World's Water Tables Running Dry

Tabassum07

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America’s breadbasket aquifer running dry; massive agriculture collapse inevitable
By wmw_admin on March 11, 2011

Mike Adams – Natural News March 10, 2011

It’s the largest underground freshwater supply in the world, stretching from South Dakota all the way to Texas. It’s underneath most of Nebraska’s farmlands, and it provides crucial water resources for farming in Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma and even New Mexico. It’s called the Ogallala Aquifer, and it is being pumped dry.

See the map of this aquifer here:
Ogallala.gif


Without the Ogallala Aquifer, America’s heartland food production collapses. No water means no irrigation for the corn, wheat, alfalfa and other crops grown across these states to feed people and animals. And each year, the Ogallala Aquifer drops another few inches as it is literally being sucked dry by the tens of thousands of agricultural wells that tap into it across the heartland of America.

This problem with all this is that the Ogallala Aquifer isn’t being recharged in any significant way from rainfall or rivers. This is so-called “fossil water” because once you use it, it’s gone. And it’s disappearing now faster than ever.

In some regions along the aquifer, the water level has dropped so far that it has effectively disappeared – places like Happy, Texas, where a once-booming agricultural town has collapsed to a population of just 595. All the wells drilled there in the 1950′s tapped into the Ogallala Aquifer and seemed to provide abundant water at the time. But today the wells have all run dry.

Happy, Texas has become a place of despair. Dead cattle. Wilted crops. Once-moist soils turned to dust. And Happy is just the beginning of this story because this same agricultural tragedy will be repeated across Oklahoma, Nebraska, Kansas and parts of Colorado in the next few decades. That’s a hydrologic fact. Water doesn’t magically reappear in the Ogallala. Once it’s used up, it’s gone.

“There used to be 50,000 head of cattle, now there’s 1,000,” says Kay Horner in a Telegraph report (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/83…). “Grazed them on wheat, but the feed lots took all the water so we can’t grow wheat. Now the feed lots can’t get local steers so they bring in cheap unwanted milking calves from California and turn them into burger if they can’t make them veal. It doesn’t make much sense. We’re heading back to the Dust Bowl.”

The end of cheap food in America?
It’s a sobering thought, really: That “America’s breadbasket” is on a collision course with the inevitable. A large percentage of the food produced in the United States is, of course, grown on farmlands irrigated from the Ogallala. For hundreds of years, it has been a source of “cheap water,” making farming economically feasible and keeping food prices down. Combined with the available of cheap fossil fuels over the last century (necessary to drive the tractors that work the fields), food production has skyrocketed in North America. This has led to a population explosion, too. Where food is cheap and plentiful, populations readily expand.

It only follows that when food becomes scarce or expensive (putting it out of reach of average income earners), populations will fall. There’s only so much food to go around, after all. And after the Ogallala runs dry, America’s food production will plummet. Starvation will become the new American landscape for those who cannot afford the sky-high prices for food.

Aquifer depletion is a global problem
It’s not a problem that’s unique to America, by the way. The very same problem is facing India, where fossil water is already running dry in many parts of the country. It’s the same story in China, too, where water conservation has never been a top priority. Even the Middle East is facing its own water crisis (http://www.eoearth.org/article/Aquifer_depletion) This has caused food prices to skyrocket, leading directly to the civil unrest, the riots and even the revolutions we’ve seen taking place there over the last few months.

The problem is called aquifer depletion (http://www.eoearth.org/article/Aqui…), and it’s a problem that spans the globe. It means that today’s cheap, easy food — grown on cheap fossil water — simply isn’t sustainable. Once that water is gone, the croplands that depend on it dry up. Following that, erosion kicks in, and the winds blow away the dry soils in a “Dust Bowl” type of scenario.

A few years after that, what was once a thriving agricultural operation is transformed into a dry, soilless death pit where nothing lives.

“The Ogallala supply is going to run out and the Plains will become uneconomical to farm,” says David Brauer of the Ogallala Research Service, part of the USDA. “That is beyond reasonable argument. Our goal now is to engineer a soft landing. That’s all we can do.” (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/8359076/US-farmers-fear-the-return-of-the-Dust-Bowl.html)

Such is the legacy of conventional agriculture, which is based almost entirely on non-sustainable practices. Its insane reliance on fossil water, petroleum fertilizers, toxic pesticides and GMOs will only lead our world to agricultural disaster.

May Allah protect us all - I can testify to the truth of the water table running low in India. Most homes have electric waterpumps in their home to pump their own water. 10 or so years ago, almost all homes had changed to a new deeper pump which pumped from deep within the ground. Last year, that pump in our home started failing - and we had to have a new, even more deeper and stronger pump installed - the electricians who installed it said that it was becoming a common problem, and it was due to the water table levels falling drastically - I can imagine how this problem would escalate in the future.

May Allah protect us all, ameen.
 

Shak78

Junior Member
The lack of water, food, oil ect are going to spark wars in the near future and may lead to the collapse of the US. May Allah protect us all.
 

Aapa

Mirajmom
Assalaam walaikum,

I was reading an article on homelessness in the US. The article focused on the rise of tent cities. Included in the article was the concern about the water table. I was amazed.

In a sense as conditions deteriorate and more and more people become victims of bankers and corrupt politicians there will be a rising need to fuel the new economy. A non-traditional banking system. There are thousands living in the tunnels of Los Vegas, tent cities in LA and now they are spreading in the northeast.
 
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