Business
Ambient Water Comments on the Impact of Weather on the Drought as States Look to Water Technologies as a Solution
Ambient Water Comments on the Impact of Weather on the Drought as States Look to Water Technologies as a Solution.

About this update from Japan Food Tech Holdings, Inc.
[{"type":"text","content":"\nAmbient Water Comments on the Impact of Weather on the Drought as States Look to Water Technologies as a Solution\n\nAmbient Water Comments on the Impact of Weather on the Drought as States Look to Water Technologies as a Solution\n\n\nDespite Heavy Rains in Drought Stricken Areas, Atmospheric Water Generation Company Encourages Government and Business Officials to Look Past Immediacy and Consider Water Technology as a Long Term Solution\n\n SPOKANE, WA--(Marketwired - November 11, 2015) - Ambient Water (OTCQB: AWGI), a leading provider of atmospheric water generation systems for extracting water from humidity in the air, today commented on the recent heavy rains in drought stricken areas of the Western U.S., with further details as to why dependency on natural weather occurrences to ease water scarcity is not ideal, and why government and business officials should consider water technology as a long term solution.Over the past six to eight weeks, there has been much discussion about the impending El Nino and whether or not that will do anything to lessen the effects of the drought, both in the U.S. and globally. Texas received up to 18 inches of rain during the last week of October, just weeks after Hurricane Patricia dumped rain on the area, leaving State officials to say the summer's drought had been vanquished. California is also seeing puddles on the ground from El Nino, but most are already warning that the rains just simply won't be enough.While the rains may bring some immediate relief in terms of days or weeks, it is the aquifers, scientists say, that are still a major problem. Ground water has been the hidden treasure that states like California have long relied on, but it is becoming increasingly hard for those underground vaults to refill. It can take years for surface water to make its way through soil down into the part of the ground that holds the moisture -- up to 50 years for California's Central Valley aquifers to refill, while some of the oldest and deepest aquifers may never refill at all. Add in the fact that California soil can be full of clay, which blocks the penetration, or dried out on top, which keeps water flowing, and it's easy to see how several inches of rain isn't as valuable to the long term drought solution as many expect.\"It can take years for rain water to make it through the ground and dee...