Currently in Los Angeles — September 27, 2023: Perfect California fall day

Plus, Louisiana's new saltwater emergency.

The weather, currently.

Perfect California fall day

A perfect fall day across the southland yesterday, with temps in the low to mid 80s away from the coast and not a stratus cloud in sight, even in the morning. Hot spots like Woodland Hills flirted with 90 degrees.

Expect similar weather again Wednesday, if not a tad warmer. Feels like it’s been a while since we’ve had seasonable temperatures. Enjoy it now because the weekend looks full of a lot more cloudiness.

What you need to know, currently.

With drought affecting broad swaths of the Mississippi River valley, river levels have dropped so low that saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico is creeping upriver in the Mississippi itself. At its current rate of progression, the Mississippi will turn too salty for water treatment plants at New Orleans to produce drinking water in just a few weeks.

Since saltwater is more dense than freshwater, the saltwater is actually moving upriver along the riverbed — within the river itself. Federal engineers that maintain the river channel have built a partial dam designed to slow the saltwater’s upstream progression, and increasingly extreme measures will need to be taken once the saltwater reaches New Orleans — like transporting freshwater by barge, and hastily building a water pipeline to the city.

Similar events happened in 1988, 1999, 2012, and again last year — but this one seems especially severe.

As global warming melts ice worldwide, sea level rise will make problems like this worse not just for Louisiana, but all coastal cities worldwide.

What you can do, currently.

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