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asiliveandbreathe

(8,203 posts)
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 11:19 AM Dec 2022

Move Water By Pipeline From The Atchafalaya River West To Arizona

In this proposal, no water would be taken from the main channel of the Mississippi. As of Dec. 19, 1.43 million gals/sec of Atchafalaya River water was simply going into the Gulf of Mexico without producing electricity or supporting commercial shipping. Taking just 100,000 gals/sec (7%) of this water would fill Lakes Powell and Mead to 50% capacity in one year and 9 months. The project would save on construction costs by using an existing facility – the Old River Control Complex just south of Vidalia, Louisiana, where the Army Corps of Engineers diverts 30% of the downflow of the Mississippi to prevent flooding in New Orleans.


This undertaking would build a 1,400 mile series of pipelines, open channels, tunnels and pumping stations (similar to the California, Los Angeles, Colorado River Aqueducts and the Central Arizona Project). It could be built in a year, along interstate highway rights-of-way, using huge earth-moving machines like those employed in Holland for their canal systems.


There is historical precedent for building systems like this project with deliberate, urgent, speed. In less than a year between 1942 and 1943, the RFC financed and built two pipelines of similar length, 1,200 and 1,400 miles, to carry crude oil from Texas oil fields to the East Coast. These pipelines rescued the entire East Coast industrial oil refining system and won World War II for the Allies.

All U.S. senators and representatives, regardless of party, should get behind HR 3339 and vote for the National Infrastructure Bank. Map at link..


https://www.desertsun.com/story/opinion/contributors/valley-voice/2022/12/25/move-water-by-pipeline-from-the-atchafalaya-river-in-louisiana-to-west/69745899007/

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Move Water By Pipeline From The Atchafalaya River West To Arizona (Original Post) asiliveandbreathe Dec 2022 OP
Interesting idea Blues Heron Dec 2022 #1
What is the cost of not doing SOMETHING - we are in dire straights in the asiliveandbreathe Dec 2022 #4
That was then. mahatmakanejeeves Dec 2022 #2
Seems the author of article has thought through some of the costs.. asiliveandbreathe Dec 2022 #6
What I'm getting at is, back in the middle of WWII, no one wasted time with mahatmakanejeeves Dec 2022 #16
Well, you make a good point..been there, done that.. asiliveandbreathe Dec 2022 #18
No, just no. It's a bandaid fix. It will start at 7% and Phoenix61 Dec 2022 #3
AZ and other states cannot afford to let the Dams go dry..ALL proposals on deck .. asiliveandbreathe Dec 2022 #5
Politicians from the southwest aren't known for their Eyeball_Kid Dec 2022 #8
We have a new sheriff in town, (Phoenix), who is a life long resident..loves her state..surely asiliveandbreathe Dec 2022 #14
This is the result of unchecked development. Phoenix61 Dec 2022 #25
A few decades ago, Arizona petitioned Illinois and Chicago to siphon off Eyeball_Kid Dec 2022 #7
A few decades ago..hummm..the map at the article seems too good to be true.. asiliveandbreathe Dec 2022 #10
mostly cuz it's forbidden by treaty w canada tho. mopinko Dec 2022 #20
This message was self-deleted by its author Chin music Dec 2022 #30
So... 2naSalit Dec 2022 #9
I hope my email to the authors will shed more light on the subject.. asiliveandbreathe Dec 2022 #11
I don't like their creds at all... 2naSalit Dec 2022 #21
Right there with you. Phoenix61 Dec 2022 #27
I used to... 2naSalit Dec 2022 #28
The more they get the more they will spend. Overspending is what got them were they are today! Chainfire Dec 2022 #12
I agree..but, who is going to stop the building..have you seen West of Phoenix.. asiliveandbreathe Dec 2022 #13
We see the same thing here in Florida. Chainfire Dec 2022 #15
The building within AZ is so shortsighted..I keep asking where are we getting the water?? asiliveandbreathe Dec 2022 #26
Water prefers to run downhill. bluedigger Dec 2022 #17
I love all the comments..will surely include in my letter to the authors at the asiliveandbreathe Dec 2022 #19
If a lunkhead like me can raise objections, imagine what an engineer could come up with. bluedigger Dec 2022 #22
Feast your eyes on what Ducey proposed.. asiliveandbreathe Dec 2022 #24
probably be cheaper to ship the more recent (less than 50 years?) back home Kali Dec 2022 #23
Phew. Ptah Dec 2022 #29
... Kali Dec 2022 #31

asiliveandbreathe

(8,203 posts)
4. What is the cost of not doing SOMETHING - we are in dire straights in the
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 11:57 AM
Dec 2022

west..waiting for a desalination plant to be built, along with ALL the pipeline from the Sea of Cortez, which seems to be all the buzz, this could be an interim solution ..

Reading the article gives me hope that someone is at least trying...for sure, politics and money will play into any solutions..2 for me, 1 for you..if you know what I mean..lining pockets seems to be always in the equation..

From article..

The National Infrastructure Bank (NIB) set out in House Resolution 3339 would provide $5 trillion in low-cost loans for a broad range of public infrastructure projects – including massive water systems – without the need for increasing taxes or any deficit budget spending. NIB is prepared to invest up to $400 billion to bring new water to the Colorado River and the Southwest. One possibility would be to divert water from the Atchafalaya River in Louisiana through Louisiana, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and up to the Glen Canyon Dam. Will Texass and Louisiana cooperate...

mahatmakanejeeves

(57,377 posts)
2. That was then.
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 11:47 AM
Dec 2022

This is now.

It could be built in a year, along interstate highway rights-of-way, using huge earth-moving machines like those employed in Holland for their canal systems.


There is historical precedent for building systems like this project with deliberate, urgent, speed. In less than a year between 1942 and 1943, the RFC financed and built two pipelines of similar length, 1,200 and 1,400 miles, to carry crude oil from Texas oil fields to the East Coast.

asiliveandbreathe

(8,203 posts)
6. Seems the author of article has thought through some of the costs..
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 12:02 PM
Dec 2022

From article..

The National Infrastructure Bank (NIB) set out in House Resolution 3339 would provide $5 trillion in low-cost loans for a broad range of public infrastructure projects – including massive water systems – without the need for increasing taxes or any deficit budget spending. NIB is prepared to invest up to $400 billion to bring new water to the Colorado River and the Southwest. One possibility would be to divert water from the Atchafalaya River in Louisiana through Louisiana, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and up to the Glen Canyon Dam. Will Texass and Louisiana cooperate..

mahatmakanejeeves

(57,377 posts)
16. What I'm getting at is, back in the middle of WWII, no one wasted time with
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 01:12 PM
Dec 2022

environmental impact studies. We do that now. They take time. Lots of time. You're not going to get a 1,400 mile canal without one.

No self-respecting government regulatory agency will even decide on which sheet cake to buy at Costco for a retirement party without forming a committee to look into it.

asiliveandbreathe

(8,203 posts)
18. Well, you make a good point..been there, done that..
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 01:29 PM
Dec 2022

which sheet cake to buy at Costco for a retirement party without forming a committee to look into it.

I am sure, if this is being debated, self-respecting government regulatory agency, WILL sit at the table..can we also have the oversight committee involved..looking at the map at link, will need environment, and state govts approval..(TX, )..

Involve EPA, D of Transportation, Finance, Congress HR3339, state Agencies..huge task, but will be worth it!!

Phoenix61

(17,000 posts)
3. No, just no. It's a bandaid fix. It will start at 7% and
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 11:48 AM
Dec 2022

just keep going. Since there won’t be a lack of water there won’t be any reason to limit growth.

asiliveandbreathe

(8,203 posts)
5. AZ and other states cannot afford to let the Dams go dry..ALL proposals on deck ..
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 12:00 PM
Dec 2022

Can we wait for building the desalination plant..I hear 10 years..puff AZ..so without a solution what shall we do??..Dunno..

Eyeball_Kid

(7,430 posts)
8. Politicians from the southwest aren't known for their
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 12:24 PM
Dec 2022

long-term policy plans. Desalination plants should have been built 40 years ago. But, oh.. it's more important to cut taxes on the wealthy, yeah?

asiliveandbreathe

(8,203 posts)
14. We have a new sheriff in town, (Phoenix), who is a life long resident..loves her state..surely
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 12:44 PM
Dec 2022

she will attack this problem along with others..at the Fed level as well..the cost of doing nothing is too high for all of us..Gov-elect Katie Hobbs's plate is full for sure..

I am a look FORWARD kind of person..we can't get any more stuck on doing NOTHING..because of NOTHING being done in the past..if you live in AZ you know how bad it is..

Phoenix61

(17,000 posts)
25. This is the result of unchecked development.
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 03:09 PM
Dec 2022

Stop building in environments that cannot sustain human development. As the climate heats it’s only going to get worse.

Eyeball_Kid

(7,430 posts)
7. A few decades ago, Arizona petitioned Illinois and Chicago to siphon off
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 12:19 PM
Dec 2022

Lake Michigan water and send it via pipeline to Arizona. The midwest's answer? Eh.. no.

asiliveandbreathe

(8,203 posts)
10. A few decades ago..hummm..the map at the article seems too good to be true..
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 12:30 PM
Dec 2022

for sure..BUT, viable, when considering ALL other aspects of the idea..I have always been one to throw ideas at the wall and see what sticks..the discussion and debate needs high priority..for all of the West..I have read about the B$ desalination plant from the Sea of Cortez..Ducey proposal, or raise the dam..proposal..time is of the essence..

mopinko

(70,070 posts)
20. mostly cuz it's forbidden by treaty w canada tho.
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 01:39 PM
Dec 2022

chgo would love to be pumping lake mich water all over. big bucks.
but it requires all the great lakes states and canada to approve such a thing.

Response to Eyeball_Kid (Reply #7)

2naSalit

(86,508 posts)
9. So...
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 12:25 PM
Dec 2022
As of Dec. 19, 1.43 million gals/sec of Atchafalaya River water was simply going into the Gulf of Mexico without producing electricity or supporting commercial shipping.


What I want to know is, has the author actually considered the environmental impacts of such a project?

This sounds like a desperate appeal to, once again, frantically go full scream ahead with a massive project that hardly considers the long term impacts where the temporary quick fix will cause more harm than it is supposed to be relieving.

Desperate thinking is rarely a good way to solve a problem of our own creation which we didn't put much forethought into in the first place.

No, just NO. It's the same desperate thinking that proposes piping water from the great lakes.

asiliveandbreathe

(8,203 posts)
11. I hope my email to the authors will shed more light on the subject..
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 12:33 PM
Dec 2022

All proposals on the table..waiting is NOT an option..

Of course ALL aspects of the environment needs to be discussed..but..I like the authors creds..

Alphecca Muttardy is a Macroeconomist with the Coalition for a National Infrastructure Bank (NIBCoalition.com), and 25 year veteran of the International Monetary Fund. Don Siefkes is an MIT-trained chemical engineer who represents the Coalition for the NIB in the San Francisco Bay Area. Their emails are, respectively, amuttardy@gmail.com and donsiefkes@aol.com.

2naSalit

(86,508 posts)
21. I don't like their creds at all...
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 01:40 PM
Dec 2022

Not if they are the only ones heading this. I don't see where a chemical engineer and macroeconomist are trained in observing the environmental impacts.

The environmental impacts will outweigh the desired effect. People need to realize that major changes in values and behavior need to take place and fast in order for our species, and too many others, to survive much longer.

Once again, commerce takes the front seat and actual biological survival is an afterthought. Once again, it's all about the Benjamins.

Arizona is mostly desert so I don't have much empathy if the water doesn't hold up. Taking water from one environment to one so different is going to be a problem in time. It already is, millions of people living there under the false pretense that they can control nature to facilitate their unnatural lifestyles insisting on living like they it's a grassland.

Money first as a path to anything will fail.

Phoenix61

(17,000 posts)
27. Right there with you.
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 03:21 PM
Dec 2022

The water shortage issue didn’t happen overnight. They saw it coming yet continued to build.

2naSalit

(86,508 posts)
28. I used to...
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 04:10 PM
Dec 2022

Pass through and stay in Phoenix back in the day, last time I there until 2019, the I-10 was finally finished all the way out to Buckeye. When I flew in to visit friends in 2019, I was shocked to see that it had grown to the size of LA from which I had just departed. My friends live in a suburb that used to be sage desert way out of town, now it's all freeways and development and you can drive for over an hour just to get to the airport, one of three. There was only only when I had been there in earlier years.

Not sustainable but too many think we are on this planet to control its natural environment for or luxury. Corrections will be made by nature and they won't be pretty.

Chainfire

(17,526 posts)
12. The more they get the more they will spend. Overspending is what got them were they are today!
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 12:35 PM
Dec 2022

Arizona needs to live within Arizonan resources. Running out of water is a sign that perhaps you are overpopulated or over-farmed or both. There was a reason that the place was named Arizona and not Oasis.

asiliveandbreathe

(8,203 posts)
13. I agree..but, who is going to stop the building..have you seen West of Phoenix..
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 12:39 PM
Dec 2022

and East to AJ??..do we tell the Saudis to stop irrigating their alfalfa???..Totally agree to that..Unless they, Saudis, plan to help solve the solution..they can invest in LIV..(golf)..or Jared , $2B..or Twitter..but, I digress...business as usual is not an option..

Chainfire

(17,526 posts)
15. We see the same thing here in Florida.
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 01:01 PM
Dec 2022

Our population grew nearly 2% this year! That is unsustainable, especially when the people go to places that do not have the natural resources to support the population. Miami would love to pipe water from the rural areas of N. Fla. where that resource is currently plentiful, and eventually they will get what they want because developers lead and the Republican government follows.

It is not just the heavily urban areas that are growing here either. Our small cities are becoming big cities and are losing the very qualities that have drawn the people to them. Only the weather remains... Of course, we have surprise weather that people find unpleasant too!

Florida and Arizona share a common trait that is telling. The majority of their population were born in other states. A big problem with both states is growth. Less than 40% of Florida's population was born here. (perhaps we need to build a wall) If Florida's native New Yorkers went home we would lose nearly 10% of our population!

I contend that the problem is not the lack of water, so providing more water won't fix it.

asiliveandbreathe

(8,203 posts)
26. The building within AZ is so shortsighted..I keep asking where are we getting the water??
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 03:19 PM
Dec 2022

..I will continue to follow up..several years ago I went to our city and state agencies, when the golf course decided to drill a new well..I went all the way to a Goergia well digger for info...I shared it with them..of course, with hands in so many pockets, it was a "fall deaf on ears moment"..at least the course cemented the 5 ponds, as we were losing water through the ground...

My letter to one of the authors..

Just a curious AZ citizen who finds your idea interesting. Several of us at our social network have been discussing your article..overall, it is the environmental impact, cost and oversight to prevent over runs.., and how to tackle the issue of the Continental Divide..just some of the comments within our debate..

Of course, we have naysayers..any proposal of this magnitude will surely have pushback..this pushback is often due to a lack of information. Congress, EPA..and any other Fed state agency who need to be petitioned..HR 3339..the more information the better..

AZ and the West cannot wait, desalination plant..pipe from Sea of Cortez, or raise the height of one of the dams..

Thank you for your article..hope to read more, as we surely do need to advance proposals..AZ and the Western states don't have time to waste.

bluedigger

(17,086 posts)
17. Water prefers to run downhill.
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 01:21 PM
Dec 2022

It seems like pumping 100,000 gal/sec from near sea level over the Continental Divide would be a pretty big lift.

asiliveandbreathe

(8,203 posts)
19. I love all the comments..will surely include in my letter to the authors at the
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 01:34 PM
Dec 2022

link..I hope everyone gets involved with this crisis..yes, crisis,,and we hear more about the debate..looking at the map at link..ddo you suppose the proposal is south far enough to avoid blasting??..

bluedigger

(17,086 posts)
22. If a lunkhead like me can raise objections, imagine what an engineer could come up with.
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 02:08 PM
Dec 2022

I would expect blasting would be necessary in many, many places along the route. I-70 crosses the Divide in NM at over 7,200' AMSL. It just looks flat. The entire route would have to be surveyed for below ground impact to cultural resources, excepting those stretches already studied for highway construction, but archaeologists work for peanuts. (More an issue of time than money there.) I'd like to see a cost comparison to desalinization plants on the West Coast. Something needs to be considered certainly, as we are running out of water to ship to the flatlanders in Phoenix from the West Slope.

asiliveandbreathe

(8,203 posts)
24. Feast your eyes on what Ducey proposed..
Wed Dec 28, 2022, 03:04 PM
Dec 2022
https://www.enr.com/articles/55659-arizona-advances-55b-mexico-desalination-plant-proposal#:~:text=Arizona%20officials%20voted%20to%20advance%20a%20%245.5-billion%20plan,method%20of%20implementation%20threatens%20to%20derail%20the%20proposal.

Arizona officials voted to advance a $5.5-billion plan to build a water desalination plant in Mexico, as well as a 200-mile pipeline and associated infrastructure as part of a state effort to address its drought-driven water uncertainty. But growing controversy around the plan and the method of implementation threatens to derail the proposal. Map at link..


NO lunkhead..afterall, Pats fan heah, good company..I would call you a THINKER..we need the EPA, congress involved..of course, MUST study all aspects of proposal..cost comparison?? How dare you.. of course cost runs..I want oversight as well..we are in a crisis..requires all hands on deck..
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