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Data Centres Are Causing Droughts

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    #21
    IIRC data centre water usage is a drop in the ocean (no pun intended) vs agriculture and civilian use, and a single chatGPT query uses next to nothing proportionally..it's a distraction from much bigger issues when it comes to AI prompting DC builds (like how none of the big tech cos trying to build AGI have a clue how to control it, but are just YOLOing it anyway)

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      #22
      Originally posted by woody1 View Post

      The main way we consume less water is only flushing for number twos.
      Number ones only require a bush in the garden behind which to hide.

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        #23
        Originally posted by Protagoras View Post

        Number ones only require a bush in the garden behind which to hide.
        Does wonders for the gooseberry bushes in keeping the American mildew away.

        But you have to be careful of the thorns. .
        When the fun stops, STOP.

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          #24
          Originally posted by Paracelsus View Post
          IIRC data centre water usage is a drop in the ocean (no pun intended) vs agriculture and civilian use, and a single chatGPT query uses next to nothing proportionally..it's a distraction from much bigger issues when it comes to AI prompting DC builds (like how none of the big tech cos trying to build AGI have a clue how to control it, but are just YOLOing it anyway)
          Yup.

          1/3 of all CO2 released by human activity comes directly from the soil. As much as 10% from cement production.

          Water is not really created or destroyed. Soil is destroyed as it loses its carbon and desertification is increasing. Creating soil can take a thousand years naturally, but maybe we can do it quicker through deliberate composting. Nitrogen and Phosphorous are badly out of whack and a huge threat to the ecological balance.

          I think we will destroy our ability to farm and end up in famine for these reasons before we end up there through drought anyway.

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            #25
            I suspect in a few months time we'll have the opposite problem. Too much of the stuff, and flooding.

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              #26
              Originally posted by woody1 View Post
              I suspect in a few months time we'll have the opposite problem. Too much of the stuff, and flooding.
              There have always been periods in geological timescales of high CO2, flooding, cooling etc. There will be a point at which unlimited human population growth will be curtailed by the environment. Before that, we'll have much greater problems of parts of the earth becoming uninhabitable and more human migrations.

              Maybe in the end, there will be relatively few humans and lots of data centres since the AI won't know what to delete!

              For me the elephant in the room looks like too many humans; we're probably already at that level economically in terms of wealth generation to support the population level.

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                #27
                Originally posted by willendure View Post


                Water is not really created or destroyed.
                No, that would be energy. Water can quite literally be created / destroyed. It's the by product of some chemical reactions and other chemical reactions split H2O into its constituent parts. It's basic chemistry. Photosynthesis splits water molecules in order to produce oxygen, for example.

                The biggest impact of human activity on water supplies is the reduction of drinkable water that doesn't need much / any treatment in order to be safe. Yes we're surrounded by the stuff but it's not all suitable for ingestion. Data centres ought to be using grey water for cooling so that they don't take from the drinkable supply. However, I suspect the design of the cooling systems requires pure water to stop the pipes getting clogged up with contaminants.

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                  #28
                  Originally posted by ladymuck View Post

                  No, that would be energy. Water can quite literally be created / destroyed. It's the by product of some chemical reactions and other chemical reactions split H2O into its constituent parts. It's basic chemistry. Photosynthesis splits water molecules in order to produce oxygen, for example.
                  I know that. What I mean is the water cycle has it mostly going round and round not being released or absorbed into something else by chemical reactions. Sure, some does, but the water cycle isn't really a source or drain of water, on the whole.

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                    #29
                    Something else to worry about: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P29F7LAtqzc

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