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Corpus Christi plans to declare a 'water emergency.' What does that mean?

No modern American city has ever run out of water. But chances are rising that Corpus Christi could be the first. Absent a biblical rainfall event, its reservoirs are on track to completely dry up by next year.

"We have no precedent to follow. There's no manual, there's no video," Corpus Christi City Manager Peter Zanoni told the City Council in March, when local leaders first acknowledged that disaster could be imminent.

Plans presented Tuesday would formally prohibit watering lawns, washing cars and filling residential swimming pools. The plans proposed a $500 fine and misdemeanor for a first violation and suspension of water service for a second. Water service could also be suspended for users that exceed their allotted water amount for more than a month.

How will the water emergency affect chemical plants and refineries?

This is the elephant in the room.

"Industry simply cannot compete long-term without reliable water resources," said Kara Rivas — a spokesperson for Flint Hills Resources, which supplies jet fuel to Texas airports from its Corpus Christi refinery — at a contentious City Council meeting last year. "This would force the shutdown of at least some aspects of our operations."

If extreme drought conditions persist, the industrial water users could suck the reservoirs dry in a year. But the city, in theory, would never let it get to that point, experts say. It would likely shut the large spigots to the industrial users and face their lawyers in court before it allowed the 500,000 residents of the Coastal Bend to be left without drinking water.

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No modern American city has ever run out of water. But chances are rising that Corpus Christi could be the first. Absent a biblical rainfall event, its reservoirs are on track to completely dry up by next year.

"We have no precedent to follow. There's no manual, there's no video," Corpus Christi City Manager Peter Zanoni told the City Council in March, when local leaders first acknowledged that disaster could be imminent.

Plans presented Tuesday would formally prohibit watering lawns, washing cars and filling residential swimming pools. The plans proposed a $500 fine and misdemeanor for a first violation and suspension of water service for a second. Water service could also be suspended for users that exceed their allotted water amount for more than a month.

How will the water emergency affect chemical plants and refineries?

This is the elephant in the room.

"Industry simply cannot compete long-term without reliable water resources," said Kara Rivas — a spokesperson for Flint Hills Resources, which supplies jet fuel to Texas airports from its Corpus Christi refinery — at a contentious City Council meeting last year. "This would force the shutdown of at least some aspects of our operations."

If extreme drought conditions persist, the industrial water users could suck the reservoirs dry in a year. But the city, in theory, would never let it get to that point, experts say. It would likely shut the large spigots to the industrial users and face their lawyers in court before it allowed the 500,000 residents of the Coastal Bend to be left without drinking water.

More

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I lived in Corpus Christi for about 2 years right out of college. Very lovely city right on the gulf. What I remember about water was that one year we had a hurricane basically stop about 150 miles off the coast. The rain was biblical. Our radio station manager assigned a piece of electronic equipment to each of us and said that when, not if, we were blown off the air, to keep that piece of equipment safe and dry and to return when the storm ended and we'd reassemble the station at that time. But the storm stopped so we never had to evacuate. Lots of rain, wow.

On a separate but related issue, I live now further north in Central Texas and my city is now considering the sale of land for a couple of companies to build data centers. At our city council meeting last week, there was a lot of discussion about this very issue....how some industries just suck the water supply completely dry. Apparently, a data center, with its need for constant cooling, is one of those industries.
 
On a separate but related issue, I live now further north in Central Texas and my city is now considering the sale of land for a couple of companies to build data centers. At our city council meeting last week, there was a lot of discussion about this very issue....how some industries just suck the water supply completely dry. Apparently, a data center, with its need for constant cooling, is one of those industries.

If they built the data centers on the dark side of the moon, no cooling needed :tap:
 
I'm scared they're going to use up the Great Lakes for data centers.
Or use up the lakes in Minnesota.

"Assuming" the government would force the issue, either/both would be the biggest eminent domain (land stealing, or in this case, water stealing) in history :furious: :mad: :apost: :ban:


😭


:pray: :pray: :amen: :amen: :thankyou: :thankyou:
 
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