Jaskalas
Lifer
- Jun 23, 2004
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If you think nuts and trees consume water, you should check out how much water is consumed by cattle and pork.
Chicken isn't on that list?
If you think nuts and trees consume water, you should check out how much water is consumed by cattle and pork.
Chicken is a vegetable.Chicken isn't on that list?
waterfootprint.org
Actually, I think we just turn the beef into a luxury item and call it a day.I mean, if Chicken is still on the menu... I might be able to live with that. A future without beef or pork is bleak, but at least there's something....
But to threaten all meat, those are fighting words.
As usual, whistling past the graveyard is the action plan.Question for those familiar with the regions water supply.
What mitigation plans are in place?
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The shocking numbers behind the Lake Mead drought crisis | CNN
The Lake Mead reservoir is poised to become the focal point of one of the country's most significant climate crises: water shortages in the West.www.cnn.com
Interesting proposition. Higher prices would mean fewer cattle needed, which means less area, and the remaining area could be dedicated to less water intensive agriculture.Actually, I think we just turn the beef into a luxury item and call it a day.
going by kilogram of food per liter:
Pork uses 1/3rd the water of beef, looks like chicken is similar.
We can even keep the milk production. Only 1/15 the water use of beef.
Sheep / goat is not efficient, but they still use only 1/2 that of beef. Same with nuts, 1/2 that of beef.
Put a water tax on the beef to help pay for its environmental impact and call it a day.
Actually, I think we just turn the beef into a luxury item and call it a day.
going by kilogram of food per liter:
Pork uses 1/3rd the water of beef, looks like chicken is similar.
We can even keep the milk production. Only 1/15 the water use of beef.
Sheep / goat is not efficient, but they still use only 1/2 that of beef. Same with nuts, 1/2 that of beef.
Put a water tax on the beef to help pay for its environmental impact and call it a day.
Depends on the land.But I sure as shit am not a farmer, so I don't know if it's practical to have a dual-purpose farm/ranch from a business perspective
Put a water tax on the beef to help pay for its environmental impact and call it a day.
Yeah, I want to switch from beef to pork and chicken/turkey. But I hate cooking with ground poultry and pork has more calories than the ground sirloin I normally eat, but I've slowly been switching over. Not perfect, but cows are by far the worst.I mean, if Chicken is still on the menu... I might be able to live with that. A future without beef or pork is bleak, but at least there's something....
But to threaten all meat, those are fighting words.
I pay the same for ground sirloin as whole chicken breast.LOL beef has been a luxury item since 2011 or 2012 when a huge drought killed off a ton of cattle and beef prices have been through the roof ever since.
LOL beef has been a luxury item since 2011 or 2012 when a huge drought killed off a ton of cattle and beef prices have been through the roof ever since.
The lab grown beef is supposed to have the same environmental impact as chicken. But if you eat the wrong beef the peach tree dish will tell the 5g chip from the covid vaccine designed by Bill Gates to buzz you.Yeah, I want to switch from beef to pork and chicken/turkey. But I hate cooking with ground poultry and pork has more calories than the ground sirloin I normally eat, but I've slowly been switching over. Not perfect, but cows are by far the worst.
And let them ruin the Great Lakes as well?Why dont we just build a pipeline from the great lakes to cali?
Forgot the Gespatcho paying you a visit for eating the wrong beef.The lab grown beef is supposed to have the same environmental impact as chicken. But if you eat the wrong beef the peach tree dish will tell the 5g chip from the covid vaccine designed by Bill Gates to buzz you.
Cold soup is no joke it will hunt your ass down.Forgot the Gespatcho paying you a visit for eating the wrong beef.

Between Zebra mussel, Chinese Carp*, and agricultural run off ya all are doing that well enough on your own, eh?And let them ruin the Great Lakes as well?
The land in the arid west is much more valuable for hunting and recreation than it is for livestock raising. If not for endless subsidies, the ranching industry in the west would have disappeared decades ago. Commercial grazing on arid lands causes landscape scale degradation to ecosystems while contributing a rounding error to our food supply.Depends on the land.
My understanding is a lot of the land in the west requires some sort of grazing animal. It is very dry and arid, and the animal goes from bush to bush. Looking at around 150 acres to keep just 1 cow alive. The animals cover lots of ground to make up the difference.
Much of the dry and arid west is really just limited to things like cattle, goats, or sheep.
Between Zebra mussel, Chinese Carp*, and agricultural run off ya all are doing that well enough on your own, eh?
The man made great algae blooms from phosphorous run off, overloading the water with nitrogen to insure the most nasty types of algae dominate, and decreasing levels of dissipated oxygen all point to the fundamental truth:
The Great Lakes NEED California to tap them. It is going to take a Heavy Hitter like California to bully the Midwest into taking care of its greatest resource. Because if you just let things go as they are now, your going to end up like all those counties in Wisconsin where the well water is no longer safe to drink.
You do not want to live with the Golden State, but you can't live with out us. Think of California like that responsible adult, that actually cares about what you drink, or more specifically what California drinks at the end of that rather long straw.
*you already are paying people to murder chinese carp with a per fish bounty. Think about what all that CA money could do!
sarcasm i hope.Between Zebra mussel, Chinese Carp*, and agricultural run off ya all are doing that well enough on your own, eh?
The man made great algae blooms from phosphorous run off, overloading the water with nitrogen to insure the most nasty types of algae dominate, and decreasing levels of dissipated oxygen all point to the fundamental truth:
The Great Lakes NEED California to tap them. It is going to take a Heavy Hitter like California to bully the Midwest into taking care of its greatest resource. Because if you just let things go as they are now, your going to end up like all those counties in Wisconsin where the well water is no longer safe to drink.
You do not want to live with the Golden State, but you can't live with out us. Think of California like that responsible adult, that actually cares about what you drink, or more specifically what California drinks at the end of that rather long straw.
*you already are paying people to murder chinese carp with a per fish bounty. Think about what all that CA money could do!
And then dig deeper wells to drain limited groundwater reserves, undercutting neighbors, until the groundwater reservoirs are all also permanently depleted - down to several thousand feet underground. Then continue to whine about it and beg for further major government subsidies to truck in water to keep the almonds growing.
people don't use that much water relative to...everything else, basically.I hate the almond farms. But its not just almonds contributing to the problem of decreased water supplies. Its:
1) Over population. Too many people demanding too much water (and other resources) for which supplies are dwindling at an alarming rate. Prices are inflating for everything because of too much demand and not enough supply of pretty much everything. This is a world wide phenomenon.
2) Both legal and illegal weed grows. Weed demands a shit ton of water to grow. https://mjbizdaily.com/cannabis-requires-more-water-than-commodity-crops-researchers-say/
3) Growing grass on our lawns. Grass farming for both residential and commercial lawns nneds to be restricted to rain water only.
4) Filling swimming pools which are just large evaporation tanks.
Possible solutions to our water crises - short term and long term:
> Maybe taxing the shit out water might help bring about more conservation efforts.
> Make growing pot illegally a 1st degree felony for all the water they use. (Its mostly the fucking cartels and other organized crime groups in the US). All they get are misdemeanor tickets right now.
>Prohibit almond farms during exception droughts.
>Stop subsidizing family growth with tax incentives.
>Stop allowing millions of illegals to freely cross the border.
Step one, and it is all fixed. But making ag users actually pay for water is apparently a political non starter.Possible solutions to our water crises - short term and long term:
> Maybe taxing the shit out water might help bring about more conservation efforts.
