River Recycler Systems

When history tells you some of the greatest discoveries were found by mistake or developed in some garage it should remind us not to judge a book by its cover. Please, look at the message; we’ve left the cover off.

“What” and “If” are probably the two most powerful words in the English language and when used together they have shaped history. Now we once again propose a “What If?” scenario.

What if we could provide enough freshwater for everyone in every community in the southwest to water their lawn, raising their quality of life, while providing jobs and cleaning the air of carbon? What if we could provide enough freshwater to end water restrictions on farmers, how many millions of opportunities would this create and how many poor people could we feed?
What if we could provide enough freshwater for every river delta restoration project in California? What if we had enough freshwater to re-inject it through wells to replenish the water tables in California, Arizona, Nevada and Utah to stop the depletion and the contamination as saltwater fills the void left from years of the over pumping of ground water?
What if we could provide enough fresh water to grow bio-crops in the southwest and try to keep some of the money we are sending to foreign countries for oil right here in the USA? What if we could provide enough freshwater to actually power the hydrogen fueled cars the industry is working on?
What if we could provide enough freshwater to have irrigated “green zones” along highways, use them to prevent wildfires from starting or from spreading, while growing bio- fuel crops that clean the air of carbon? How much money could that save? How many lives? What if we could move this water with clean wind power thru pipe lines with inline electric generators to provide mid desert rest areas with charging stations?
What if we could collect and store enough freshwater for all these projects, and more, without building one more dam?

Now What if we told you that with your help, We Can!

Welcome to the River Recycler Systems – California Project.