instead it's put to good use.

    • @nermainmerl6108
      @nermainmerl6108 Před 2 lety +4

      @@gizmoapangalook121 He doesn't mean that, greywater can be used even at farming. You'll have to use special types of dishwasher caps etc but even if you don't want to or it's too expensive you can cleanse the greywater from harmful chemicals using some non edible plants and even fish. I know that it sounds complicated but anyone can do it easily and it doesn't take much space (unless you live in a block of flats) but there are water usages for in-city greywater use. Like filter the greywater and sell it to carwashers (they do it in germany a lot) or use it for the toilet

    • @gizmoapangalook121
      @gizmoapangalook121 Před 2 lety +4

      What you are missing is the fact water is heavy and it costs money to ship. By the time it gets to its destination it is 3 times more expensive. Btw nestle sued the us govt and won. We no longer have the right to clean drinking water. This is a manufactured problem. Also some countries all the water rights are owned by coke, Pepsi, and nestle. Let that sink in.

  • @TGFTH
    @TGFTH Před 2 lety +282

    97% of water in earth is salty
    Also fact:
    97% of people in earth are salty

  • @alicedurante1876
    @alicedurante1876 Před 2 lety +79

    I really like your videos, because issues are presented for different perspectives, for the better or worse. I think though that in this one in particular another issue should've been mentioned: water leaks.
    Very often the biggest water waste doesn't come forme citizens, but from water leaks in the pipelines and an inefficient use of water in the industrial and agricultural sector.
    I know that this isn't always the case and for some countries and some areas desalination is essential, but for many other cases the priority should be the efficiency of water use and transport, from treatment plants to the final user.
    Also, many countries are starting to invest in more efficient wastewater treatment plants, that allow to use the treated water in agricolture or even as drinkable water.
    Anyway, I understand that all of these subjects would've taken a lot more minutes and made the video endless, it would've been nice to mention them briefly though.
    I would also love to see a video made by you about all the different solutions to face the water crisis. Maybe you already published it!
    In conclusion, great video overall, keep up the good work!

    • @vodkaboy
      @vodkaboy Před rokem +1

      "wastewater treatment plants" big yes :)

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB Před rokem

      Lies again? Serie A Leader Reflection Journal

  • @j.d.blitch5552
    @j.d.blitch5552 Před rokem

    Thank you for making this video

  • @Robot_247
    @Robot_247 Před 2 lety +82

    Being an engineer on a Navy warship you learn about and operate a lot of these systems (reverse osmosis units/evaporators/brominators/electrolyticdisinfectantgenerators)

  • @aman_01ahmad33
    @aman_01ahmad33 Před 2 lety +27

    For the people who searched for this video: I have utmost respect for you!

  • @arnozachary9551
    @arnozachary9551 Před 2 lety +1

    Insightful, thanks!

  • @polinash
    @polinash Před 2 lety

    Thanks for this video, guys! I consider subscribing!

  • @hatcher_
    @hatcher_ Před 2 lety +124

    So from what I can tell, there are two forms of desalination shown here, membrane desalination and evaporation desalination, evaporation desalination produces salt and no brine but membrane desalination produces the bad brine. Why not just use membrane desalination to produce the bulk of water (because its cost efficient) and then evaporate desalinate the water out of the brine and just sell the salt to eat?

    • @samsadowitz1724
      @samsadowitz1724 Před 2 lety +15

      That's my thinking as well. Brine just has a much higher concentration of salt than normal. So we use that to our advantage in salt production.

    • @chuckkottke
      @chuckkottke Před 2 lety +30

      That's a great idea, but I think you would have a lot of extra salt on a massive scale, somewhat like the red mud problem from bauxite production. One possibility would be to melt the salt with silica sand into glass, perhaps in solar furnaces set up in the desert, and use the cooling energy to produce electricity. Or store the salt in the driest deserts on Earth that are already salt laden.. It's a salient problem!

    • @ChristianCaurla
      @ChristianCaurla Před 2 lety +6

      Unfortunately, both methods produce brine.

    • @samsadowitz1724
      @samsadowitz1724 Před 2 lety +12

      @@ChristianCaurla how so? Evaporated brine just becomes salt. That's how sea salt is harvested

    • @leprechaunbutreallyjustamidget
      @leprechaunbutreallyjustamidget Před 2 lety +2

      Or use electrolysis and reclaim most of the energy when you burn the hydrogen and oxygen

  • @limitedtime5471
    @limitedtime5471 Před 2 lety +77

    Problem1: seas rising
    Problem2: not enough potable water
    Solution?? 🤔 cmon humans we can do it

    • @bobisrighturwrong
      @bobisrighturwrong Před 2 lety +7

      Stop breeding like farm animals!

    • @jango7889
      @jango7889 Před 2 lety +7

      @@bobisrighturwrong tell that to all the third world countries

    • @abderrahmane1747
      @abderrahmane1747 Před 2 lety +18

      @@jango7889 you know that 3rd world countries don't have the industrial power to pollute the world, it's the developed one that does. Also breeding in another country won't affect you,because water is a local problem more than a global one. So every country has its own challenges to deal with.

    • @gremlin3099
      @gremlin3099 Před 2 lety +1

      @@abderrahmane1747 if we reduce the world population that will be an easy solution to all our problems kinda

    • @hjkkotsu4680
      @hjkkotsu4680 Před 2 lety

      @@abderrahmane1747 what do you know 3rd world country most of companies doest have waste treatment thats why they pollute more look at india Philippines indonesia compare that to South korea and japan And Canada Australia

  • @yolson13
    @yolson13 Před 2 lety +1

    As someone from Cape town, I still shower with a bucket and use it to flush. It is not really necessary anymore, we had a good reason season, but it is a good habit to save water. Not letting the tap run while brushing your teeth or closing the tap in the shower while applying shampoo is a good way to save water.

  • @dazita
    @dazita Před 2 lety +1

    Such an excellent informative video!

  • @hcrffi
    @hcrffi Před 2 lety +43

    Been suggesting for the past 20 years to build the water plant throughout the West and East Coast of US. Government never listened and instead, gave money to other Countries and wasted money on unwanted things.

    • @ronmiller7248
      @ronmiller7248 Před 2 lety +4

      I'm sorry, and just who are you?

    • @eternalrecurrence6042
      @eternalrecurrence6042 Před 2 lety +5

      @@ronmiller7248 Stuart Trenton, Civil Engineer I've read his paper in HS.

    • @charliepearce8767
      @charliepearce8767 Před 2 lety +1

      Better tec on the way
      Like trying to break the land speed record with wagon wheels using today's tec.

    • @AndalusianLuis
      @AndalusianLuis Před 2 lety

      Yes the US government is going to do what a random person wants them to do.

    • @eternalrecurrence6042
      @eternalrecurrence6042 Před 2 lety

      @@AndalusianLuis Many a knight have fallen attempting to slay the wolf of Farron even in the waning hours of the age of flame the unkindled march wearily upon the silent throne above the weeping forest.
      ps. oh bro dude Thomas edison?

  • @josephpk4878
    @josephpk4878 Před 2 lety +140

    Fully dehydrate the brine, fill decommissioned mines with the salt and save it for when the climate recovers.

    • @SuperCakeKing
      @SuperCakeKing Před 2 lety +6

      Also gotta plant some damn plants

    • @blow0me
      @blow0me Před 2 lety +10

      recovers from what ? The climate is fine.

    • @SuperCakeKing
      @SuperCakeKing Před 2 lety +52

      @@blow0me except for its dry as fuck now look at the major dams in the us they dryin up

    • @blow0me
      @blow0me Před 2 lety +27

      @@SuperCakeKing man made dams, man made problems, too many humans consuming and wasting water. It's always the same common denominator with all of these perceived or alleged problems....too many humans. It isn't the climate, it isn't Bill Gates, it isn't even dementia ridden Biden...ALL the problems are down to far far too many humans on the planet.

    • @citizenoftheninthdivision
      @citizenoftheninthdivision Před 2 lety +6

      @@blow0me *too many brown humans

  • @yasminesawadogo8506
    @yasminesawadogo8506 Před 2 lety +1

    im a student and this helped me a lot in writing I am supposed to write an outline about this now I know all the information I need!

  • @headztempleheadz
    @headztempleheadz Před 2 lety +1

    Another brilliant video. Thank you for doing them in English. 👍🏻

  • @MrTwenty20video
    @MrTwenty20video Před 2 lety +150

    I appreciate the presentation. It was an important topic and was presented with valuable information. Thank you. ✌

  • @desolatesurfer8651
    @desolatesurfer8651 Před 2 lety +60

    Southern California needs to invest in many desalination plants.

    • @mvpfocus
      @mvpfocus Před 2 lety +23

      The San Diego area already has a huge desalination plant that reportedly puts out 50 million gallons of fresh water per day. It currently only costs about half as much to import water, though. It seems to me like it would be cheaper (in the US) to simply build a few pipelines to ship water from the Northwest to the Southwest. In fact, a federal water sewer could work nationwide, sending water all over the country from areas that need to get rid of excess water to prevent flooding. This is why we need a government that works, instead of one that is stuck in an intractable battle of opposite sides of the ideologue spectrum.

    • @tomfuelery2905
      @tomfuelery2905 Před 2 lety +16

      Nah, they'd rather spend the money on a high speed train to nowhere and gripe about how they don't get enough from the Colorado river.
      Idiots.

    • @adminadmin9997
      @adminadmin9997 Před 2 lety +5

      I work in construction in California and they are building Water treatment plants along the coast line. For the first 5 years the plants will be used to water plants and then after 5 years it will be turned into a plant that generates drinking water.

    • @oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164
      @oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164 Před 2 lety

      It should have been done 25 years ago.

    • @oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164
      @oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164 Před 2 lety +1

      @@mvpfocus You really want the US Government controlling another program?

  • @mdcclxxvl5790
    @mdcclxxvl5790 Před rokem +1

    Desalination can stop rising sea levels and climate change we need more of this spread the word!

  • @andrewc13
    @andrewc13 Před 2 lety +2

    This is why I am greatful that I live on the great lakes. I don't ever need to think about when I'm not gonna get water

  • @safaeltoumi9954
    @safaeltoumi9954 Před 2 lety +23

    I am working as a research assistant on desalination in TUNISA, working on a hybrid pilot : NF & RO membranes ... it's just magnificent !

    • @Alicegab300
      @Alicegab300 Před 2 lety

      @@niteshchoughule7395 these minerals can be added to the desalinated water

    • @mohsinpanhwar5850
      @mohsinpanhwar5850 Před 2 lety

      hello mam could u guide me for speclization in chemistry for best branch plz suggest??

  • @LukaDoncicFitnessOfficiaI
    @LukaDoncicFitnessOfficiaI Před 2 lety +71

    Desalination: way to save the world
    Government : how about some strawberries in september?

    • @johndor7793
      @johndor7793 Před 2 lety +4

      I dont get it

    • @msaag5490
      @msaag5490 Před 2 lety +11

      @@johndor7793 The joke is that countries like the US use a butt ton of water to make certain foods available all year. These foods are grown in arid areas where it needs an even higher amount of water to grow these foods.

    • @stan5555
      @stan5555 Před 2 lety +2

      @@msaag5490 why not just import it from other places.

    • @dungeonmaster16
      @dungeonmaster16 Před 2 lety +7

      @@msaag5490 plus companies that sell water in america wont be happy. cause face it with draught issues that benefits companies that see bottled water like example dasani by coca cola. the demand for bottled water will increase and if so companies will raise prices since eventually ppl dont got a choice or most wont know shit on alternatives like filtered water for example or just lazy. moment theres a alternative for water usage which is the sea if this fully goes though then similar to say tin foil (think was tin foil, maybe wrong on this and another item long ago instead) when first invented ppl throught its a rare resource/commodity and prices were high. but when ppl realize its damn easy to make it the price for it plummeted. same for water. water prices will plummet a bit when ppl realize its now more accessible and draught issues is reduced. water companies wont be happy if they start losing sales monthly if ppl find easier alternatives to gain water and cheaper in mass. and those companies will find ways to blame the one that caused all that knwoing history of companies suing one another on stuff involved with that.
      random/side thing: its like the whole hyperloop train thing too on it will mess with companies involving travel.
      the one plan is from san francisco to L.A. avg driving time is 5-7 hours. flight time is 1-2 hours. hyperloop is avg 30 mins.
      for driving: hyperloop will for sure reduce companies services on ppl needing gas, hotels, car repairs, snacks, diners, and so on from SF to L.A back and fourth. if alot of ppl use hyperloop imagine the loss on sales/services for those companies that rely on ppl driving from those places to another? they wont be happy and find an excuse to blame/sue hyperloop company for "damaging" their business.
      for flying: similar with less ppl flying from those places to another. avg flight ticket costs 100-400 (depending on season and which seats.) round trip. if more ppl use hyperloop instead of flying for say those on business trips thats a lost on ticket sales for airline companies. similar they wil lfind a way to blame/sue hyperloop company for interfering with sales.
      note thats just for sf to la. theres info of more is planned from i think chicago to detroit or something and few outside of america like in united arab emirates.

    • @msaag5490
      @msaag5490 Před 2 lety +4

      @@stan5555 That doesn't solve anything. Water is a universal resource that everyone needs. If you exported it from some place, that means your taking water people in that area can use. That's fucked up. And no, supply-demand economics shouldn't be used here. Everyone needs water, it has inelastic demand.

  • @garycalzavara
    @garycalzavara Před 2 lety +1

    Just to let you know I do love your videos. Are amazing.

  • @mirwaisqatae1373
    @mirwaisqatae1373 Před 2 lety

    Thank you, it was very informative

  • @joefrankhernandez7656
    @joefrankhernandez7656 Před 2 lety +44

    I’ve said this since the 80s but if you have the power over it you can charge whatever you want for it that’s why they won’t do it

    • @musicfan1517
      @musicfan1517 Před 2 lety +3

      May God put you and those who think like you as far from power as possible.

    • @user-dw1zb3fh5n
      @user-dw1zb3fh5n Před 2 lety

      @@musicfan1517 unfortunately it is called “reality“

  • @NoOneAtAll666
    @NoOneAtAll666 Před 2 lety +13

    Brilliant and clear overview of the challenges. Well done :)

  • @kirtiprajapati1585
    @kirtiprajapati1585 Před rokem

    The best part of video 10:18 I wish people from other countries also adopt to conserve as much as water we can 🍀

  • @LimeEngine
    @LimeEngine Před 2 lety

    great making and thanks for revealing how much work it is, in the end. bywe

  • @randodox8375
    @randodox8375 Před 2 lety +14

    This is great knowledge. Thanks for spreading it!

  • @erichpizer1
    @erichpizer1 Před 2 lety +6

    I live in cape town and to this day since 2018 maintain my grey water system for flushing and rain water storage of 11 000 litres despite heavy rain.

  • @zeke546
    @zeke546 Před 2 lety +3

    What an excellent presentation, brief but very informative. Glad you were recommended, subscribed

  • @bobbobson4069
    @bobbobson4069 Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant informative video! Subscribed. Thanks

  • @briantcosta
    @briantcosta Před 2 lety +16

    Great video, I am glad that the youtube algorithm recommended this channel hahaah Greetings from Brasil 🤙

  • @tl3139
    @tl3139 Před 2 lety +81

    "Water, Water, Everywhere, Nor Any a Drop to Drink!"

    • @lunarology9158
      @lunarology9158 Před 2 lety

      hay sid... Buddy come here get real close.... STFU NO

    • @tl3139
      @tl3139 Před 2 lety +6

      @@lunarology9158 Can you translate that please?

    • @blow0me
      @blow0me Před 2 lety +1

      humans, humans, everywhere, consuming and destroying everything, without a care for all other life.

    • @tl3139
      @tl3139 Před 2 lety

      @@blow0me Unfortunately there's no birth control everywhere to slow the spread.

    • @blow0me
      @blow0me Před 2 lety

      @Gem Boyie pretty sure we all know that saying about assumptions ?

  • @Chimpunk729
    @Chimpunk729 Před rokem +1

    Its not just the amount of freshwater but it also the amount of pure/drinkable freshwater that we need to resolve. Fun fact (or ironic fact) i live at about 350km from jakarta and here the ground water is about 1.5m from the surface. So its challenging for you to build a house, the fondation of a house. Teh households rarely use the ground water since we use the tap water (for shower since its undrinkable) from the government's water company and the source is from the deep well and the dam near the area. And for drinks we use gallons water. Ground water in my place heavily use for plantation and so the problem are households contamination (e. Coli) and chemical contamination water from the fertilizer or other plantation industries.

  • @EcoSnooki
    @EcoSnooki Před rokem

    Another highly informative video from DW...Kudos

  • @LiquidShivaz
    @LiquidShivaz Před 2 lety +21

    Remembering my travels to Curaçao. Amstel brewery has a desalination plant there (or uses the water from it), resulting in very nice beer

  • @rais1953
    @rais1953 Před 2 lety +12

    Perth, Australia has two desalination plants and also purifies its waste water to recharge the main aquifer supplying the region. The desalination plants draw most of their power from wind farms, reducing the load on the environment.

    • @abnormallynormal8823
      @abnormallynormal8823 Před 2 lety +2

      And they single handedly solved the drought problem in WA

    • @charliepearce8767
      @charliepearce8767 Před 2 lety

      @@abnormallynormal8823
      For domestic and light industrial use...
      Not for agricultural purposes.

    • @desolatesurfer8651
      @desolatesurfer8651 Před 2 lety

      Perth Australia is way ahead of it's time.

    • @peterhatton7558
      @peterhatton7558 Před 2 lety

      @@desolatesurfer8651 I left Perth in 1997 to many people their then, so as they longed to jam in more for no logical reason other then stupidity they built that crap, instead of learning to live in a responsible way.
      when I was there the grass farms were using most of the water and the water level was dropping like a stone all so people could pretend they lived in England with lawns and flowers everywhere.
      how dumb can we be.

    • @rais1953
      @rais1953 Před 2 lety

      @@peterhatton7558 Not so much now Peter. Still plenty of lawn areas, more than there should be in a dry climate but not watered from the drinkable supply. More people are growing dry climate plants and there's a trend to small artificial lawns in newer areas.

  • @smithfield06
    @smithfield06 Před 2 lety

    Lanzerote has an amazing desalination process was one of the first places to do so

  • @ahmedalshangiti325
    @ahmedalshangiti325 Před 2 lety

    Wowwww, I really appreciate your effort for making this video

  • @Doug923
    @Doug923 Před 2 lety +17

    While not mentioned in the video, there is another line of research to turn brine into batteries.

  • @lethalduck1412
    @lethalduck1412 Před 2 lety +97

    Evaporate water from brine and sell the residual salt for a profit, use remaining brine to grow tomatoes and all, take the profit, build a space company with that with reusable rockets, explore and mine necessary material for solar panels. Now you have clean water, unlimited solar panels, and a shitload of tomatoes and salt.
    I know, easier said than done, lol.

    • @matteopacciani9402
      @matteopacciani9402 Před 2 lety +9

      Well, with no other option available your is a greate idea, still it's not economically competitive as the little of such problems

    • @balashibuyeeter2704
      @balashibuyeeter2704 Před 2 lety +11

      @Dillon in some ways, you are right. Solar panel right now is not very efficient. That's why we should use nuclear energy more and solar panels for small scale.

    • @UCiWrMgES50tlUhV3l6NqjNA
      @UCiWrMgES50tlUhV3l6NqjNA Před 2 lety +4

      @@balashibuyeeter2704 small scale? if every company or building adopts solar panels in their infrastructure, either vertical or horizontal...it will create a lot of eco sustainability in the cities. people gotta realize vertical use is also possible.

    • @wildrussiansnake8978
      @wildrussiansnake8978 Před 2 lety +1

      @@balashibuyeeter2704 Bro everytime i think about how we have literally the best source of energy to probably ever exist and we don't use it because nuclear = bad i want to smash my head againts the wall.

    • @qtfy
      @qtfy Před 2 lety

      you play oxygen not included right

  • @nicksharma1355
    @nicksharma1355 Před 2 lety +2

    Very Informative ❤️

  • @06howea1
    @06howea1 Před 2 lety +2

    This is amazing video and smart to use the technology with renewable energies

  • @razzy1
    @razzy1 Před 2 lety +80

    One of south africas wine breweries would be enough for cape towns taps

    • @larsgoran9926
      @larsgoran9926 Před 2 lety +6

      "Let's force companies to give everything they own away to people who refuses to work" sounds a bit like communism

    • @Panzerram
      @Panzerram Před 2 lety

      @@larsgoran9926 communism would make the problems here even worse

    • @larsgoran9926
      @larsgoran9926 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Panzerram That's my point

  • @ravoniesravenshir3926
    @ravoniesravenshir3926 Před 2 lety +84

    I was about to say you can always harvest the salt and other minerals.

    • @charliepearce8767
      @charliepearce8767 Před 2 lety +8

      Yep.
      And be used in products we haven't even thought of yet.
      Like many by products in the past that were troublesome
      Are now expensive and in demand to use in other processes.

    • @annoyingguyoninternet1631
      @annoyingguyoninternet1631 Před 2 lety +11

      Sally Saudi Arabia is wasting this opportunity by dumping that brine water back to the sea

    • @calvingreene90
      @calvingreene90 Před 2 lety

      Look at Israel's Dead Sea industry for how.

    • @thedevilsadvocate5210
      @thedevilsadvocate5210 Před 2 lety

      It uses a lot of energy and wastes a lot of water.

    • @calvingreene90
      @calvingreene90 Před 2 lety +2

      @@thedevilsadvocate5210
      Desalination is relatively energy intensive but where is the wasted water?

  • @juanritanjaya6254
    @juanritanjaya6254 Před 2 lety +8

    ‘Water water everywhere, so lets all take a drink’
    - Homer Simpson

  • @AntonioFGagliardiLugo

    THANKS GREAT VIDEO !!

  • @nebroskitheraut6705
    @nebroskitheraut6705 Před 3 lety +9

    I love your content guys!!!! Keep it up! I hope you get more viewers and subs.

  • @samsadowitz1724
    @samsadowitz1724 Před 2 lety +91

    I see Brine as a valuable resource in the preservation of various foods. Another solution to the brine problem is having a salt farm right next to the desalination plant as a very cheap way to process and make sea salt as a byproduct.
    This salt can then be used for the saltwater aquarium hobby or it can be used as table sea salt.

    • @jamelmayo7340
      @jamelmayo7340 Před 2 lety +11

      Brine is also used to de ice roads

    • @n7b302
      @n7b302 Před 2 lety +5

      Its way too much salt and most of the time its thrown back into the sea/ocean

    • @ponternal
      @ponternal Před 2 lety +4

      Problem is there is just so much

    • @samsunguser3148
      @samsunguser3148 Před 2 lety +4

      @@witoldschwenke9492 the problem is they dump it all in one go...

    • @Shinkajo
      @Shinkajo Před rokem

      @@witoldschwenke9492 so you want to pump salt water into the environment? You do know that's a bad idea right? And why would you add salt back to purified water, when you can just drink it instead? Or didn't you know that waste water is processed in plants to produce clean water that is then pumped back into our taps?

  • @maxhill9254
    @maxhill9254 Před 2 lety

    This video is well done! thx :-)

  • @jakeglenn2246
    @jakeglenn2246 Před rokem +1

    Thanks. Please cover how many water tables are below the ground. We need more drilling since most scientists do not agree.
    There are many undiscovered aquafers. Please interview experts on this.
    ALso since nature can fix things over time, you need to experiment more. For example build a Large are for a lake and dump all the brine in there and study how nature addresses this over time !!
    Make a 100 acre lake and fill it with brine. Plant salt tolerate plants and trees, etc
    They study how nature cleans it !! This would be a learning project !!! Keep up the great work!!
    Build one in the desert and also non desert area. This is how we learn !!

  • @Theliox
    @Theliox Před 2 lety +5

    Thanks, I liked the positive outlook you printed on this problem :)

  • @phlodel
    @phlodel Před 2 lety +19

    A neighbor of mine was a retired Westinghouse engineer, He had worked on nuclear power plants. He said the biggest mistake Westinghouse made with nuclear power was not including desalination facilities with the power plants.

    • @fredkibler
      @fredkibler Před 2 lety

      1. Location, not all nuc plants are on salt water 2. salt water is NOT circulated through the reactor. 3. Any nuc plant near salt water could add on a desalination plant if desired.

    • @timengineman2nd714
      @timengineman2nd714 Před 2 lety +3

      @@fredkibler The main issue is that Nuclear Reactors run at a below maximum efficiency, as a safety factor (at high efficiency there is very little time for human reaction to an emergency), this means they have a tremendous amount of Waste Heat, which would be great to run a Distiller/Evaporator to purify ocean or brackish water into drinkable water!
      This also will lower the amount of hot moist air being shot up into the atmosphere since you would no longer need all of those large cooling towers. An even better solution would be to have the plant near where a city lets out it's treated fresh water into the ocean..... They could mix the Brine discharge from the Water Plant so there would be minimal disruption of Ocean Life from water being too high or too low in salinity being discharged into the ocean.
      (Former Water King aboard two different US Navy ships)

    • @fredkibler
      @fredkibler Před 2 lety

      @@timengineman2nd714 I'm gonna give you a gce on your 1st paragraph. Mixing could be done but then why would a city low on fresh water be dumping it, they would be better off treating and reclaiming it so that only a minimal amount is lost. Brine should just be sent to evaporation pools or something similar to collect the salt.

    • @joeyracano1
      @joeyracano1 Před 2 lety

      wrong. co locating drinking water with nuke waste is not bright.

    • @fredkibler
      @fredkibler Před 2 lety +1

      @@joeyracano1 no one's talking about that

  • @slashbat2375
    @slashbat2375 Před 2 lety +5

    It's so surreal that we were facing day zero in 2018. It feels like an age ago with everything going on with covid. I still don't flush the toilet every time so that I can save water lol, it's just ingrained in me now

    • @yolson13
      @yolson13 Před 2 lety

      Same. Our dams are the fullest they have been in a long time and I still shower with a bucket.

    • @5DNRG
      @5DNRG Před 2 lety +1

      As those in the mountains say, if its brown flush it down..., if its yellow, let it mellow.

  • @ericras5993
    @ericras5993 Před rokem

    We have been doing that for years here in aruba and i must say we have one of the best waters in the world

  • @darinjames3313
    @darinjames3313 Před 2 lety +3

    Thank the Heavens for our Smart People on the Planet........with Hearts......Thank you

  • @juliusk7745
    @juliusk7745 Před 2 lety +116

    The narrator has one of the finest voices I’ve heard in a long time

    • @ChristianCaurla
      @ChristianCaurla Před 2 lety +6

      Thank you so much! It means a lot to me

    • @localmilfchaser6938
      @localmilfchaser6938 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ChristianCaurla facts

    • @nicog6188
      @nicog6188 Před 2 lety +2

      Khajit has wares if you have coin

    • @Alexander_l322
      @Alexander_l322 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ChristianCaurla I don’t like it so much but I think it maybe the mic that’s letting you down.

    • @deivydasbaksa3324
      @deivydasbaksa3324 Před 2 lety

      I loved it the way it sounded i sometimes rewatch the video for a better mood

  • @helpme100
    @helpme100 Před rokem

    I'm in love with this subject 😍

  • @Zyks10
    @Zyks10 Před 2 lety

    Brilliant content!

  • @Skorrigan
    @Skorrigan Před 2 lety +66

    "Flush only when you really need to flush" - yeah right, and how exactly are we going to deal with sewage that is 5 or 10 times more coondensed than now? XD

    • @Justin73791
      @Justin73791 Před 2 lety +8

      Sewage plants will be fine, your pipes would probably be fine as solids will have a longer time to break down before you flush. I'm not sure how this is actually a problem aside from the home sanitation factor?

    • @ChristianCaurla
      @ChristianCaurla Před 2 lety +7

      Very good pint. Many sewage systems are not built for periods of draughts. Cape Town did a great job in using less water during the drought, but their sewage system almost collapsed. Stay tuned, my friend. I am working on a video about this problem for this channel.

    • @burgernthemomrailer
      @burgernthemomrailer Před 2 lety +5

      @GeeKIller dude gamer bottle strat is ecofriendly holy shit

    • @wildrussiansnake8978
      @wildrussiansnake8978 Před 2 lety

      @@burgernthemomrailer Not washing your ass for a week is too bro, gamers really out here saving the world, another tip is to get as deep into a game till you forget to eat or drink water, we heroes bro.

    • @philiproler5572
      @philiproler5572 Před 2 lety

      @@burgernthemomrailer these news are comparable to if someone told you that fapping cures cancer arent they? xD

  • @primeradianttechnologies3085

    Great content , thank you

  • @tarjei99
    @tarjei99 Před 2 lety +16

    It has been suggested to use surplus heat from molten salt reactors to make fresh water. Some minerals will have to be added.
    The heat is basically free if the main task of the reactor is producing electricity.
    A reactor can also use the heat to produce fertilizer, chemical compounds, etc. for little cost.

    • @The_Savage_Wombat
      @The_Savage_Wombat Před rokem +1

      I can put a glass jug of salt water out with a magnifying glass on it and a coil of 1/4" copper tube into another jug. It's ridiculously easy to desalinate.

    • @tarjei99
      @tarjei99 Před rokem

      @@The_Savage_Wombat Copper is poisonous.

    • @The_Savage_Wombat
      @The_Savage_Wombat Před rokem +2

      @@tarjei99 That explains why I'm so sick. Must be from all the copper plumbing in USA.

    • @tarjei99
      @tarjei99 Před rokem

      @@The_Savage_Wombat There is a reason for all copper cooking pans being lined with tin and we are advised to not drink hot water from the tap.

  • @indigotaylor-noguera7119

    Uses for the brine, from Britannica; "Brine is used as a preservative in meat-packing (as in corned beef) and pickling. In refrigeration and cooling systems, brines are used as heat-transfer media because of their low freezing temperatures or as vapour-absorption agents because of their low vapour pressure. Brine is also used to quench (cool) steel." and from Wikipedia; "Brining is used to preserve or season the food. Brining can be applied to vegetables, cheeses and fruit in a process known as pickling. Meat and fish are typically steeped in brine for shorter periods of time, as a form of marination, enhancing its tenderness and flavor, or to enhance shelf period."

  • @Semgil2023
    @Semgil2023 Před 2 lety +31

    When the earnings get to the point there will be a solution…

  • @factsare3852
    @factsare3852 Před 2 lety +3

    Very impressed with the quality of the video and the commentator. Very good job and information, well done all round. 👍

  • @vaifyulhefdi7948
    @vaifyulhefdi7948 Před rokem

    You can use more renewable technique for desalination, and the salt residue can be make as ordinary food salt seasoning..

  • @josedacunhafilho
    @josedacunhafilho Před 2 lety

    São Paulo, Brazil is heading for the same situation as Cape Town, except there is no ocean nearby.

  • @michaeltrobridge9755
    @michaeltrobridge9755 Před 3 lety +4

    Very good. Thanks for the insights!

  • @umani811
    @umani811 Před 2 lety +7

    Thanks for this video. Love from Tamilnadu, India.

  • @haludan111
    @haludan111 Před 2 lety +14

    Desalination is the way to go. I grew up in Hawaii, and most of our water comes from Desalination through the volcanic rock.
    Desalination plants could easily provide all the water we need, and provide us with sea salt as a byproduct for animals, and humans.

    • @sleepyearth
      @sleepyearth Před rokem +1

      That's because of your place's unique geography circumstances. Not so for many other places.
      Desalination plants uses quite abit of energy to convert sea water into drinkable water. It can turn out to be rather expensive for under developed countries.

    • @haludan111
      @haludan111 Před rokem

      @@sleepyearth, true, but you can use a passive system that uses tidal generators to create the power to desalinate.
      Or use my method, which is using gravity based water condensers, they function better near high humidity, so they work great near the ocean. Think of it as a desalination system without the cooking of the water.

  • @gcb4763
    @gcb4763 Před rokem +1

    Perth Australia has been losing 1% annual rainfall each year for about 20 years. The water catchment areas can no longer produce enough water to flow into the dams. The city has an artesian basin under the coastal areas under Perth, which can be used for a while, however eventually than level will drop and sea water will pollute the coastal areas of the artesian basins. The government was faced with limited options. There is a dam in the north of the state, but the dam is about 2,000 km from Perth. West Australia is a big and dry place. To date, the State government has been building desalination plants. Some people complain that desalination plants are unnatural, but in fact, they are a reflection of nature, with water evaporation from the sea and forming rain clouds then rain. So far 50% of the city is using the two desalination plants currently built. Any excess water is stored in the old dams in the hills. A third plant is planned.

    • @ImperialKnight86
      @ImperialKnight86 Před 8 měsíci

      "Unnatural." Nothing hurts my head more than reading that. I swear people just oppose things just for the sake of opposing it.