I absolutely agree with Ms. Stephanie Thomas on the ideas of
being selective about our crops in order to conserve water. At the moment we
are at the beginning of a 10 year drought. The truth is Texas cannot keep up
with our demands of water for our crops and green grass. This has me wondering
if there is an alternative to our situation. An Example that Ms. Thomas used, a
farmer was forced to water crops that wouldn’t grow just so he could get
federal crop insurance. This farmer had spent $25,000 just to water his 175
acres on crops that couldn’t really benefit anyone. This has me puzzled why the government is forcing
commercials to water unsuccessful crops, because if you really look at it. It seems
like what used to be a profitable field, had now become a money pit. I can see
this problem growing more than just an agricultural watering problem but an
economic problem as well. Business and corporations will definitely strafe away
from Texas if we can’t stop wasting water because they will spend more money
buying water, thus reducing their profits.
I think
handing out citations is a great start to make people more aware of Texas
current water situation. A technique that telephone service provider use are
caps, they put caps to limit a certain amount of traffic on their data service
lines, and if one were to go over that cap then they are charged for overages.
What if Texas started capping people for usage? Could this solve our water
crisis? But then the idea of putting a cap on water seems wrong, because we
would also be limiting on drinking able water. Like Ms. Thomas said, we are
limited on time and we need to act fast.
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