7.3billion - potential annual drinking water costs for the human race
Did some math in this post and here is a snapshot of what I found out in the writing of this post So let’s say high quality filtered water costs the same everywhere as it does in Orange County california homes with filters…it would only cost 7.3 billion to ensure all 8 billion people on earth have 8 glasses a day of perfect drinking water for a whole year. Thats less than a dollar per person per year….. What’s up with water? That’s my main side quest right now. The stats from Google say we’re using about 6-16 million gallons daily or 25-62 million liters on the 2.5 billion AI daily queries. Seem like a lot? Certainly I’ve heard complaints and worries about it. Guess what? That’s barely anything compared to the fashion industry, the SECOND largest consumer of water globally! They use….wait for it…..215 trillion liters a year….thats 250-500 billion liters daily O.O…. It costs about 2700 liters of water to make one cotton t-shirt, about as much water that one person needs for 900 days. These stats have inspired me to do a deep dive on water. What are the major industrial water users? What are the main suppliers of drinking water and usable cooking and hygiene water? How do governments and businesses work in this regard? What are the sciences and policies? I wanna know..what businesses, what charities, and what volunteer work, small medium and large scale can most easily pop up for already involved and wanting to be involved parties that reasonably scratch itches/needs in all of these arenas. I’m just spitballing and have no clue what I’m talking about…I’m just starting my research…but I already have 2 ideas I’m working on. Churches could have members buy water filters and use church tap water to volunteer time just filling the machine and emptying it in to industry viable containers that could be picked up daily or weekly by big water trucks and delivered to warehouses that ship it all over the country and world starting with nearest regions and greatest need…I keep thinking of homeless people but that’s so hard because of their conditions/locations as well as them being potentially dangerous…street outreach would be cool but a seriously hard option. Anyway…consumer tap water is about ten cents a gallon…I think that the machines and filters aren’t that expensive and maybe bring it to twenty or thirty cents a gallon. Literally the church could just put up signs for visitors as well as remind people to stop by and fill the jugs as much as they want in their free time! Honestly one person could make a bunch of gallons of water in minutes depending on how many machines there are. This is all assuming there would/could be enough oversight that’s regulatorily viable and reasonably safe…the goal is clean drinking water for needy people, not poisoning people!!! Of course..this is just a nice gesture to help needy regions while we figure out how to help the various regional issues with innovation and cooperation toward sustainable community involvement and growth!