• nullptr@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    What ya mean “no water”? Are they all relying on bottled water, like the whole country? Cant watch youtube

    • swampdownloader@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      50 minutes ago

      There’s a good real life lore video on nebula. They killed their traditional agricultural system with an extractive well water fueled one which depletes aquifers. Neighboring rivers from other countries got dammed. They rerouted their own rivers for dams and dried out lakes and flooded a salt deposit making the whole river salty. They also focus a lot on domestic agriculture at the expense of water depletion. All around poor mismanagement using outdated American plans to build their dam infrastructure without environmental assessments.

    • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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      2 hours ago

      From what I’ve heard, the current government tapped the groundwater table to push farming. Now, there isn’t enough groundwater to accommodate the difference between water demand and river water.

      It sucks for Iran.

      • Vupware@lemmy.zip
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        52 minutes ago

        Meanwhile, the rest of the world will completely disregard this cautionary tale and continue to extract groundwater to farm until only saltwater remains.

        Then, as billions of people are dying of starvation, thirst, and societal downfall, the elite will finally prioritize desalination R&D and if/when they get something to work they will hail it as a revolutionary step for humanity and completely disregard the fact that this R&D / subsequent proliferation could have been initiated decades ago when the problem was first apparent.

        Voila, no more overpopulation crisis, and water, what the civilized world once considered a human right, is now used as a method for exerting control, as it is only ever potable (sans rainwater) after being processed.

        • BanMe@lemmy.world
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          24 minutes ago

          Parts of the US, like all the major cities in Texas, are actively sinking because we’re draining the aquifers that took millennia to fill. It’s yet another problem just festering, fascinating to watch as the reality approaches.

      • nullptr@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        Lol oh look, people in power are myopic and prioritize short term benefice over long term thonking; I wonder how often that happens!

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          1 hour ago

          people in power are myopic and prioritize short term benefice over long term thonking

          I’m not sure “maintaining adequate levels of domestic crop yield” is a short-term benefit. They’re stretched for water because they’re in a historic drought during a climate catastrophe. This is a no-win situation, exacerbated by the constant threat of military invasion by nuclear superpowers and their rabid fascist local proxies.

          The Iranian government can’t summon rain from the heavens any easier than their Saudi or Qatari neighbors. Those states just have the benefit of access to western markets and engineering firms for enormous desalination plants. Meanwhile, Iranians’ energy infrastructure - necessary to run the pumps and pipelines that irrigate much of the country - have been subject to repeated bombardment by Israeli and US aircraft. Most notably, their civilian nuclear program was crippled by Trump’s B-2 bombing run in June. But this is just the tail end of the damage inflicted by the eleven day shootout with Israel.

          • AA5B@lemmy.world
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            5 minutes ago

            And yet other articles were blaming corruption and cronyism for not adequately limiting water used for agriculture