How much water have we removed from the water cylce?

If we tallied up all the water we have stored, outside the water cycle, in the millions of places we hold it, dams, tanks, in toilets, car radiators, refrigerators, pipes, most of the products in our supermarkets, hot water systems, etc etc, the list would be huge. How much water in total would there be in these places? (how much water is in Coke cans at the moment?)

And, hypotheticaly, if all this water was returned to the water cycle, would it have any impact on the worlds current water crisis?

8 Responses to “How much water have we removed from the water cylce?”

  • byderule:

    PERMACULTURE ANSWER

    Water SHORTAGE

    we cant loose a drop of water from the planet ,we live in a closed system ,but we can change it ,and a lot changes naturally.
    With quality or form or location.

    from ice or snow to rivers or the sea,to clouds to rain or sweet potable water to poluted water .

    we should save water
    because there is so little that we can use

    ——————————…
    25% of the planets surface is land
    75%of the surface is water and it is rising

    ——————————…

    97%of the Earths water is salt

    fresh water is only 3% of all the Earths water
    most of it is beyond out reach

    now much ice is melting and running into the seas fresh water lost for ever.

    STORAGE or Location of % of the fresh water
    ice and glaziers 74%
    groundwater 800 meters + 13.5 %
    groundwater less than 800meters 11.o%
    Lakes 0.3%
    soils 0.006%
    Atmospheric in circulation 0.0035%
    rivers 0.03%

    frozen land or permafrost is not included and represent an unavailable storage of 40%

    so of the 3% about 11.6 ,is easily available to us ,in rivers, lakes and ground water surface aquifers,more and more of this is becoming contaminated

    overpopulation of an extra 70 million people a year (increasing all the time )and expanding agriculture ,which uses 70% of available potable water supplies ,has brought the good(sweet) water suplies to critical levels ,some countries have been in trouble already quite a while .

    now climate change and desertification because of irresponsible agriculture ,overgrazing and deforrestation is damaging world fresh water production .

    it is a good reason for concern and if we do not rectify matters by changing agricultural methods ,reforrest ,stop deforrestation,become more economic with water use ,stop producing more people ,stop wasting and contaminating water, we will be in serious trouble all round
    and could end up looking like Mars

    and these are some of the things we can do

    EFFICIENT WATER USE

    IN THE HOUSE
    one can connect the sink straight to the toilet sistern and so use the water twice ,first to have a shave and then to flush the toilet
    also if you bend the ball valve you can regulate the level of the sistern

    and always have your grey water and black water seperate
    so that the sink and shower water goes directly into the garden saving on irregation and at the same time ,making the sewage smaller and easier to deal with ,this also goes and iregates the garden but via a sitern of two compartments and a french drain ,on which you plant trees,

    ON THE LAND
    economic systems of irregation like drip irregation
    and design using a lot of stone walls ,that condense water in the night
    and planting leafy plants for the same purpose
    building wind breaks ,to counter act the drying effects of the wind and farm towards agro forestal ,using as many trees as posible to limit evaporation .using shade nets before we have tree cover

    and use MULCH

    by cutting down the weeds before they produce seeds and leave them where they fall,they will cover the ground and put even more organic matter on top,you can use saw dust,leaves green or dry,and when you plant make a little space and plant in the mulch.this is the easiest quickest and by far most benificial way(for the quality of you soil)to prepare the land for planting

    to prevent weeds from coming all you have to do it turn out the lights,you can even use cardboard or black plastic(this is good for strawberries because they will rot if they touch humid ground,and the bugs can get to them).

    mulch is the same principal as compost but it includes the whole garden surface
    the top part of the soil where the topsoil is being produced houses a world or microbiotic life.

    Mulch is organic material green or dry that covers the ground,the thicker the better the composting process will turn it in to black topsoil

    the humidity is preserved underneath and promotes the devellopment of worms(their exists no better compost than their excrements)and a variety of micro biotic life which together with the mulch produce more topsoil.

    the mulch also keeps the ground temperature even and guards against the impact of the rain ,which would other wise brings salt to the surfave if on unprotected land

    Mulch also prevents the soil from drying out because of the sun and,

    WATERHARVESTING

    the natural way of nature is to evaporate moisture for clouds and this gets blown to places with less water any way ,what obstruct the clouds from getting to deserts ,tend to be mountains that are in the way,
    but generally speaking ,the normal weather patterns spread rain evenly over the planet to balance out the temperatures and humidity.

    As far as catching rain is concerned ,we do this all the time ,and have done so already since Babylonian times,and is a part of the more advanced Agriculture,that existed with the Egyptians,Central ,and south American indigenous peoples,and many others ,today we call this water harvesting.

    In Permaculture the rule is to harvest water to the point of Zero runoff.
    this means that all of the rain that falls on an area is absorbed by the terrain and not a drop leaves it.

    by building dams,ponds or swales, with interconecting ditches,
    if there are enough of these ;the places ,where before the rain water ran over the ground into the rivers and on to the sea ,(in a matter of hours or days),It now runs into absorbant dams or swales and saturates the ground and eventually reaches subteranean water deposits ,taking many months to do so.
    Or it fills up ponds that can be used for Aquaculture.
    And so a convex situation that repels water is transformed in a concave ,absorbant one and turning the area in to a sponge.

    in Spain and Portugal ,which still display many examples of the conquering Moorish influence,One can find many remnants of Waterharvesting,such as aquaducts and tanks underneath the patios ,which collect the rain water from the roofs ,to be used in dryer times.

    in Arabia ,on a large scale ,land has been shaped to catch and lead,rain water into sandy areas or to agricultural lands.sand is almost as good as dams because it absorbs water and holds it.

    to find out more about Water harvesting I recomend:
    the designers manual by Bil Mollison,which cost about 40 dollars.
    and is the best all round book you can get.(tagiari publishing, tagariadmin@southcom.com.au)

    some other writers that are on the internet are
    david Holmgren
    Larry Santoyo
    Kirk Hanson

    Masanobu Fukuaka has written ,
    One-Straw Revolution
    The Road Back to Nature
    The Natural Way of Farming
    Simon Henderson
    and Bill Molisson.
    a representitive of the concept in USA is
    Dan Hemenway at YankeePerm@aol.com
    barkingfrogspc@aol.com

  • Albert F:

    None, a trick question.

  • curious from jersey:

    I don’t think so…with Icebergs melting we have a lot of water to drink and use and we’ll never run out of it.

  • ESweetPea:

    That’s not the issue. The problem is that the fresh water remaining in the general environment is often fouled, and the ocean is full of garbage and waste, as well.

    Throw in some acid rain, ya got yourself one nasty cocktail.

    Storing fresh water has never been an issue. It’s dirtying up water out in the world that’s the real problem.

  • JOHN WALKUP:

    Pretty much all that we have ever used for anything.

  • jdkilp:

    I don’t know the answer, but my guess is that it’s a tiny fraction … maybe 1% or less. Compared to the oceans, seas, inland lakes, and the moisture in the atmosphere, it’s a very small number.

  • JOHN F N:

    Most of the questions are impossible to answer. But to answer if there would be an impact on the world’s water crisis, what kind of water crisis? Pollution, too much water, too little ????

  • K M:

    not one drop.

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