As thousands of homes started to burn across Los Angeles on January 7th, 20% of hydrants in the Pacific Palisades ran dry. The rapid spread of flames in 100 mph winds meant firefighters used water too quickly for pumps to maintain water pressure. Big questions and misinformation have now surfaced, from a 117-million-gallon reservoir emptied a year ago, to the protection of a small endangered fish that did not impact water supply. CNBC digs in to what really happened with the water in LA during the LA fires and some creative solutions that could help other cities better prepare. Chapters: 0:00 Introduction 2:50 'Plenty of water' 7:38 The blame game 10:09 'Not California problems' 12:13 More resilient water systems Produced by: Katie Tarasov Edited by: Amy Marino Camera: Andrew Evers Senior Director: Jeniece Pettitt Animation: Jason Reginato, Mithra Krishnan, Mallory Brangan Additional Production: Erin Black Additional Footage: Cal Fire, Getty Images, LA Fire Department, Rain, Mark Whaling, Yorba Linda Water District » Subscribe to CNBC: » Subscribe to CNBC TV: About CNBC: From 'Wall Street' to 'Main Street' to award winning original documentaries and Reality TV series, CNBC has you covered. Experience special sneak peeks of your favorite shows, exclusive video and more. Want to up your AI skills and be more productive? Take CNBC’s new online course on “How to use AI to be More Successful at Work" to leverage AI at work, and in life. Sign up now and use coupon code |
Carter Worth, Worth Charting, talks tech...
The 'Fast Money' traders talk volatility...
Horacio Rozanski, Booz Allen Hamilton CE...
Listen and subscribe to Financial Freest...
Bill Gates has revealed just how much hi...
Super Bowl ticket prices are fluctuating...
President Donald Trump says the US and M...
President Donald Trump says Elon Musk ha...
Chip stocks are tumbling Monday morning ...
Stocks (^GSPC, ^IXIC, ^DJI) are experie...
#YahooFinance #recession #bitcoin #Biden...
ISM Manufacturing Business Survey Commit...