Thirsty in paradise: Water crises are a growing problem across the Caribbean islands
Thirsty in paradise: Water crises are a growing problem across the Caribbean islands
Thirsty in paradise: Water crises are a growing problem across the Caribbean islands
isn't it weird to be surrounded on all sides by water but no desalination investments have been made to do anything with it. coolcoolcoolcoolcool
Probably has something to do with the fact that desalinization plants are ridiculously expensive when you live on the same land mass as the factories that are building all the parts for them, and the price rises dramatically when it all has to be loaded up onto container ships, transported to you, and then built by a foreign company, and most of those island nations are incredibly broke.
They're not broke. Half of these countries are above $20K GDP per capita:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Latin_American_and_Caribbean_countries_by_GDP_(PPP)
The problem with desalination is that it's expensive and you can't dump the salt anywhere. It creates a brine that kills fish. That would hurt the environment and the tourism industry.
Not only that, they get a ton of rain every year. They're tropical islands. There's enough water, they just need to collect it. Desalination is a technical solution when they really just need boring infrastructure.
Desalination plants also requires a lot of energy, which is another ressource that carribean islands are struggling with.