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Six weeks from water disaster
#1
by MARK KENNY, POLITICAL EDITOR, CANBERRA

AUSTRALIA is praying for rain as it faces the stark truth that the drought crisis is just six weeks from becoming an unprecedented disaster.

Murray-Darling Basin irrigators in four states will be denied water from July if there no substantial rainfall by June, with Prime Minister John Howard delivering an edict that urban water supplies must be protected, even at the expense of thousands of farmers facing a doubtful future under a worst-case scenario.

Adelaide residents are likely to share the pain as the State Government prepares to introduce extreme level five water restrictions if flows into the river system do not drastically improve. And all Australians face higher supermarket prices for the fruit and vegetables produced in the basin, which supplies 40 per cent of the nation's agricultural produce.

Mr Howard called an urgent press conference in Canberra yesterday to announce the drastic situation, saying a "contingency planning report" on water reserves had revealed the worst news yet during the harshest drought in history.

Mr Howard said the Government had no choice but to protect "critical urban water supplies" along the system, including that of Adelaide.

"You are simply not going to have enough water, consistent with the obligation to supply critical human needs to town communities along the river system, you are not going have enough water to provide any allocation for agriculture," he said.

Mr Howard warned that without exceptionally heavy rains in the next six weeks, there was no prospect of water being available for anything other than urban use and both crops and stock would have to go without.

Long-range weather forecasts suggest a 50 per cent chance of better than average May rains in the Riverland but not for the rest of the basin.

Adelaide relies on the River Murray for about 90 per cent of its water supplies. The city now is on level three restrictions.

Farm representatives yesterday suggested Adelaide residents would have to "do more" and adopt tighter restrictions. Federal Water Resources Minister Malcolm Turnbull said Adelaide's supply of household water was safe for now but he offered no guarantees into the future.

"Yes it is, for this year. The officials are confident they can get enough water down to Adelaide," he said.

Asked how much rain was needed to avoid the zero irrigation scenario, Mr Turnbull declined to nominate a figure.

"A lot . . . I would suggest you just pray for rain, don't pray for a specific number of millimetres," he said.

Opposition water spokesman Anthony Albanese said the situation was made worse because the Government had failed to address climate change.

"This water crisis has not occurred overnight," he said.

"The water crisis has developed over a number of years and it shouldn't have taken an election year to get action from the Howard government over the issue."

The Irrigation Association of Australia's chief executive, Jolyon Burnett, said scarcity could drive up food prices as irrigators rationalised their operations.

"Perennial crops, fruit trees for example, some of the growers are already watching and deciding which trees to let go, which parts of the orchard to shut the water off to," he said.

The Murray-Darling Basin spans fours states and the ACT and is home to about 50,000 stone fruit and citrus farmers, who contribute more than a $1 billion a year to the economy.

National Farmers' Federation water taskforce representative Laurie Arthur said the situation was unprecedented.

"We've never seen the like of this ever," he said.

"We'll be seeking urgent discussions with the Minister for Water and the Prime Minister to make sure that industry expertise can't find some way to try and protect some of the valuable assets we do have."

The State Government meanwhile has warned that action will be taken against irrigators taking Murray water without permission.

South Australian Farmers Federation president Wayne Cornish said he did not think any farmers would break the law but some would be tempted.

"If your trees were dying and your vines were dying of thirst, there would be a fair temptation, I imagine," he said.

http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story...01,00.html
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#2
Yes, so much is dying. Johnny has somehow got everyone on their knees to pray, and yesterday we had a dab of rain, just a touch. The Murray has been overused for many years, it will rain this year, they need to make everyone feel desperate and they have just about achieved everything they set out. Then when the hero Kevo (Kevin Rudd) takes over from Johnny at this years election things will change, Kevo is loved by the people, it is all politics, we are now paying $7 a kilo for tomatoes, and they do not even smell like real food, the people put down their protests and say ok to imported food, because in Australia we have great fresh product, the food here is fantastic and tasty. They want us to get with the rest of the world and have that fast food taste everywhere you go, and say yes to the food grown overseas in sewage!
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#3
It’s too bad politics are destroying this planet. China just publicly admitted they can manipulate the weather. So that proves Australia could have rain if the rulers wanted it.

http://www.hyperspacecafe.com/forum44/2197.html
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#4
That is interesting Richard,
The public just do not believe it, if you talk to people and explain why the government would do it, they see all the reasons but still look at you as if you are the alien, weather control is so ‘unbelievable’ and I really do not know if the public will ever see past the manipulation.
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#5
  Well, wishing you rain now!  :)

  If you do a search for  "Cloud Seeding" you might find info on making it rain....  They have been doing that for years.    Our local weather channel admitted they would cloud seed sometimes.  Dont hear much about it now tho.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_seeding

How cloud seeding works

[Image: 180px-Gen_AgI.JPG]

[Image: magnify-clip.png]Ground-based silver iodide generator
The most common chemicals used for cloud seeding include silver iodide and dry ice (frozen carbon dioxide). The expansion of liquid propane into a gas is being used on a smaller scale. The use of hygroscopic materials, such as salt, is increasing in popularity because of some promising research results.

Seeding of clouds requires that they contain supercooled liquid water--that is, liquid water colder than zero degrees Celsius. Introduction of a substance such as silver iodide, which has a crystalline structure similar to that of ice, will induce freezing (heterogeneous nucleation). Dry ice or propane expansion cools the air to such an extent that ice crystals can nucleate spontaneously from the vapor phase. Unlike seeding with silver iodide, this spontaneous nucleation does not require any existing droplets or particles because it produces extremely high vapor supersaturations near the seeding substance. However, the existing droplets are needed for the ice crystals to grow into large enough particles to precipitate out.
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#6
It sounds like rain is coming. :)

Aborigines Use Ancient Weather Forecasting Methods To Predict Coming Rains

For more than 60,000 years, Australian Aborigines have been reading the land, the clouds, the stars, the plants and the animals to predict how the cycles of nature would affect their hunting and gathering in the season ahead.

Using that ancient knowledge, some of the world's longest surviving cultured people are seeing a bit of good news in the natural world for some areas of Australia devastated by mega-drought.

So don't start evacuating the cities just yet, drought breaking rains might not be as far away as previously thought :

With wattle trees blooming across southeastern Australia and native birds and cockatoos on the wing, Aboriginal weather watchers say rain is on the way – giving some hope to parts of the country ravaged by drought.

"The cockys are flocking everywhere. That's usually a good sign that rain is coming," said Jeremy Clark, from Victoria.

"The way the flora and plants and shrubs are starting to react, I'd certainly be expecting rain."

For the first time, the forecasts from Clark's Brambuk community, which covers five Aboriginal homelands, are being taken seriously by Australia's Bureau of Meteorology as it looks for different ways to better understand the changing climate.

Bureau climate meteorologist Harvey Stern said the traditional Summer, Autumn, Winter and Spring seasons have little relevance in Australia's tropical north – or even in the temperate south, where aborigines have six seasons based on the weather and changes to the natural environment.

The bureau's Indigenous Weather Knowledge programme taps into the Aboriginal philosophy that all of nature is connected, and subtle changes to plants and animals can give clues about the climate and weather.

Mr Clark, chief executive of the Brambuk community which covers most of western Victoria, including the Grampians mountains and national park, said Aborigines have always had different ways of looking at the weather, reading landscape rather than a calendar.

"It's still practised. We won't go fishing for eels, for example, until wattles start flowering and the animals start moving, and the full moon comes. Then you know the eels are running on the migratory journey to the sea," he said.

http://theorstrahyun.blogspot.com/search...0knowledge
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#7
I do believe that there is truth to this article except that the aborigines never had to deal with HAARP all those years ago. There are theories about native animals not breeding during the drought- totally false. Cocky’s and all birds have always been in large numbers with the drought.

Yet the native plants are doing things that prove the plant life has greater awareness. Animals are like us and sensitive to the influence of weather manipulation and electromagnetic frequencies, yet plants survive on a different level.

I have this enormous gum tree in my yard, it is amazing, you can hear its melody and feel its energy when near it. I noticed last year that this big gum starting dropping branches and looking quite thin, I thought it was dying but all the native trees in the bush have done the same. I thought why?

 It is better to drop a percentage of the whole and survive, rather than hold on to the whole and die. If we humans were only this intelligent!

But I am happy to report that we have had a whole week of cloudy days and had some nice rain, the ground is now moist and grass is growing, but to refill our water storage we would need rain for 40 days and 40 nights!
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#8
I’m glad to hear you’re getting rain because it sounds like they were thinking about evacuating you guys. icon_lol

By Matthew Schulz

A TOP US radio commentator claims Australian authorities are in secret talks to evacuate 11 million citizens due to drought.

If he's right, will the last Australian to leave the country please turn off the tap?

Well, it's all a bit of a joke - and the big laugh is on US talkback host Art Bell, one of the biggest names in American radio.

Bell, who is on more radio stations than any other US broadcaster, repeated claims that Australian authorities are in emergency talks with the United States and other Commonwealth allies for the "proposed evacuation of 11 million" citizens, because of the crippling drought.

The weekend host for the Coast to Coast radio show claimed Australians would be forced to travel to other parts of the world on a flotilla of cruise ships carrying up to 500,000 people at a time because of the dwindling water supply.

And while there has been some talk of evacuating a handful of isolated country towns struggling to maintain their water supply, Bell repeated the claims of a supposed Russian scientist who said Australia had sought the help of other western nations to consider moving its citizens to the vast wilderness regions of Alaska and Canada.

He paraphrased claims by supposed Russian scientist Sorcha Faal that secret talks were already under way to evacuate half the country, following Prime Minister John Howard's grim warning that the nation's food bowl region of the Murray Darling was under direct threat.

"I wonder when the climate sceptics are going to finally catch on," Bell said.

"Will it take something like this? Like evactuating half a nation, before we wake up and realise that it is actually happening?" 

http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story...3,00.html#
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#9
that is a funny story.
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#10
I am of the opinion that both Sorcha Faal and Art Bell are Illuminati mouthpieces.
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