Monday, June 13, 2022

 Save Water and It Will Save You

By Kaylee A.

 

Have you ever just stopped and thought about how your everyday actions could affect anyone around the world? Even things like brushing your teeth, taking a shower and washing your hands can really take a toll on others' lives.

          For example, an article published by Water for People tells the story of

Peter living with his family of six that has to hike two miles everyday to gather his water for the day. Peter's youngest of his five children is only four years old and is already in the habit of hiking the trip everyday. Peter states, "My children have not really had the time to play and simply be children," along with the overall 450 million children around the world in hardship, from lack of clean water.

All of this could change, considering the average amount of gallons used per day by the average American is 82 gallons of water, and 30 gallons of that is being wasted and could be going to families just like Peter’s. Maybe we think this is acceptable because it typically does not affect us living in the U.S, but by the year 2050, around half the population will be living in areas with high levels of water scarcity, and every two minutes a child your age, even younger, could be dying from water carrying a variety of diseases.

Half the reason many people around the globe experience water scarcity is because of climate change. In a study done by Stanford University, “if temperatures continue to rise due to climate change, rainfall will increasingly become a beast of extremes.” Director of the Global Freshwater Initiative, Steven Gorelick, says, “Rainfall is somewhere between beautiful and a nuisance.  It’s not something you immediately drink, so when water supplies come up short, it’s often a slow-moving disaster.” We can't blame everything on climate change as we are also a major cause of this world wide disaster due to us over using fossil fuels, which are a type of hydro-carbon material, produced underground from leftover dead plants and animals that are used by humans to burn and produce fuel; this causes altered weather patterns and climate activity, limiting the amount of water around the globe. This also isn't completely ideal because although 70% of Earth is made up of water, only 3% is fresh water, meaning we can drink it.

Do Qatar, Israel, Lebanon, Iran, Jordan, Libya, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Eritrea, United Arab Emirates, San Marino, Bahrain, India, Pakistan, Turkmenistan, Oman and Botswana sound familiar? Well, these are only some of the many countries that have high levels of water stress today. This is a big problem because the effects could spread like wildfire, even to countries less likely to be affected. For example, if water is low in all of these countries, economic decline may occur, leading to serious supply and demand issues around the globe, cutting off all sorts of necessities like food, clothing and much more.

So what can we do about this even from halfway across the world? Even donating to a local charity could help tremendously like generosity.org, which is a non-profit organization committed to ending the clean water crisis in developing countries.

Now that you know the effects of water scarcity, it's time to wake up and make a change. Remember, even the smallest of things can make the biggest impact.  Together we can solve this world wide problem as a worldwide community.

  “Rainfall is somewhere between beautiful and a nuisance.  It’s not something you immediately drink, so when water supplies come up short, it’s often a slow-moving disaster.” We can't blame everything on climate change as we are also a major cause of this world wide disaster due to us over using fossil fuels, which are a type of hydro-carbon material, produced underground from leftover dead plants and animals that are used by humans to burn and produce fuel; this causes altered weather patterns and climate activity, limiting the amount of water around the globe. This also isn't completely ideal because although 70% of Earth is made up of water, only 3% is fresh water, meaning we can drink it.

Do Qatar, Israel, Lebanon, Iran, Jordan, Libya, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Eritrea, United Arab Emirates, San Marino, Bahrain, India, Pakistan, Turkmenistan, Oman and Botswana sound familiar? Well, these are only some of the many countries that have high levels of water stress today. This is a big problem because the effects could spread like wildfire, even to countries less likely to be affected. For example, if water is low in all of these countries, economic decline may occur, leading to serious supply and demand issues around the globe, cutting off all sorts of necessities like food, clothing and much more.

So what can we do about this even from halfway across the world? Even donating to a local charity could help tremendously like generosity.org, which is a non-profit organization committed to ending the clean water crisis in developing countries.

Now that you know the effects of water scarcity, it's time to wake up and make a change. Remember, even the smallest of things can make the biggest impact.  Together we can solve this world wide problem as a worldwide community.





5 comments:

  1. The author’s opinion on the issue of water waste is that people have been over-using water and we should all be more cautious with the amount of water were really wasting. I completely agree with Keeley because it says that 450 million children around the world do not have clean water to use. Water scarcity is happening all over the world because of us wasting water on simple things like brushing our teeth, bathing, etc.

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  2. Kaylee,
    You did a really great job on this. Immediately from the line “ Together we can solve this world wide problem as a worldwide community.” I inferred that you weren’t okay with this situation. I agree with you, it’s not okay; people are dying, diseases are spreading, “every two minutes a child your age, even younger, could be dying from water carrying a variety of diseases.” and children may not be able to see a future of opportunities.
    I really liked how you put your emotion into this piece, and how I pictured myself in someone else's position.

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  3. I agree; people should stop wasting so much water. I agree because like you said 70% of earth is water, and only 3% of that water is fresh.

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  4. I absolutely agree with you, Kaylee. I honestly never thought about the use of water until I read your article. “by the year 2050, around half the population will be living in areas with high levels of water scarcity.” This blows my mind that generations after us will have to deal with this crisis. That is unless we can do something about it. Together we can solve this worldwide problem and end it for good!

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  5. Kaylee, I agree that we should be saving water and not wasting it. I believe this because it affects the lives of many people. For example, you said an article published by Water of People tells the story of a family that has to hike two or six miles each day. You also say because of the easy access of water, Americans use 82 gallons of water a day and 30 gallons of that gets wasted instead of going to families like Peters. Because we waste so much water the reality that Peter is going through may become ours. But we can also do the reverse and give Peter our reality. This is why we should save water instead of wasting it.

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