New Wildfires in California

The fires are many, many, many miles from Oceanside, Chic. Rest easy.
Star, I often read posts on my tablet, but prefer to respond when I can use the computer. I can't find the post now where you said you are alright but hesitated to respond. I am so glad you and your family are okay. I can't keep track of where everyone lives, so didn't realize you were in Cali. I will continue to pray for your safety, that of residents in the path, those who have lost everything, those who are donating and helping and of course, for the safety of all heroic firefighters who are fighting these awful fires @Ronni
 
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was the palisades never a good spot to build?

See post #293

The 20th century was one of the wettest in 4,000 years for the area. No one knew that when LA’s population was growing astronomically in a time of abnormally high amounts of rainfall. The research in post 293 was published in 1996.

The climate has normalized for the area back to frequent drought years, and flora that evolved over hundreds of thousands of years to burn is doing its thing. Wildfires are a natural occurrence in this ecosystem.
 
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What I want to know is where are all these displaced residents staying? There are over a hundred thousand of them and some don't have cars anymore to get around because they lost them in the fires or abandoned them. I know some are in shelters, but I really only saw on the news about one shelter that could hold 200 people.
 
Why don't we desalinate ocean water in California?


California regulators last year rejected a $1.4 billion desalination plant in Huntington Beach, citing not only the costs of the water but the hazards to marine life and risks associated with sea level rise and flooding.Jan 27, 2023
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I was wondering about this, so I looked it up.
There's gotta be a better way.

**apologies if already mentioned
 
Yes, I have the same question. All motels / hotels must be full.
And apparently charging very high prices. This was said by a well-known LA podcaster. He is one of those who is living in a hotel and admits he can afford it. His biggest complaint was the folks who are not being cohesive as Americans in a time of crisis. United we stand.
 
AI generated fake video. :cool:
Why do you think so?

That clip was used on a few TV news outlets. The sea in that area was reported to be unusually calm for the few days those planes could be used. Reporters said that was due to direction of the winds, and, of course, there wasn't much traffic and other human activity.

I don't think it's AI generated.
 
Why don't we desalinate ocean water in California?


California regulators last year rejected a $1.4 billion desalination plant in Huntington Beach, citing not only the costs of the water but the hazards to marine life and risks associated with sea level rise and flooding.Jan 27, 2023
-----------------------------------------

I was wondering about this, so I looked it up.
There's gotta be a better way.

**apologies if already mentioned
It's mainly the cost. I bet they're rethinking that now, after a low estimate of $275 billion in losses so far....the costliest wildfire in Calif.

A desalination plant was approved back in 2015, but there was the question of how it would draw in water. State regulators wanted the intake built below the seafloor, to make sure it didn’t suck up fish and their eggs, but when a study said building that type of intake would cost too much, the plant was un-approved.

Also costly is modernizing and expanding the current system of aqueducts and canals, better forest and flora management, and improved city planning. But all of those 3 combined would absolutely be cheaper than the final tally when this fire is done.
 
Perth Western Australia has had desalinated water for some years now. It cost ~$AUD 390,000,000 and produces about 46 billion litres per year.
$AUD 2.8 billion is allocated for a second desalination plant.
 


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