Understanding Water
It may seem hard to swallow, but that tall glass of ice water you had with
dinner last night also may have helped refresh a thirsty brontosaurus eons ago.
Contrary to popular belief, water is not a renewable resource. It is finite.
The water you use today is literally the same water that existed on the planet
billions of years ago. Nature recycles water. It doesn't make new.
Also, as you no doubt learned in school, over two-thirds of the earth's surface
is covered by water. But did you know that only about 2.8 percent of it is fresh
water? And, more critically, did you know that only about 0.3 percent of the earth's
total water supply is usable by humans?
In the last decade of the 20th century alone, the earth's population increased
by more than one billion people. At present rates, over the next 50 to 90 years
the world's population will more than double. The demand on water supplies is
growing exponentially. Clearly, understanding and using scarce water resources
wisely is vital. Our very survival as a species depends on it.
Demands on Water Resources Continue to Increase
Count the ways you and your family use water. Drinking. Cooking. Bathing. Doing
laundry. Housecleaning. Watering the lawn. Washing the car. Giving the dog a bath.
In industrialized countries, the average family of four consumes 250 gallons of
water each day.
But that's only a small part of the water usage picture. So many of the things
that we take for granted, things that make our lives easier, also depend on water—vast
quantities of water
Consider that it took approximately 100,000 gallons of water to manufacture
your family's car. The newspaper that landed on your doorstep last Sunday morning
soaked up 280 gallons of water just to print. And that five-pound sack of flour
sitting on your kitchen shelf required 375 gallons of water to produce. In the
United States, water consumption increased by more than 100 percent in the last
half century. In the same period, it rose by more than 500 percent in Europe and
300 percent in Africa. Many experts predict world consumption will double by 2020.
Concerns About Water Quality
You're not alone if you're concerned about the water you and your family drink.
A survey by the Water Quality Association found that three-quarters of Americans
don't believe their household water supply is as safe as it could be. In a recent
USA Today/CNN/Gallup Poll, 47 percent of respondents reported they won't drink
water straight from the tap.
Environmental problems have an enormous impact on water quality. Water runoff
from industrial plants and farms, acid rain and other forms of pollution have
tainted groundwater and surface water supplies in many areas of the world. Population
growth, urban and suburban sprawl, and industrial and agricultural expansion continue
to stress fresh water supplies.
Water contamination problems, epidemic in the developing world, also routinely
occur in highly industrialized nations. In the last half dozen years, numerous
cases have been recorded in the United States, affecting tens of millions of consumers
in more than 1,000 communities.
Some of the most serious incidents have involved bacteria. A 1993 outbreak
of cryptosporidium in Milwaukee affected more than 400,000 residents and caused
more than 100 attributable deaths. Other virulent pathogens have also intruded
into municipal water supplies with alarming frequency.
Some Answers
Today governments around the globe, on every level, are investing hundreds
of billions of dollars to improve infrastructure and mandate higher water quality
standards. In addition, more and more individuals are relying on modern home water
treatment systems to assure an ample supply of fresh, pure water for their families
at the most local of all levels—the home.
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