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Arey Arizona lo elaa untunnaru raa ayya


RPG_Reloaded

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4 hours ago, phatposts said:

new geographical region that too with extreme variation lo sudden gaa evvadu adjust avvaledu. visiting ki poyi aaa area ni judge cheyyadam foolish. 

Denver velte oxygen levels diff due to elevation. 

Texas lo severe heat

North east - very cold

Chicago lo wind + cold 

South lo humidity + heat

ila edo okati untadi.

Oorike dobbadam 

Atlanta randi anni baaguntai!

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9 hours ago, Sanjiv said:

Fcuking HOT desert lo nilabadi hot ga undante etla yaar?

Did you miss some logic?

Alaanti desert lo kuda yelaa untunnaru mana desi gallu ani vesa baa thaadu

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9 hours ago, Realityy said:

Anna nuvvu Dallas nundi epudu vellinavu come back to Austin TX

attilisathi-dil-raju.gif

Phenix lo larty ki pilisthe vacha

2 days ke love da place anipinchindi vaa

Anyday Austin lo makaaam veyali ika

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16 hours ago, RPG_Reloaded said:

attilisathi-dil-raju.gif

Phenix lo larty ki pilisthe vacha

2 days ke love da place anipinchindi vaa

Anyday Austin lo makaaam veyali ika

My friend moved from NJ to Pheoenix waste place anta 5 months very hot 3 months moderate hot motham mida 8 month weather is not good annadu. 

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On 5/12/2023 at 11:58 AM, RPG_Reloaded said:

G ki chematalu padutunnay

 

cars tires melting if we park outside

 

restaurant ki velthe spucy foods

 

Trip ki velthene g lo buring,

how indian community staying there?

mahesh-babu-khaleja.gif

Same doubt, desi gallu etta untuanro akkada. 

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On 5/12/2023 at 8:58 AM, RPG_Reloaded said:

G ki chematalu padutunnay

 

cars tires melting if we park outside

 

restaurant ki velthe spucy foods

 

Trip ki velthene g lo buring,

how indian community staying there?

mahesh-babu-khaleja.gif

ninnane paripoyi vellanu ma urike... brathiki unte malli ravachu anni 

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6 hours ago, kittaya said:

ninnane paripoyi vellanu ma urike... brathiki unte malli ravachu anni 

Are you safe bro?

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  • 5 weeks later...

Arizona, Low on Water, Weighs Taking It From the Sea in Mexico.

A $5 billion plan to desalinate seawater in Mexico and pipe it to Phoenix is testing the notion that desert cities can keep growing as the Earth warms.

As the state’s two major sources of water, groundwater and the Colorado River, dwindle from drought, climate change and overuse, officials are considering a hydrological Hail Mary: the construction of a plant in Mexico to suck salt out of seawater, then pipe that water hundreds of miles, much of it uphill, to Phoenix.

But now, a $5 billion project proposed by an Israeli company is under serious consideration, an indication of how worries about water shortages are rattling policymakers in Arizona and across the American West.

On June 1, the state announced that the Phoenix area, the fastest-growing region in the country, doesn’t have enough groundwater to support all the future housing that has already been approved. Cities and developers that want to build additional projects beyond what has already been allowed would have to find new sources of water.

Desalination plants are already common in coastal states like California, Texas and Florida, and in more than 100 other countries. Israel gets more than 60 percent of its drinking water from the Mediterranean.

Environmentalists contend that instead of importing water from another country, the state should protect its limited supplies by having fewer lawns, fewer swimming pools and, maybe, fewer houses.

A nightmare version of Arizona’s future

The proposed source of Arizona’s salvation is Puerto Peñasco, a city of 60,000 an hour south of the border.
A third of the population lives in poverty. Among its other problems: Puerto Peñasco can’t provide enough potable water for its own residents.
The city is a nightmare version of Arizona’s own future. Lacking surface water, it relies on underground aquifers, whose supply has dwindled as the population has grown.


Since the megadrought began in 2000, Arizona’s population has jumped almost 50 percent and shows no signs of stopping.

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17 minutes ago, andhra_jp said:

Arizona, Low on Water, Weighs Taking It From the Sea in Mexico.

A $5 billion plan to desalinate seawater in Mexico and pipe it to Phoenix is testing the notion that desert cities can keep growing as the Earth warms.

As the state’s two major sources of water, groundwater and the Colorado River, dwindle from drought, climate change and overuse, officials are considering a hydrological Hail Mary: the construction of a plant in Mexico to suck salt out of seawater, then pipe that water hundreds of miles, much of it uphill, to Phoenix.

But now, a $5 billion project proposed by an Israeli company is under serious consideration, an indication of how worries about water shortages are rattling policymakers in Arizona and across the American West.

On June 1, the state announced that the Phoenix area, the fastest-growing region in the country, doesn’t have enough groundwater to support all the future housing that has already been approved. Cities and developers that want to build additional projects beyond what has already been allowed would have to find new sources of water.

Desalination plants are already common in coastal states like California, Texas and Florida, and in more than 100 other countries. Israel gets more than 60 percent of its drinking water from the Mediterranean.

Environmentalists contend that instead of importing water from another country, the state should protect its limited supplies by having fewer lawns, fewer swimming pools and, maybe, fewer houses.

A nightmare version of Arizona’s future

The proposed source of Arizona’s salvation is Puerto Peñasco, a city of 60,000 an hour south of the border.
A third of the population lives in poverty. Among its other problems: Puerto Peñasco can’t provide enough potable water for its own residents.
The city is a nightmare version of Arizona’s own future. Lacking surface water, it relies on underground aquifers, whose supply has dwindled as the population has grown.


Since the megadrought began in 2000, Arizona’s population has jumped almost 50 percent and shows no signs of stopping.

lot of people moved here..last 4 years.. lot of new developments..

 

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23 minutes ago, hydusguy said:

lot of people moved here..last 4 years.. lot of new developments..

 

how is desi folks migration to AZ compared to TX,NC,GA?

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