We head out the door and it’s falling from the sky, we go for a run and we sweat it out, we drink it, we wash in it, we breathe it out.It’s in those beers on the weekend – in fact, it’s even there to rehydrate you after those beers on the weekend.
In fact, the human body is more water than human! Every single cell in our body is filled with it.Nothing would be on this earth without it – it’s almost romantic sounding (I did say almost). And if we didn’t drink it for a few short days, we wouldn’t even be alive today, reading this article, wondering about why water is so precious.
So today, I’m going to debunk some common myths for you.
Um, correction.There’s an awful lot of water on this planet, but only 2.5% of it is freshwater and of that, much of it is trapped in glaciers and snowfields. This means we’ve gone from 70% of the world’s water, right down to just 1% being available for the 7 point something billion people on planet earth. Yikes.
Okay, so.The water that comes out your tap has been intensively treated to some of the highest standards in the world. This treatment involves a huge (literally HUGE) amount of energy. That means when you’re pouring water down the drain, you’re also pouring energy down the drain, too.
The other part of this myth that needs debunking is that water might still exist at the end of the process, but it is a finite resource. Oh, a flashy term right there. By finite resource, I mean that that we cannot magically create more water.With a rising population and each of us using more water than we did just fifty years ago comes a strain on water resources to make sure there is enough to go around.
Us water companies have to work really hard to make sure we maintain flows in rivers, lakes and streams across the country and it really is a bit of a balancing act.
So, if we take it down to its simplest form, the less water you use, the more we can leave in the environment for the wildlife and ecosystems which rely so dearly on water.
And as discussed already, with the treatment process involving so much energy, in addition to chemicals and other resources, it quickly becomes apparent that water use actually does have a pretty big environmental impact.