One of my most nostalgic memories as a young child growing up when my sister was still living here was the hectic morning routine I would have to endure until she went to college. My sister single-handedly is causing the water shortage crisis in America, as well as everywhere around the world. My sister would manage to take the longest showers ever recorded in the history of mankind. When someone is in the shower for 40 minutes, you wonder what could be going on in there. A shower uses roughly 2 gallons of water per minute, so every day for 4 years or so my sister would use 80 gallons of water every morning.
The American public has no clue about how limited water is on this planet. The world is mostly water. However, only 3 percent of this
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In the United States and other developed nations, access to clean, safe water for the majority of the population is achieved through a public water supply infrastructure. The people who don’t receive their water from infrastructure normally get it from private wells. The EPA is in charge of determining the standards for the drinking water in the U.S. And even though the infrastructure system most of us have is aging and can fail, everyone can have access to clean, safe water at a reasonable cost. Without this access to safe water, the human population, as well as all living things, will decline; water is what keeps you and me alive …show more content…
For one thing, more humans on this planet equals more water being consumed. With this massive spike in population, natural resources and forested places are being demolished to create housing for people. When it rains in a forest, the water gets absorbed into the soil, seeps down into the groundwater, and becomes part of our drinking supply again. When it rains in a suburban neighborhood, the water cannot seep through the concrete, so it begins to travel downhill, which is called runoff. This runoff water will dissolve anything in it’s path. All the car oil, litter, and other contaminants that could be on the road get swept in the runoff, which leads to either a storm drain or a creek or river. Depending on where you live, both of those places could supply you with drinking water