Our Daily Water Footprint
Did you know that the average person uses 5,500 liters of water a day?
Isn't that hard to believe? Yes, we do consume that much water. And given the fact that nearly 2.1 billion people still lack access to safe water – we need to ask ourselves whether our water usage is as smart as can be. This is because water is a renewable but finite resource. As such, understanding our water consumption can help us solve one of the most pressing problems we face today.
Let's Calculate Our Daily Water Footprint
Let's discover our daily water footprint. A hot shower is the typical start of our day. But even a quick shower amounts to approximately 9 liters of water per minute going down the drain. Even a five-minute shower uses just 45 liters of water.
Next, when we throw on our favorite pair of jeans and t-shirt, we may not realize that there is a water footprint in getting dressed. It takes almost 8,000 liters of water to produce a pair of jeans, and another 2,700 liters of water to produce a t-shirt. If we divide the total amount by 365 days (considering that it lasts a year), it adds only another 29 liters to the staggering amount of water used. You haven’t even left your bedroom and your daily water footprint is already 74 liters.
Even the food we eat has a hidden water footprint. For every 200 ml of milk, 200 liters of water were used to produce it. Drinking just one cup of coffee with a quarter cup of milk has upped our water count by another 50 liters. It’s not yet 9 AM, and our daily water footprint’s already starting to add up – to 124 liters!
What about the car we drive to work? Your car consumes water as well. It takes about 454,000 liters of water to produce a small car. And each time you fill up a car’s 60-liter (16-gallon) gas tank, your vehicle consumes a whopping 10,860 liters (2,869 gallons). Over a five-year period, your car consumes 49 liters a day in production water, and another 775 liters (in gas production) a day –-based on filling a 60-liter tank every two weeks. Your daily water footprint has now reached 948 liters.
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