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Water in the Future: How Safe Are Our Water Supplies?

Now that we've entered the new millennium, and face risks we'd never even considered before, we must ask ourselves: How safe are our water supplies?

In the future, we'll see greater national and global movement toward using water wisely. As agriculture, the environment, and cities compete for water, sources will be strained, causing higher prices and shifting our priorities. We won't run out of water, but we will recycle it and describe it by type: drinking water, gray water, black water, rainwater.

Scott Chaplain of the Rocky Mountain Institute predicts, "We're going to see a great reduction in water use." Through conservation and a wide range of water-saving products and technologies, current indoor usage of about 77 gallons per person per day will probably drop to 30 gallons or less. Globally, 2 billion people already lack adequate clean water or sanitation; regional shortages will likely worsen as pollution and demand increase.

Here are a few quotes from experts:

"Federal programs are maturing, so water quality should improve over the years ahead, both in terms of source water protection and in more stringent standards for water at the tap."—Stephen Clark, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

"We don't have to rely on taking water from the farmers. There's more than enough water that could be supplied through conservation in our cities to meet all of our needs for the next 20 years or more."—Scott Chaplin, Rocky Mountain Institute

"Water is going to be the future energy engine. It will replace fossil fuels as the primary national treasure of all countries. It will become the gold."—Paul Bierman-Lytle, SEAS—Sustainable Environment Associates

"We want basic human needs to be met for drinking, sanitation, cleaning, and growing enough food. All those things require that we use water as efficiently and wisely as we can. That's something we're not doing now."—Peter Glick, Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment & Security

Five water trends you can count on by the year 2012:

1. Efficient appliances

Appliances will become highly efficient in their consumption of water. Dishwashers and clothes washers will have sensors for tailoring water to a load's needs.

2. Reclaimed water

Homes will have rainwater collection kits and dual water supplies—one with drinking water, the other with reclaimed water for toilets and outdoor irrigation.

3. Low-maintenance/high-tech gardens

Landscaping will utilize more native plants. Sophisticated mulching and drip-irrigation sensors will control delivery of reclaimed water.

4. Low-flow fixtures

Faucets, showerheads, toilets, and other fixtures will operate effectively with very little water.

5. Organic local treatment

Local treatment facilities will use plants, algae, fish, and aquatic organisms to produce clean water.

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