Our nitrates are high, they are not 40-80 ppm high though.This doesn’t seem great…EPA safe drinking levels are 5 ppm. This testing looks like 40-80.
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Our nitrates are high, they are not 40-80 ppm high though.This doesn’t seem great…EPA safe drinking levels are 5 ppm. This testing looks like 40-80.
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The MCL standard for nitrate-nitrogen is 10 ppm, water treatment plants are using certified lab tested samples for their measurements not hobby aquarium kits, and it's not the same thing as fecal matter in the water. There are a lot of problems with nitrates in our drinking water but it doesn't excuse completely false alarmist posts like this one. The levels are nowhere close to 40 or 80 ppm in our drinking water.This doesn’t seem great…EPA safe drinking levels are 5 ppm. This testing looks like 40-80.
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True, NO3 ppm greater than 25 ppm aren't that common even at the field tile exit to a stream. Also, don't expect this to just go away within a month. SE MN differs very little from the Raccoon and Des Moines watersheds. Here's some water nerd insights.The MCL standard for nitrate-nitrogen is 10 ppm, water treatment plants are using certified lab tested samples for their measurements not hobby aquarium kits, and it's not the same thing as fecal matter in the water. There are a lot of problems with nitrates in our drinking water but it doesn't excuse completely false alarmist posts like this one. The levels are nowhere close to 40 or 80 ppm in our drinking water.
That question has been on my mind. They've lured a lot of water usage here, but have they built the necessary infrastructure to support that?
6% of daily capacity is 6% of daily capacity.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.
Most of this right now is because of high nitrates in rivers, lakes and reservoirs, that the cities are sourcing their water from, but another huge issue is starting to pop up and is going to ruin a lot more peoples water.
With Iowa's Karst topography, more and more of the pollutants are making or going to make their way into the ground water and aquafers. This is a huge issue and if we don't do something very soon everyone's water is going to be unfit.
Most counties now recommend water testing every year, because wells are starting to show up polluted. This is a major concern considering we are talking both private and public water sources all over the state.
Its time to realize just because hog **** is less concentrated it is still not healthy, because all that happens is because it is less concentrated way more is applied in order to reach the same concentration levels as chemicals. And last I checked no one is drinking glasses of hog ****, because its "organic". The amount of hog **** spread across Iowa is insane. Hogs produce way more waste than humans. I realize there is a study that compares waste water from humans and says that humans produce more, but that is just ingenuous because it includes gray water etc, like showers, hand washing, dish washing and other non waste black water. Hogs produce way more waste per hog and we have more than 10 times the amount of hogs in Iowa. I actually had the numbers somewhere, but cant find it right now. If I remember right its like 11 times the amount of crap from one hog than one human per day.
Think of this, what would the state be like if we had 10 times the people, a couple hundred million, think of the waste in the state, now think of if we just dumped that waste on the ground with no treatment, like we do hog ****. That is the equivalent of 30-50 million hogs amount of waste in the state we have.
Its insane, I get it we all love our bacon, but there has to be a limit. We cant produce the entire worlds amount of pork in just Iowa. Enough is enough. Let China produce and pollute their country, we dont need to provide them with all their pork and pollute ours.
Yes, I know there are some hog farmers and other farmers that spread this **** on the land like its frosting, here that are going to be pissed about this, but it is the truth, sorry.
Pretty sure DDG has a strong partnership with Microsoft. Just because it's hosted in AWS doesn't mean its not hitting other companies data centers.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.
6% of daily capacity is 6% of daily capacity.
The problem is, when they were running at 108% demand vs capacity last week, even magically wiping data centers completely out of existence and zeroed out their water usage, you would have still had demand over 100% of what they could produce below the EPA limit.
Stuff like that happens all over the country.The idea that someone wants or needs to water their lawn to make it more difficult for everyone else in the metro to get clean, better drinking water is peak Iowa…
I think last year in July I was going 3 days a week with a few random runs scattered in to hit certain spots. I have half an acre and it typically runs for 3 hours.How often do people usually water their lawns in Iowa? When I lived in Texas I watered 3 days a week. I would think once a week would be enough in Central Iowa. I have no idea. I live in the country and never water my lawn.
I think we're having two different valid discussions. One about long-term issues, and one about avoiding an immediate situation.And what % is each individual homeowner, commercial property, or splash pad that was forced to shut off?
You're making an apples and oranges comparison when there are far more of those than there are data centers. The data centers are using a disproportionate amount of water, and in a time when others are forced to scale back, it's not great for them to still be using whatever they want.
When I lived in the city - neverHow often do people usually water their lawns in Iowa? When I lived in Texas I watered 3 days a week. I would think once a week would be enough in Central Iowa. I have no idea. I live in the country and never water my lawn.
Agreed. Tell that to the manager of every office park, motel property, dining establishment, shopping center, warehouse zone and outward facing business in the metro.When I lived in the city - never
Now in the country - also never
Watering a lawn is a waste of resources. It will go dormant and then spring back when conditions improve. Magic!