Crime Cases Still Using Cassettes
Technology4 mins ago
I was watching the evening news last night and they had the article on a family conserving water,having a shower instead of a bath, filling the dishwasher completely before starting it etc.. what i do not understand is this planet is 80% (its raining every other day in england) all it takes is purifying and filtering it, we have plenty of it no excuses i think the word is LAZY the goverment wants to complain and tell us what we can do and can't do.
No best answer has yet been selected by louisa06. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The Times ran a very late April Fools article yesterday about possibly 'lassoing' Iceburgs and using tug boats to tow them back to England, where they could be stored in deep water docks and put to good use.
Not much use in a 90 degree summer though!
(Why not fill the dock with Jack Daniels and Coke, and have one MASSIVE party!!)
Ianess makes a very good point about drinking water purity water being used for flushing toilets etc.
I imagine the answer is the cost of an entirely seperate distribution system.
The logical follow on is therefore the installation of rainwater tanks in houses to use filterred water from guttering for such purposes.
However while much of the supply is unmetered and relatively cheap there's not much incentive to install such systems. There's a fair case to suggest that government should introduce legislation to require such systems in all new build houses.
It'd be intresting to see if the water industry supported such a move or not.
Zacsmaster, there's little or no power requirement to such systems. We're not talking about recovering rain water for drinking here toilets and washing machines use large quantities of drinking water. They can easily use filterred rain water.
Pump, tank and filter - it's not rocket science
Even if you use UV sterilisation to make the water good for drinking or bathing they use less than 100W when in use.
As for all that old cr@p about the UK getting more than enough rain that the papers love to spout it's worth noting that with our population we get less rain per head of population than Sudan
Your comparison of the Sudan with Britain is a little disingenuous, jake. Sudan is almost twelve times as large as Britain and with half the population it is not surprising that it gets more rainfall per head than we do. However, they too have their problems because most of their rain falls in the south-west of the country, with large swathes of the north and east bone dry. However, you can prove anything with statistics so here�s my view.
About two feet of water (on average) falls upon GB each year. If my quick arithmetic is correct (and I�m sure I�ll be told if it is not) this equates (very roughly) to about half a million gallons for every man, woman and child in the country, or about 1400 gallons each per day. Yes, I know it does not all fall in the right places at the right time, and much of it is not collected, but that is where the water companies come in. It is their function to collect it, store it, purify it (and they still choose to purify all of it to drinking water standard when only about 1% of it is drunk), and get it to the right places at the right time. It is not their function to ration it.
To help them the country is intersected at regular and convenient intervals by quite large rivers. At present there is a large water supply pipe to the west of London which has been broken for some time. This is preventing large quantities of water being pumped from the Thames to reservoirs near Heathrow airport. So all the recent rain the Thames has been conveniently funnelling from the Cotswolds towards the capital is passing merrily by and being emptied into the sea.
Water is not a scarce resource in this country though the water companies are doing a sterling job in making people believe this is so. Water supply companies with vision and the will to succeed are the scarcity which is causing the current problem.