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Daily Features |
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October 25, 2007
No
Backup if Atlanta's Faucets Run Dry
By GREG BLUESTEIN
ATLANTA (AP) - With the South in the
grip of an epic drought and its
largest city holding less than a
90-day supply of water, officials
are scrambling to deal with the
worst-case scenario: What if
Atlanta's faucets really do go dry?
So far, no real backup plan exists.
And there are no quick fixes among
suggested solutions, which include
piping water in from rivers in
neighboring states, building more
regional reservoirs, setting up a
statewide recycling system or even
desalinating water from the Atlantic
Ocean.
"It's amazing that things have come
to this," said Ray Wiedman, owner of
an Atlanta landscaper business.
"Everybody knew the growth was
coming. We haven't had a plan for
all the people coming here?"
Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue seems to
be pinning his hopes on a
two-pronged approach: urging water
conservation and reducing water
flowing out of federally controlled
lakes.
Perdue's office on Friday asked a
Florida federal judge to force the
Army Corps of Engineers to curb the
amount of water draining from
Georgia reservoirs into Alabama and
Florida. And Georgia's environmental
protection director is drafting
proposals for more water
restrictions.
But that may not be enough to stave
off the water crisis. More than a
quarter of the Southeast is covered
by an "exceptional" drought - the
National Weather Service's worst
drought category. The Atlanta area,
with a population of 5 million, is
smack in the middle of the affected
region, which extends like a dark
cloud over most of Tennessee,
Alabama and the northern half of
Georgia, as well as parts of North
and South Carolina, Kentucky and
Virginia.
State officials warn that Lake
Lanier, a 38,000-acre north Georgia
reservoir that supplies more than 3
million residents with water, is
already less than three months from
depletion. Smaller reservoirs are
dropping even lower, forcing local
governments to consider rationing.
State water managers say there is
more water available in the lake's
reserves. But tapping into it would
require the use of barges, emergency
pumps and longer water lines. And
some lawmakers fear if the lake is
drained that low, it may be
impossible to refill.
The Corps, which manages the water
in the region, stresses there's no
reason to think Atlanta will soon
run out of water.
"We're so far away from that,
nobody's doing a contingency plan,"
said Major Daren Payne, the deputy
commander of the Corps' Mobile
office. "Quite frankly, there's
enough water left to last for
months. We've got a serious drought,
there's no doubt about it, anytime
you deplete your entire storage pool
and tap into the reserve."
But, he said, any calls to stockpile
bottled water would be "very
premature."
Still, some academics and
politicians are proposing
contingency plans in case the
situation worsens.
Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin said
the region should explore piping in
additional sources of water -
possibly from the Tennessee or
Savannah rivers. She even suggested
desalinating sea water from
Georgia's Atlantic coast.
"We need to look beyond our
borders," she said.
Former Gov. Roy Barnes, a Democrat
who was defeated in 2002, told
reporters this week that he had
planned to offer grants to fix leaks
that waste millions of gallons of
water each year. He also said he
planned to build three new state
reservoirs in north and west Georgia
to help insulate the state from a
future water crisis. But those plans
died when he left office.
"Los Angeles added 1 million people
without increasing their water
supply," he told reporters. "And if
Los Angeles can do it, I'll tell you
Georgia can."
It seems the idea of building state
reservoirs is gaining steam in the
Legislature as Georgia's battle with
the Corps over federal reservoirs
heats up.
Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle said he favors
building more regional reservoirs
shared by multiple communities to
harness the 50 trillion gallons of
water that fall over Georgia each
year.
"You can see that if we can just
manage the rainfall and utilize that
and make sure that we have abundant
storage for it, we can take care of
our needs well into the future,"
said Cagle, a Republican from
Gainesville, the largest city on
Lake Lanier.
Some academics say Georgia should
start using more "purple water" -
waste water that is partially
treated and can be used for
irrigation, fire fighting and uses
other than drinking. That would
conserve lake water and help
replenish the water-supply system.
Such measures could make Georgia
"drought-proof," said Todd
Rasmussen, a professor of hydrology
and water resources at the
University of Georgia.
"People have got to start thinking
in this direction," said Rasmussen.
"You can't wear out water. It's
clearly an opportunity that needs to
be explored."
The drought has led to extreme
conservation measures.
Virtually all outdoor watering
across was banned across the
northern half of the state,
restaurants were asked to serve
water only at a customer's request
and the governor called on Georgians
to take shorter showers. Carol
Couch, the state's environmental
director, said it's "very likely"
new limits on water usage are
needed.
Scorching summer temperatures and a
drier-than-normal hurricane season
fueled the drought. State
climatologist David Stooksbury said
it will take months of above average
rainfall to replenish the system. He
is now predicting the drought could
worsen if "La Nina" conditions
develop and bring little winter
rainfall.
"I tell people we need 40 days and
40 nights," he said with a sigh.
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On the Net:
Georgia Drought: http://www.georgiadrought.org
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