A new study shows that agriculture consumes 92% of the world’s fresh water used each year.
Arjen Hoekstra and Mesfin Mekonnen of the University of Twente in
Enschede in the Netherlands divided the surface of the earth into blocks
of 85 square kilometers or less and looked at water consumption
patterns for agricultural, industrial, and household uses in each block.
The study looked at the years 1996 to 2005.
In that time, people used an annual average of 9087 cubic kilometers
(about 24 quadrillion gallons) of fresh water for all uses. Unlike many
other studies, this one took into account the fact that water is often
recycled and reused many times before it goes into the sea.
The study also looked at “virtual water”,
or the water embedded in the creation of a product. A previous study
found that it takes about 5300 liters of water to grow and process a
dollar’s worth of grain, something that’s not obvious when looking at a
sack of flour in the grocery store.
Many countries lack sufficient water to produce necessary goods, so
the crops are grown and processed in other couuntries, then imported, or
material goods, such as electronics, are created and put together, then
imported. About 22% of the water consumed worldwide is virtual water
that has moved across national borders.
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