Water wars

china
China has less agricultural land available per person, then Saudi Arabia and started hording food months ago 70% world grain reserves (https://archive.ph/4QIsg) The landmass of China has over 90,000 dams that weren't properly maintained due to Deng Xiaoping's push for rapid development, the Three Gorges dam for example is basically a huge heap of concrete plastered on top of the bedrock, it wasn't anchored with rebar. Each dam is the personal fiefdom of a CCP member, maximising his personal gain by not allowing for example dam overflows to be channeled to his dam. Each rainy season, excess water breaches these dams, flooding the crops: we are heading for food shortages, but the governments of the world don't want to cause panic by alerting us to it. Ammonia prices have risen over 1000% resulting in shortages of urea fertilizer, because the Democrats are doing everyting in their power to prevent oil and natural gas production. Natural gas is the main feedstock for nitrogen. Skipping one cycle of urea fertilizer results in a 40% reduction in corn yield, the main feed for cattle. Large mega farm corporations in the UScouldn't secure enough urea, it wasn't available at any price. Bill Gates acquired vast tracts of land using proxies at auctions, his ownership could eventually not be kept under wraps. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_5iQbwbUJJQ (Recently, China’s property woes and food crisis have become hot topics in the media, but another devastating crisis is silently approaching, which could place an endpoint to China’s story) links to https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2021-12-29/china-s-water-shortage-is-scary-for-india-thailand-vietnam and https://thehill.com/opinion/energy-environment/584266-american-supply-chains-face-a-dire-threat-from-chinas-water Water — or rather, the lack of it in China — may be the factor that pushes U.S. supply chains over the edge. Water is an unseen, vital input for all economic activity. Beyond agriculture, water is critical for power generation, mining, industry and the consumer products we rely on every single day. Like the estimated 3000 gallons of water that it takes to make the typical smartphone. See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kJEs-28CD0E channel adapt2030 Russia stopped weat exports and fertilizer. Ukraine's invasion spiked gas futures by 40% in Europe, electricity prices are around ZAR5.4, ZA's rates is R2.50 on average.

The Global warming issue prevented the hedge funds from investing the nearly $100trillion we need to prevent oil spiking to $140 as with the 2008 crash. Even if they were to invest the funds tomorrow, it will take six years at the earliest for the energy to come on line. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=erONP33MBlA (published Feb 2021, the prediction on food purchasing spree have realized) The largest floods in the last 400 years are beginning to overwhelm China's central cities and surrounding grain growing and agriculture zones. At present 100+ million people will need to evacuate. With the unfathomable losses of food production, China will need to go on a buying spree unlike the world has ever seen for food imports. This will start with rice from Asia and move to every continent. The images in the video will give you an idea of the situation, and the precarious events our world will witness. Gold, silver, cryptocurrency, how will China pay for it all? China didn't build the dams for flood control but electricity generation.

vice news
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aSodjZhdc_c Punjab will be a desert in twewnty years due to bad agricultural practices. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gi3aZLA1tMw Planet a    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHVxNjnNdMY channel stefair https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vB68xvRb2T4 In this Our Changing Climate environmental video essay, we look at our global freshwater crisis. Specifically, the video investigates how droughts in California and the Amazon lead to water scarcity for local residents, wildfires, and changing landscapes. These droughts are now exacerbated by climate change and will only make water scarcity and water access worse if drastic action is not taken to curb climate change. In addition, California's Central Valley shows clearly how agriculture can make droughts even worse by drawing unsustainable levels of water out of surrounding aquifers. The water crisis around the globe and in Central Valley has become so bad that many residents are forced to get bottled water because their tap or well water is contaminated or non-existent. In short, we're facing a global water crisis, a shortage of water that, if addressed through water conservation and climate change can be avoided.

water crises
What the NSA is positioning the chess pieces for. Zaire and especially South Africa could find itself invaded by a Chinese armada. The US and Europe might not have the will to counter this. CIA agent Thomas Cromwell(Steve Bannon) in a recent speech warned that China will invade Africa, displacing everybody towards Europe. This will weaken Europe so much that the US won't have the resolve to counter China.

China has outright annexed disputed land and islands in a test run to see how Europe and the US will react when they eventually annex South Africa. With the complicity of the Chinese government, industrial chemicals are mass produced and shipped to Mexico for the manufacture of narcotics. Trump is signalling to China that the US is getting concerned.

Foreign senate.gov doc on Afghanistan, Asia Pakistan water crises

https://www.fin24.com/Opinion/aquifer-alert-are-we-drilling-to-water-disaster-20171118-2   By the beginning of the 21st century, a third of the world depended on aquifers for drinking water and farming. In China, plagued by drought, the North China Plain aquifer sustains 117 million people in Beijing and surrounding areas. […] aquifers in several of the world’s most productive, heavily populated regions are being drawn down at precipitous rates. "NASA satellites, monitoring changes in Earth’s gravitational pull, found that 21 of the world’s 37 largest aquifers have passed the sustainable tipping point.”

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/2016/08/vanishing-midwest-ogallala-aquifer-drought/

https://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2012/12/121218-grabbing-water-from-future-generations/

https://www.desertsun.com/story/news/environment/2015/12/10/how-unchecked-pumping-sucking-aquifers-dry-india/74634336/ backup(https://archive.is/vxKHj) links to https://archive.is/7pmx1 and wiley.com agupubs and unwater pressrelease and archive unwater 281167

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_8X8tbjqjg Renaissance dam crises from Caspian report

Great plains
https://sdn.unl.edu/bread_basket

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3fKSRW2GZ6Q The central part of the United States has often been called the bread basket of the U.S., but it's really the bread basket of the world. In this video montage, listen to University of Nebraska-Lincoln groundwater geologist Jesse Korus and UNL geologist Matt Joeckel explain that growing plentiful crops relies on the water in the High Plains Aquifer, that underlies nearly all of Nebraska. Strategic Discussions for Nebraska provides an opportunity for the University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Journalism and Mass Communications to interact with our fellow Nebraskans about topics vital to the state's growth and quality of life. We also teach students research and reporting skills and conduct research projects in Nebraska communities to promote more effective communication. www.unl.edu/sdn

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ogallala_Aquifer and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7CxA8PeDhIc The Great Plains is the breadbasket of the world, it will eventually dry up, resulting in famines and wars. The only solution is a cheap Redrok solar links type sun tracking device., enabling the endless recycling of waste and water with greenhouse hydronponics. https://www.worldwater.org/water-data/

USA today
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RjsThobgq7Q In places around the world, supplies of groundwater are rapidly vanishing. As aquifers decline and wells begin to go dry, people are being forced to confront a growing crisis. Much of the planet relies on groundwater. And in places around the world – from the United States to Asia, the Middle East, Africa and Latin America – so much water is pumped from the ground that aquifers are being rapidly depleted and wells are going dry. Groundwater is disappearing beneath cornfields in Kansas, rice paddies in India, asparagus farms in Peru and orange groves in Morocco. As these critical water reserves are pumped beyond their limits, the threats are mounting for people who depend on aquifers to supply agriculture, sustain economies and provide drinking water. In some areas, fields have already turned to dust and farmers are struggling. Climate change is projected to increase the stresses on water supplies, and heated disputes are erupting in places where those with deep wells can keep pumping and leave others with dry wells.

Even as satellite measurements have revealed the problem’s severity on a global scale, many regions have failed to adequately address the problem. Aquifers largely remain unmanaged and unregulated, and water that seeped underground over tens of thousands of years is being gradually used up. In this documentary, USA TODAY and The Desert Sun investigate the consequences of this emerging crisis in several of the world’s hotspots of groundwater depletion. These are stories about people on four continents confronting questions of how to safeguard their aquifers for the future – and in some cases, how to cope as the water runs out.

california
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RsCDe1lJypU California and Arizona may be dry, but Saudi Arabia is drier. Now Saudi companies are competing with farmers in the two states for limited water supplies in the region. The parent company of Saudi Arabia’s largest dairy supplier has acquired more than 4,000 acres of farmland in California over the past two years to grow alfalfa that is sent back to Saudi Arabia. For more on this, earth system and water scientist James Famiglietti, joins ‘News With Ed.

Lithium
https://www.mining-technology.com/features/lithiums-water-problem/ (https://archive.is/wip/xVL2h) ithium mining has become a boom industry as more and more of the metal is needed in electric car batteries. Yet despite being lauded as key material for a renewables revolution, it too has a dark side. Blamed for speeding up desertification around the salt lakes of Latin America’s ‘lithium triangle’, the evaporation techniques used in mining lithium are causing concern. So does lithium have a water problem, and what is being done

links
https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/least-2-iranian-protesters-shot-water-crisis-grows-worst-drought-50-years and archive iran protests https://www.zerohedge.com/economics/mississippi-claims-memphis-stealing-its-groundwater-supreme-court-decide wri.org water risk atlas https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ZwBSjBgMXg arizona https://www.zerohedge.com/weather/record-drought-sizzles-southwest-fears-return-1930s-dust-bowl megadrought southwest global warming Encryption, zerohedge https://www.circleofblue.org/2010/world/coming-era-of-water-scarcity-prompts-global-industrial-transformation/ Pakistan Timber Mafia https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-07-16/world-needs-water-treaty