Got the Message? Water is going to get more expensive as it gets scarce

If you look at the White House Fact Sheet for Climate Change impact and look for “water”  it shows up 20 times.

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Energy and Water are interconnected.  The smart data center people think about the long term water use in their facility as it is going to get scarcer and more expensive

• Energy: “Extreme weather events are affecting energy production and delivery facilities, causing supply disruptions of varying lengths and magnitudes and affecting other infrastructure that depends on energy supply. The frequency and intensity of certain types of extreme weather events are expected to change. Higher summer temperatures will increase electricity use, causing higher summer peak loads, while warmer winters will decrease energy demands for heating. Net electricity use is projected to increase. Changes in water availability, both episodic and long-lasting, will constrain different forms of energy production. In the longer term, sea level rise, extreme storm surge events, and high tides will affect coastal facilities and infrastructure on which many energy systems, markets, and consumers depend. As new investments in energy technologies occur, future energy systems will differ from today’s in uncertain ways. Depending on the character of changes in the energy mix, climate change will introduce new risks as well as new opportunities.” (NCA Highlights: Energy Supply and Use)

• Water: “Climate change affects water demand and the ways water is used within and across regions and economic sectors. The Southwest, Great Plains, and Southeast are particularly vulnerable to changes in water supply and demand. Changes in precipitation and runoff, combined with changes in consumption and withdrawal, have reduced surface and groundwater supplies in many areas. These trends are expected to continue, increasing the likelihood of water shortages for many uses. Increasing flooding risk affects human safety and health, property, infrastructure, economies, and ecology in many basins across the United States… Increasing resilience and enhancing adaptive capacity provide opportunities to strengthen water resources management and plan for climate-change impacts.” (NCA Highlights: Water)

Water tips the use of Power in NSA Utah Data Center

Crawling public records for evidence of data centers being built is common.  Another thing you can do is use public records of utility use.  It is tough to get the amount of power used in public records, but water use is not considered as confidential.  Well, until Salt Lake Tribune reported on the water use of NSA’s Utah Data center.

NSA paying for water it’s not using at Utah Data Center
Records » It could be evidence the data center in Bluffdale is not operating at anticipated capacity.
 
First Published Apr 28 2014 03:10 pm • Last Updated Apr 29 2014 07:30 am

The National Security Agency’s Utah Data Center has been paying for water it’s leaving in the tap.

A review of the data center’s recently released water bill shows that since at least July, the NSA has been paying its mandatory minimum bill. In July, the NSA paid Bluffdale $28,596 for 6.2 million gallons of water.

There are rumors there are problems in the electrical systems in the data center which limit the power used.

The water bill is further evidence the Utah Data Center is not operating at anticipated capacity. The Wall Street Journal reported in October the facility was suffering from electrical problems, delaying full-scale operation. The NSA has refused to discuss the status of the Utah Data Center, even to say if it’s operational.

We’ll see what the water use is in July 2014 for get a year to year usage.

Californian's Know Your Water Rights - A Smart Atlas of Water Governance in CA

Here is a web site to help Californian's understand water in the state.

Understand Water in California

Presenting real-time, interactive visualizations of how we use, manage and understand water in California. By visualizing and promoting water data for the state, we are making it possible to understand our cumulative usage of water and how this effects the many farms, individuals, governments, and businesses that rely on water availablity for healthy economies and ecosystems.

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As the needs of our state shift with the changing demands placed on us by population growth and climate change, we want to give the gift of broad insight and clear communication to the many professionals and concerned citizens who work so hard to protect and deliver one of our most precious resources.

Water is a shared resource; as such, it is managed by the state on behalf of the people. To achieve our interdependent goals of healthy ecosystems, economies, farms and cities, we strive to bring you up-to-date, clear and accurate information to inform your decisions.

Deliveries
 
The water rights section works.
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THE RIGHT TO BEAR KNOWLEDGE

“If you can't measure it, you can't manage it.”

Peter Drucker

The primary challenge with water in California is not its scarcity, but rather how we manage it. Many experts have mutually concluded, that a major first step to improving our management of water is by reforming how we account for it. Whether a lack of adequate statements of diversion for surface and subsurface waters, or the existence of a fine grained environmental monitoring network, it is clear that we could do a better job of recording and measuring. New instruments and institutions are necessary to accomplish this. It is not a question of technology, but one of techniques. The technology is available and affordable, but the institutions and practices of how we measure and document our water resources are not fully mature. We must get control of our understanding of what is in the system at any given point. We owe it to ourselves, our economy, and our ecosystem. This effort benefits all stakeholders.

NSA data center's 1.7 mil daily water use has people's attention

The NSA is suffering from bad PR.  When the folks designed the data center they probably thought who cares about the water use.  Well the media has picked up the latest published numbers and spread the word riding the wave of negative PR.

Microsoft was evil at one.  Google has the issue.  Facebook to an extent and even Apple.  The NSA with its large data center has taken over the position of who in the data center industry is most hated by outsiders.

I wonder when Greenpeace will start protesting the NSA.

    1. NSA data center will use 1.7M gallons of water per day to read your email
      Geek ‎- by Ryan Whitwam ‎- 16 hours ago
      Data centers are notorious for using a lot of power and other resources, but residents of Bluffdale, Utah are a little annoyed by the volume of ...
  1. NSA data center will use 1.7M gallons of water per day to ... - Infowars

    www.infowars.com/nsa-data-center-will-use-1-7m-gallons-of-water-per-...
     
    21 hours ago - What kind of data? Well, this is the NSA so the official answer is, “that's classified. ” More generally, the data center will be processing the ...
  2. NSA Utah Data Center - Serving Our Nation's Intelligence Community

    nsa.gov1.info/utah-data-center/
     
    NSA Utah Data Center: Site plan, technical specs, photos, and map. ... Other supporting facilities include water treatment facilities, chiller plant, power ...
  3. New Utah NSA Center Requires 1.7 Million Gallons Of Water Daily ...

    amresolution.com/.../new-utah-nsa-center-requires-1-7-million-gallons-o...
     
    16 hours ago - More secrets, more water? The NSA data center in Bluffdale could require as many as 1.7 million gallons of water per day to operate and keep ...
  4. Amid Data Controversy, NSA Builds Its Biggest Data Farm : NPR

    www.npr.org › News › US › National Security
     
    Jun 10, 2013 - The Utah Data Center, 26 miles south of Salt Lake City, will begin operations in ... Though the NSA director has said it won't hold data on U.S. citizens, ...the computers will fry without 1.5 million gallons of cooling water a day.
  5. New Utah NSA center requires 1.7M gallons of water daily to operate

    www.blacklistednews.com/_New...NSA_center...water.../M.html
     
    2 days ago - More secrets, more water? The NSA data center in Bluffdale could require as many as 1.7 million gallons of water per day to operate and keep ...
  6. New Utah NSA center requires 1.7M gallons of water daily to ...

    www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=25978926
    4 days ago
    More secrets, more water? The NSA data center in Bluffdale could require as many as 1.7 million gallons of ...
     
  7. Why the NSA put a data center in Utah | The Salt Lake Tribune

    www.sltrib.com/sltrib/politics/56472070.../utah-nsa-data-center.html.csp
     
    Jun 29, 2013 - NSA Bluffdale Center won't gobble up Utah's power supply ... Either of two nearby water districts could provide the data center with what ...
  8. NSA data center will use 1.7M gallons of water per day to cool the ...

    inagist.com/all/357042506178891776/?utm_source=inagist&utm...
     
    9 hours ago - NSA data center will use 1.7M gallons of water per day to cool the collection of servers required to read your email. http://t.co/Sqab1ovJCz by ...

40% change in Flooding in USA by 2100

You may want to rethink the long term flood risks for your data center.

FEMA has a Climate Change report where flooding is discussed.

Download and read the study, "The Impact of Climate Change and Population Growth on the National Flood Insurance Program"

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The national average increase in SFHA by the year 2100 may approximate 40% for riverine areas and coastal areas if shoreline recession is assumed; and 45% for riverine areas and coastal areas if fixed coastlines are assumed.

Fast Company reports on the same study and says the risk is 45%, choosing to emphasize the change if fixed coastlines are assumed.  The number would be 40% if shoreline recession is assumed.

Our Flooded Future, According To FEMA

By 2100, the area of the U.S. at risk for inundation will increase 45%. These maps--from the guys who are going to have to deal with it--show where.