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Wednesday, March 22, 2006

World Water Day




While we enjoy the blessings of water every day many around the world suffer from a lack of clean water. They suffer through disease and death. Every year during Ramadan we deprive ourselves for a long period of time from food and water. That is a glimpse of how hard it is without water. We can live for a longer amount of time without food, water however is an essential need. And when the only water you can drink is dirty then there is a problem. I hope inshah allah that everyone on our planet can get access to clean water. The facts right now don't look that bright ( taken from the Christian Science Monitor):

1.1 billion people lack access to safe drinking water, including 42 percent of all sub-Saharan Africans.

• As of 2005, 4,700 people died on average every day - mostly children under the age of 5 - due to lack of potable water.

• The cost of a household connection to water pipes can be five times greater than the per capita income in Benin, Burkina Faso, Kenya, Mauritania, and Uganda.

• Households without plumbing spend on average 90 minutes every day hauling water for family needs. The average American tap delivers the same amount of water in two minutes.

• Women are usually responsible for fetching water when households in the undeveloped world lack plumbing. On average, they carry about 45 pounds of water at a time.

Water Use

• 30 to 50 liters of clean water is considered the basic daily need ofeveryhuman for drinking, cooking, and sanitation.

• Africans consume 37 liters of water a day on average; Americans consume 420 liters a day.Humans consume 950 trillion gallons of water annually - 70 percent of that is used for agriculture.

• Americans - who comprise less than 5 percent of the world population - consumed 15 percent of the total amount of water used in the world in 2000.

• Water use increased at more than twice the rate of world population growth in the 20th century.

Bottled water

• Global sales of bottled water last year reached $100 billion. By contrast, only $10 billion a year would be required to meet the UN goal of providing safe drinking water by 2015 to half of the 1.1 billion people who now lack it.

• 1.5 million barrels of crude oil are required to produce the 2.7 million tons of plastic used to bottle water annually.


Also view this Poster and article on the same topic.

Along the same lines here is an article on the Bottled Water Industry.




3 comments:

Abu Adam said...

Bottled Water - the $100 Billion Fraud Industry

Abu Adam said...

Thanks for bringing this news to our attention :)

Anonymous said...

it's disturbing to hear all this. one of the reasons i went into environmental engineering was that i hoping to get involved in these sort of issues. unfortunately what i've learned is that it seems to be more of a policy/bureaucratic problem then it is a technical one.