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Why should you conserve water?
Why should you conserve
water? Water is one of our most abundant yet precious resources, which
we seldom appreciate. Why? Because it is so plentiful and easy to
obtain. All we do to get water is turn on any of our spigots 24 hours a
day, 7 days a week and it’s there. It appears just like magic. Now we
know water just doesn’t magically appear.
After extensive treatment processes and
traveling through miles of pipeline, potable water is a valuable
resource that shouldn’t be wasted. Did you know that just 1% of the
entire water supply on this planet is available for human use—the rest
is salty or locked in glaciers or ice caps. And just 1% of that amount
is actually used for drinking purposes—the rest goes to watering lawns
and gardens, washing machines and down toilets and drains. And
remember, you pay for every drop, whether it’s used or wasted, so water
conservation is something we all should practice.
Do you
know that when you conserve water, you also save on other services.
When you use less hot water, there is less energy needed to heat that
water, thereby reducing your gas or electric bill. When you use less
water, you also put less water down your sewer drains, thereby reducing
your sewer bill or reducing the burden on your private septic system.
By implementing a simple conservation program, you are helping the
environment by helping ease the burden on water storage, purification,
distribution and treatment facilities.
These
pages contain some simple, painless ways to reduce your water
consumption without really altering your lifestyle. A good water
conservation program is mostly a matter of using common sense and taking
the time to think about water and how you use it. Get your entire
family involved in this program since the habits learned at an early age
will make your children better environmental citizens in the future.
FOUR BASIC STEPS TO A WATER
CONSERVATION PROGRAM
Step 1:
Economize!
Look at your water
habits which you have developed over a lifetime. A large amount of
water goes down the drain because we have always thought of water as
being plentiful and cheap. As a general rule, inside your house, the
bathroom facilities make up nearly 75% of the water used. Become aware
of the amount of water you use and look for ways to use less. The most
important thing to do to economize: Think as you use water!
Step
2:
Repair Leaks!
A small leak of just
one drop per second wastes 2,400 gallons of water a year. Leaks are one
of the great enemies of your water conservation program and they
shouldn’t be taken lightly. And don't forget the leaky hot water
faucet; you'll save both water and energy.
Step 3:
Install Water Saving Devices!
There are many
devices you can buy and install fairly easily to reduce your water
consumption. These include faucet aerators; flow regulators for
showerheads; and displacement devices for toilets to reduce water
consumption. Investing a little money, time and labor can have big
paybacks to reduce your water use.
Installing
high-efficiency faucets or faucet aerators could reduce a household's
faucet water by more than 500 gallons annually, can have a payback
period as little as one year and could save between 2,850 and 8,500
gallons and as much as $50 over the lifetime of the product! In the
future you'll be able to look for WaterSense labeled faucets and faucet
accessories like aerators. WaterSense labeled products perform as well
as or better than other products in the marketplace and perform at least
20 percent more efficiently than their less efficient counterparts.
Check
http://www.epa.gov/watersense for more
information.
Step 4: Reuse
Water!
Unused or slightly
used water is often suitable for other purposes, even with no treatment
or filtration. During a severe drought, reusing water may become a
necessity. When maximum conservation is called for, make the most of
any water before you let it go down the drain!
SAVING WATER OUTDOORS
Did you
ever realize that sometimes half or more of the water piped into homes
is going right back out through hoses onto lawns and gardens. It’s a
fact of life that when more water is used outside, more is wasted
there. But you don’t have to let your lawn turn brown or the car get
dirty to conserve water. Just use some simple common sense instead.
Using the hose to wet your car beforehand.
For
instance, once you set a lawn sprinkler out and turn it on, it’s easy to
forget just how much water you can waste in a short period of time. A
single lawn sprinkler spraying five gallons per minute uses 50% more
water in just one hour than a combination of ten toilet flushes, two
5-minute showers, two dishwasher loads and a full load of clothes!
The
basic principle of lawn and garden watering is not to give your lawn and
plants more than they need. Don’t follow a fixed watering schedule.
Water when the grass or plants show signs of needing it. Over watering
is bad for plants and lawns.
Did
You Know…
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Leaking toilets can leak over 1,000 gallons of water every single day.
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Every
flush uses 3-1/2 to 7 gallons of water.
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An
unrestricted showerhead runs at 5-10 gallons a minute.
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You
pay for every drop, whether it's used wisely or wasted.

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Water Conservation Tips
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