We have water everywhere, so it doesn’t seem like a big deal to worry
about its conservation. Even the water that we use in our showers and
sinks gets treated and then used again.
That is the wrong attitude. Though we aren’t necessarily in a dry
area in South Florida, water conservation is important. The main concern
is the way our water gets treated. After it is used in showers and
sinks, the water is sent through the sewage system and to water
treatment plants. The water is then put through a series of filters and
chlorine is added to kill bacteria. By the end of the process, even
sewage water is clean enough to drink.
But this whole process takes a lot of energy. Eighty percent of the
energy used in utilities, such as water treatment, comes from fossil
fuels. Fossil fuels, unlike water, are non-renewable and extremely
detrimental to the environment when burned to create energy. Even if you
don’t care about how burning fossil fuels is bad for all of us, you
definitely care about costs. According to the Miami-Dade County website,
water treatment and purification costs about $11 per 1,000 gallons of
water. That’s not too much money considering how many gallons that is.
Yet on average, a person in the U.S. uses 80 to 100 gallons of water per
day. Considering there are 2.5 million people that live in Miami-Dade
county alone, that’s 225 million gallons of water used a day! In terms
of treatment, that’s $2.4 million per day to treat water to use. That’s a
lot of tax dollars.
The biggest use of water in a household is flushing the toilet,
showers and then sinks. Obviously, we can’t stop using the bathroom, but
we can take shorter showers. Instead of a 15-minute shower, take a
5-minute shower. After a certain point, more water does not make you
cleaner. Also, make sure that sinks and showers don’t leak after being
turned off. Some bigger things we can do as a community are install
high-efficiency showers and toilets around campus. Though the initial
cost would be high, it would payoff over time. High efficiency
dishwashers and washing machines would also help. These little steps
that all of us can take would help work toward a greener U and
eventually greener world.
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