¤ª¤Ï¤Ê¤··Ç¼¨ÈÄ

¥È¥Ã¥×¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤Ø

pDANmfUpBY

Æü»þ¡§ 2019/09/08 21:22
̾Á°¡§ Royce
URL¡§ http://xnxxxvideos.in.net/
ID¡§ 6I6WEy.g

Where's the nearest cash machine? http://silverdaddies.fun/ www.silverdaddies.com
The costs of maintaining unsustainable water use are spiraling out of control. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that our nation’s water systems will need to spend at least $300 billion by 2030 simply to keep our existing drinking water infrastructure reliable. When you add in the cost of developing new water supplies, treatment plants and transmission systems to accommodate growth – whether $20 billion for new reservoirs and pipelines in North Texas or $7 billion for a new 263-mile pipeline for Las Vegas – the numbers become even more startling. The fact that the federal government no longer pays for such projects – as it did decades ago – means there are no deep pockets to subsidize our continued water bonanza.

Page:[1]

¥¿¥¤¥È¥ë ¡¡ ¤³¤Î¥¹¥ì¥Ã¥É¤òÀèƬ¤Ë°ÜÆ°
̾Á°
E-Mail
URL
¥Ñ¥¹¥ï¡¼¥É ¡ÊÊÖ¿®ÆâÍƤν¤Àµ¤äºï½ü»þ¤Ë»ÈÍÑ¡Ë
¥³¥á¥ó¥È
²èÁü¥Õ¥¡¥¤¥ë
¡¡    ̾Á°¡¢E-Mail¡¢URL¡¢¥Ñ¥¹¥ï¡¼¥É¤òÊݸ¤¹¤ë