Water


water-2.jpgYou have to love water. Water is, without doubt, the most incredible substance we know. All life depends on it. Although water covers three quarters of our Earth’s surface, the freshwater that so much of life depends upon only makes up 1% of this water – just a tiny sliver scattered on this earth to support us all.

'Water, water every where, nor any drop to drink.'

Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 'The Rime of the Ancient Mariner', 1799


MYTHS

There is more than enough water to go around. We can drain our rivers at will and they always recover. We use water so wisely that we can’t possibly find any more savings.


FACTS

Fresh water is our most precious resource on earth. It is the essential ingredient for life on earth. We use it in almost everything we do. We depend on it for drinking, eating, energy and transport. We have become so used to its seeming abundance that, like a loving mum, we have come to take it for granted.

Until recently Sydney’s water levels in our dams were at historical lows. Our farms are getting drier, the runoff into our rivers is slowing down – we have less water for everything.

Sydney households are terrible at conserving water. Consider for a moment the recent global study by international water experts Hoekstra and Chapagain. They found that New South Wales households held the worst record for water consumption. On average, each Sydneysider uses 341,000 litres of water each year – that’s around 8 backyard swimming pools. We are the most carefree by a good distance on the driest continent on the planet! The closest to us is Canada in distant second with 279,000 litres per year. The Americans use 217,000 litres per person, the Chinese 26,000 and Bangladesh just 16,000 litres (half a backyard pool). The world average is 57,000 litres. We need to lift our game.

Using water tanks to capture all the rainfall from our roofs is a great start. Recycling our stormwater and wastewater would be a brilliant. Currently most of it gets washed down the drain.


Latest information

 

  • And now for some good news on water...

    June 25th, 2010

    Let's face it: green fatigue is real. It's hard to keep caring when all you hear is bad news. And that's why we all need a bit of good news. We need to be reminded that good things are happening, and the world isn't falling to pieces just yet.

    Read more >

  • Touchy-feely descends to argy-bargy as Mermaids try to turn the tide

    February 3rd, 2012

    WHY isn't the marine life at the world's most famous beach protected? That's what snorkellers, divers and marine biologists want to know. But they're picking a fight with recreational fishers who say that ''touchy- feely'' moves such as creating a marine park at Bondi would have no impact on biodiversity.

    Read more >

  • Water from thin air: Aussie Ed's Airdrop an international hit

    November 16th, 2011

    An Australian designer has beaten 500 inventors to win a £10,000 international prize for his beetle-inspired device that is capable of extracting water from even the driest desert air.

    Read more >

  • Bottled water ban 'stupid'

    October 10th, 2011

    THE peak body for the bottled water industry has called the Victorian College of the Arts' decision to ban the sale of bottled water ''stupid''. Last week, the VCA announced it would stop selling bottled water at its Southbank campus in a bid to reduce its environmental footprint. The university has installed 10 new drinking fountains instead.

    Read more >

  • Sandbag strategy leaves beach's future living on the edge

    August 25th, 2011

    Emergency work to prevent further coastal erosion at the northern NSW town of Kingscliff has been stalled by red tape, with council staff warning many more seaside communities will face the same problem unless the complex coastal protection laws are streamlined.

    Read more >

  • 'Reef becoming coal and gas highway'

    August 24th, 2011

    Queensland’s first Greens senator Larissa Waters has used her parliamentary debut to warn that the state’s tourism industry is in danger of having its prized asset turned into a ‘‘coal and gas highway’’.

    Read more >

Snapshot

this week's carbon emissions:
1.885m tonnes

water restrictions
Water Wise Rules

current uv levels:
Extreme

water storage levels:
80.8% full

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