Why do we care how much water the average person in the United States uses? Isn’t there plenty of water for everyone?
Well, depending on where you live, there may or may not be plenty of water. In the United States we take running water for granted, but if you live in a third world country, you might spend a good part of your day retrieving water and boiling water to survive. Since the water we use today is the same water that the dinosaurs, Christopher Columbus, and Abe Lincoln drank and used for daily living we need to be sure that water resources are conserved, used wisely, and shared equitably.
Although 75% of the Earth’s surface is comprised of water, 97% of that water is saltwater, 2% is frozen, and only 1% is usable freshwater. Kids in elementary school learn at an early age about the three phases of water and the water cycle, how water from the dinosaurs is recycled, and how water is vital to life on Earth. They learn how we all live the Water Cycle on a daily basis, and why water is such a precious resource.
Most Americans are very familiar with one part of the Water Cycle, precipitation, and tune in daily for the weather, specifically rain, sleet, hail, or snow. American students learn about other parts of the Water Cycle as well. They learn that the sun evaporates water from lakes and oceans (liquid water turns into water vapor), and about condensation of water vapor into tiny water droplets within the clouds. Students learn that water is stored in glaciers, snow, ponds, lakes, rivers, and oceans. Later they may learn the importance of natural filtration and storage of water in wetlands and marshes, and how it percolates into underground storage called aquifers that are pumped for drinking water and other uses.
Luckily, the water cycle never stops; it keeps on going making life on Earth possible. Unfortunately, some countries such as the United States use more of the limited freshwater resources, and have a water footprint that is double the global average water footprint. According to TreeHugger.com,
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The top five biggest average daily users of water are the U.S., Australia, Italy, Japan, and Mexico - all five of these use well over 300 liters daily (about 79.25 US gallons). The countries where water poverty is the worst and water usage is the lowest are Mozambique, Rwanda, Haiti, Ethiopia, and Uganda - these five use 15 liters (3.96 gallons) or less daily.”
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So Americans need to think about how important the Water Cycle is to life on Earth, and be sure to conserve water resources whenever possible. Keep reminding yourself and your teens to take shorter showers, teach your children to turn off the faucet while brushing teeth, switch to low flow shower-heads and toilet flushing systems, and when replacing old appliances, buy Energy Star dishwashers and washing machines which are more water and energy efficient than older models. Lastly, think before wasting precious water, life on Earth isn't possible without it..
Sources:
Water Footprint, http://www.waterfootprint.org/?page=files/WaterFootprintsNations, 11/28/2010
We Use How Much Water? Scary Water Footprints, Country by Country, http://www.treehugger.com/files/2009/06/we-use-how-much-water.php, 11/28/2010
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_cycle, 11/28/2010
http://water.epa.gov/learn/kids/drinkingwater/water_trivia_facts.cfm, 11/28/2010
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