Saltwater corrodes firefighting equipment and may harm ecosystems, especially those like the chaparral shrublands around Los Angeles that aren’t normally exposed to seawater. Gardeners know that small amounts of salt – added, say, as fertilizer – does not harm plants, but excessive salts can stress and kill plants.

  • @DerArzt
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    09 hours ago

    But there’s way more salt produced that way than the market wants to buy

    Artificial scarcity from Capitalism yet again!

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      49 hours ago

      We want to desalinate water so that we have fresh water.

      Doing so generates salt as waste and requires safe/responsible disposal.

      We can sell some of the salt, as a product.

      But the market won’t buy all of the salt.

      So the salt just goes back to the “waste” category, and we need to find disposal methods.

      I don’t see where scarcity (whether artificial or natural) comes into play. The world has lots and lots of salt, and anyone who wants it can get it very cheap.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        16 hours ago

        Constitute it into bricks and dump them into old salt mines. Itll at least slow down mine erosian.