miketheterrible wrote:So uh, what is the actual plan?
Apparently above our clearance level yet
miketheterrible wrote:So uh, what is the actual plan?
franco wrote:miketheterrible wrote:So uh, what is the actual plan?
Apparently above our clearance level yet
miketheterrible wrote:franco wrote:miketheterrible wrote:So uh, what is the actual plan?
Apparently above our clearance level yet
I personally think a combination of: Desalination plant, pipeline and underground reserves would be the most ideal. Guarantee to get water and have a surplus.
GarryB and Maximmmm like this post
franco, Big_Gazza, PapaDragon, Maximmmm, slasher, LMFS, Hole and like this post
Big_Gazza, kvs, PapaDragon, miketheterrible, Lurk83 and Russian_Patriot_ like this post
Maximmmm wrote:If I was Ukrainian I'd be salivating at all of the infrastructure rebuilding that we've done to Crimea. It's insane what has happened in 7 years.
Big_Gazza, kvs, auslander, miketheterrible and Russian_Patriot_ like this post
Big_Gazza, kvs, auslander and JohninMK like this post
Lurk83 wrote:
Crimeans gave recieved far more in 7 years from Russia than they ever got in 25 years from Ukraine!
medo, Big_Gazza, JohninMK and miketheterrible like this post
But major issue with water is not one centimeter closer to solution, it is disaster for agro sector. Russia so far has no real answer for it.Maximmmm wrote:If I was Ukrainian I'd be salivating at all of the infrastructure rebuilding that we've done to Crimea. It's insane what has happened in 7 years.
mr_hd wrote:But major issue with water is not one centimeter closer to solution, it is disaster for agro sector. Russia so far has no real answer for it.Maximmmm wrote:If I was Ukrainian I'd be salivating at all of the infrastructure rebuilding that we've done to Crimea. It's insane what has happened in 7 years.
GarryB, franco, PapaDragon, miketheterrible, Hole and The_Observer like this post
mr_hd wrote:But major issue with water is not one centimeter closer to solution, it is disaster for agro sector. Russia so far has no real answer for it.Maximmmm wrote:If I was Ukrainian I'd be salivating at all of the infrastructure rebuilding that we've done to Crimea. It's insane what has happened in 7 years.
Simferopol, February 14. Crimeainform.
Two-thirds of the monthly precipitation in the form of snow fell in Simferopol during the snowfall on Friday and Saturday. This Crimeainform was reported in the Crimean Hydrometeorological Center.
"In Simferopol, 27 mm of rain fell at a monthly rate of 42 mm, 23 mm of rain fell on Ai-Petri, 27 mm fell on the Angar Pass, and 27 mm in Bakhchisarai district (Postoir meteorology station)," the hydrometeorological center said. The amount of precipitation forecasters determine after the melting of snow, so the data on snow cover and precipitation are different.
"The snow cover in Simferopol is 28 centimeters, on Ai-Petri - 12 centimeters, on the Angar Pass - 18 centimeters, in Bakhchisarai district - 25 centimeters," - said forecasters. In the near future, heavy snowfalls in Crimea are not expected, on February 18, including daytime temperatures will be minus 3 - minus 8 degrees, night - from minus 11 to minus 16. In Crimea, there is a storm warning about frost and snowfall. Until February 18, the temperature is expected to be 7-8 degrees below the climatic norm.
franco, kvs, PapaDragon, slasher, LMFS, Hole and Russian_Patriot_ like this post
GarryB, miketheterrible and lancelot like this post
kvs wrote:The western media is spreading FUD about a water crisis in Crimea echoing the rubbish spouted by Kiev propagandists.
Big_Gazza, kvs and miketheterrible like this post
ALAMO wrote:kvs wrote:The western media is spreading FUD about a water crisis in Crimea echoing the rubbish spouted by Kiev propagandists.
Is it anything new? No need to be impressed, Crimea bridge is still a Mosfilm production, remember
flamming_python, Big_Gazza and miketheterrible like this post
Big_Gazza, kvs and miketheterrible like this post
kvs likes this post
kvs and miketheterrible like this post
Big_Gazza and kvs like this post
kvs, Rodion_Romanovic, miketheterrible, LMFS, lancelot, Scorpius and The_Observer like this post
One of the main reasons for water scarcity is its huge losses during transportation and preparation, reaching up to 80% (for comparison: on average in the Russian Federation, losses are 20-30%). The authorities, according to the federal target program, expect to solve the problem by 2025. It is planned to spend more than 18 billion rubles from the federal budget on measures to eliminate the deficit. In particular, it is planned to build desalination plants with a capacity of 20 thousand cubic meters of water per day by 2025. Earlier it was reported that the budget can allocate about 8 billion rubles for the construction of factories.franco wrote:Full reservoirs: How Crimea's water problem was resolved in a few days
...
As of June, the situation with the provision of Crimean residents with water has noticeably improved in comparison with the previous year. Anatoly Kopachevsky, director of the research and production company "Water Technologies", suggested that by the end of this year the reservoirs feeding Simferopol will receive about 30 million cubic meters of water. In his opinion, there will be no problems with water supply on the peninsula in the coming years, which will allow making strategic decisions in this area.
https://topcor-ru.translate.goog/20410-polnye-vodohranilischa-kak-za-neskolko-dnej-razreshilas-vodnaja-problema-kryma.html?_x_tr_sl=auto&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en-GB&_x_tr_pto=ajax,se
kvs likes this post
franco, flamming_python, kvs, PapaDragon and miketheterrible like this post
Scorpius wrote:The size of the budget of the Crimea for 2013 (the last year as part of Ukraine): 4.7979532 billion UAH (or 18.759997012 billion rubles at the then current exchange rate).
The size of the budget of the Crimea as part of Russia, 2021: 150,836,290,936.78 rubles, or 56,705,372,532.62 UAH at the current exchange rate.
I think you can see the visual difference. By the way, do not confuse: in one of the cases you can see the economy of a European power, which is supported by all the power of the civilized West, and in the other-a country with a torn economy, a gas station country that does not produce anything, is under sanctions, etc.
kvs wrote:
Thank you for the links. This data destroys all of the efforts by the liberasts and their western backers to paint the situation in Crimea as dire.
No freaking jurisdiction on the planet is worse off after having a factor of eight budget increase. Also, the forex change in the ruble
in late 2014 means nothing. Russian domestic prices are not in dollars.
franco wrote:Full reservoirs: How Crimea's water problem was resolved in a few days
It looks like the "water" problem of the Crimea is being solved in a natural way. Due to the abundance of rainfall last week, local reservoirs quickly filled with water. On Wednesday and Thursday, the rains on the peninsula were so strong that the issue of water supply to the Crimeans was closed....
Big_Gazza likes this post