Ankeny water ban

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I live in Ankeny and I'm not grumbling at my neighbor. I'm grumbling at DM Water Works and the farmers upstream who are preventing us from turning on our hose.

It just rained another 0.6 inch this morning (approximately 3 inches of rain in the last 5 or 6 days) and there's still a water ban in place.

It's going to be 107 degree heat index this weekend and my grandkids can't go to the splash pads or even play on the slip and slide in their back yard.

I know there are lots bigger problems to worry about these days. Just frustrating.
The ban isn't because of lack of water, it's about what's in the water.
 
DuckDuckGo uses Amazon servers and Google isn't present in Des Moines' footprint, so I've wasted no CIWW water here. Keep trying those gotchas though. You'll embarrass someone someday.
Sorry, misunderstood what you were saying. Regardless, the point is we have all made data centers a giant priority, and their demand is huge. These things are heavily competitive and backed politically with some pretty heavy incentives.

This is like the smoking ban in Iowa where casinos get an exception.
 
DuckDuckGo uses Amazon servers and Google isn't present in Des Moines' footprint, so I've wasted no CIWW water here. Keep trying those gotchas though. You'll embarrass someone someday.
Isn't there a massive Google Data Center over in WDM? Or is it Microsoft?

Either way - the percentage of water the data centers use isn't the issue.
 
Isn't there a massive Google Data Center over in WDM? Or is it Microsoft?

Either way - the percentage of water the data centers use isn't the issue.
Apple in Waukee? Microsoft has a couple farms at least along the Raccoon in West Des Moines. Meta is a HUGE user near Bondurant. Google has a large data farm near Council Bluffs. That's the nearest I'm aware of.

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DuckDuckGo uses Amazon servers and Google isn't present in Des Moines' footprint, so I've wasted no CIWW water here. Keep trying those gotchas though. You'll embarrass someone someday.
Soon to be in CR though. In fact CR has a second water treatment facility nearly dedicated to the existing water dependent industries (ADM, Red Star, Cargill and a paper company) with a couple of data centers going in right now as well.
 
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Apple in Waukee? Microsoft has a couple farms at least along the Raccoon in West Des Moines. Meta is a HUGE user near Bondurant. Google has a large data farm near Council Bluffs. That's the nearest I'm aware of.

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The one I'm thinking of is Microsoft off of Grand and 88th.
 
I live in Ankeny and I'm not grumbling at my neighbor. I'm grumbling at DM Water Works and the farmers upstream who are preventing us from turning on our hose.

It just rained another 0.6 inch this morning (approximately 3 inches of rain in the last 5 or 6 days) and there's still a water ban in place.

It's going to be 107 degree heat index this weekend and my grandkids can't go to the splash pads or even play on the slip and slide in their back yard.

I know there are lots bigger problems to worry about these days. Just frustrating.
The Prairie Ridge splash pad is open.
 
The ban isn't because of lack of water, it's about what's in the water.
I know. That's why I said in an earlier post that I was grumbling at the DM Waterworks and the farmers who live upstream from Ankeny.
 
Nothing comes close to stressing production capacity like summer irrigation.


Q: Are data centers being asked to reduce water usage?
A: No. Records show that data centers use 2-6% of the system capacity versus outdoor water usage
which composes 40% or more of our system capacity during peak watering season.
 
Nothing comes close to stressing production capacity like summer irrigation.


Q: Are data centers being asked to reduce water usage?
A: No. Records show that data centers use 2-6% of the system capacity versus outdoor water usage
which composes 40% or more of our system capacity during peak watering season.
Yeah most data centers use a **** ton of water, but are on a closed loop.
 
Keep using ethanol so we can grow more and more corn...makes sense.:eek:;):cool:
I am curious what other areas/states do differently for water. Ilinois, other areas of Iowa, etc use lots of fertlizer and have crops but they don't seem to have the same problem. They grow lots of corn and have drainage tile just like we do.
 
Nothing comes close to stressing production capacity like summer irrigation.


Q: Are data centers being asked to reduce water usage?
A: No. Records show that data centers use 2-6% of the system capacity versus outdoor water usage
which composes 40% or more of our system capacity during peak watering season.
The 2% number is obviously winter usage rate. So 6% of 60% suddenly becomes 10%. That doesn't seem trivial. I don't think you need to project this very far before we have the oligarchs owning all the clean, barely potable water.
 
Yeah most data centers use a **** ton of water, but are on a closed loop.
so do they use cooling towers or some other sort of heat exchangers? just curious how they cool the water down in a closed loop system at those places?
 
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