Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumAfter 40 Years Of Desalination FA, Corpus Christi Faces Drought-Induced FO - Water System Depletion Looms In 2027
The imminent depletion of water supplies in Corpus Christi threatens to cut off the flow of jet fuel to Texas airports and other oil exports from one of the nations largest petroleum ports, triggering potential shockwaves through energy markets in Texas and beyond. Without significant rainfall, Corpus Christi is headed for a water emergency within months and total depletion of the system next year, according to the citys website. The impacts are going to be felt tremendously through the state, if not internationally, said Sean Strawbridge, former CEO of the Port of Corpus Christi Authority, the nations top port for crude oil exports, in a 40-minute interview Thursday. This should be no surprise to anybody. We were talking about this over a decade ago.
Other current and former officials, alarmed at what they call a lack of preparations, have suggested the potential for an economic crisis involving mass layoffs, disruption of fuel supplies and billions of dollars in emergency spending to avoid an evacuation of the city. Strawbridge, who now lives in Houston, laid the blame on city leaders, citing their lack of experience, their lack of knowledge, their lack of recognizing the risks in a bumbling, decade-long endeavor to build a large seawater desalination plant that would veer the region off its clear course towards calamity.Theyve found themselves in quite a dire predicament as a result of those poor decisions, Strawbridge said. Time is up. A spokesperson for Corpus Christi Mayor Paulette Guajardo declined interview requests, citing prior commitments, and did not respond to follow-up questions. City manager Peter Zanoni also did not respond to questions. Instead, Corpus Christi public information manager Robert Gonzales provided an emailed statement.
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Zanoni, the city manager who has overseen Corpus Christis descent toward water depletion since 2019 and receives a $400,000 salary, rejected notions of imminent disaster during a press conference Thursday, when Lake Corpus Christi, one of the citys main reservoirs, dropped below 10 percent. The press conference took place three days after Inside Climate News asked the city for comment about the impending water crisis.I think we are going to get through this, he told TV cameras as he stood before the dwindling remnants of the lake. We have confidence in what were doing. This is no time to panic.
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James Dodson, a former director of Corpus Christis water department who retired this year as a private consultant and was involved in several of those projects, disagreed. He said residents and officials are crazy not to be panicking. Its the very worst scenario that Ive ever seen, said Dodson, who oversaw a historic expansion of Corpus Christis water supply in the 1990s. Its going to be an economic disaster. For years, he said, the city dismissed repeated opportunities to develop groundwater import projects as it maintained a singular and fruitless focus on desalination. That includes projects that the city only recently scrambled to get started. Dodson doubted any will materialize in time.
Theyve been kicking the can down the road for a long time and theyve finally run out of road, said a current regional water official who requested anonymity to preserve a working relationship with the city. Theyre looking at projects to do that they should have done five, six, seven years ago.
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https://insideclimatenews.org/news/08032026/after-a-decade-of-missteps-a-texas-city-careens-toward-a-water-shortage-catastrophe/
jmbar2
(7,940 posts)I didn't understand how challenging desalinization projects are until this article. Really great post - thank you!
marble falls
(71,638 posts)surfered
(13,008 posts)The city does get 95 MGD of water from an inter basin pipeline from two rivers to the east; however the city uses about 125 MGD.
The majority of the water is not consumed by residents, but by industrial users (mostly oil refineries).
Wonder Why
(6,837 posts)rights separately. You can sell the land and keep the water rights just like you can keep the oil rights. The buyer, without water rights, can't drill a well and the water rights owner can pump out all the water he wants even if it affects neighbors.
So every city has to buy more and more underground water as it grows. This happened in the '70s to El Paso and it got so expensive, they decided to pump it from New Mexico. However, there, all water is controlled by the state engineer and he denied their permit. The Supreme Court ruled in favor of NM.
Texas has a stupid system and they are too stupid to fix it.
wolfie001
(7,538 posts)....those fuckers think in terms of the apocalypse. End times. Jeeby weeby coming down to slay all sinners. Basically, they're all weirdos. I have many family who ascribe by that stupid as fuck thinking. I don't talk to them. Maybe a couple of texts per years. Peter Zanoni is a committed rePUKE. I guess the next Democratic President will send funds to help those bigots and then they'll take all the credit for fixing their problem. Over and over again. Madness
CrispyQ
(40,892 posts)That's what my trumper relatives would say. Even the ones that live in Texas, probably.
Your relatives must be my neighbor?