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Showing posts with the label #water scarcity

What are the Advantages of Having Recycled Water?

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70% of our earth is covered by water, so we must keep it clean as well as fresh all the time for a better life. But, water pollution is at peak these days, due to which several countries use  wastewater recycle system  and  water reuse technology  to clean dirty or polluted water. Indeed, recycled water offers many benefits, such as using it for irrigation, watering the plants, and washing clothes. Apart from it, recycled water also offers the below-mentioned benefits.  Reducing effects on the atmosphere : Filter machines in a wide variety of industries dewater and remove liquids and solids, all of them vigorously designing and applying water management techniques as well as water and wastewater reuse. The mining and mineral processing firms can innovatively handle the waste mines through modern, large-scale filter press technology, and they can dry them instead of tailings ponds. Tailing ponds have the potential to pose multiple environmental threats such as contaminant leakage to dri

Will Water Desalination be Global for Water Scarcity?

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  Everyone knows that the ocean takes up almost 70 percent of the earth's surface and accounts for 96 percent of the planet's water. The thing is, we can't drink this water directly, because it is salt-oversaturated. The method of converting saline ocean water into drinking water is desalination. So, will the  water desalination system  be a silver bullet with 783 million people without access to drinking water and more areas facing extreme droughts? So far, the Near East and the USA was a desalination king. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Israel are heavily dependent on clean water desalination. Israel provides 40% of desalination domestic water. There are still barely any supplies in these countries of soil or fresh water, so desalination is a requirement for creativity. The one percent of the planet that depends on desalination to fulfill water requirements is in these nations. However, by 2025, the United Nations reports that 14% of the world will rely on desalination to sati