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17 answers

Water isn't really scarce, dude.

Some places are rife with disease due to dirty water. I'm not sure how converting seawater would change this.

2006-08-22 14:02:48 · answer #1 · answered by Gestalt 6 · 0 0

in case you have glass or clean plastic sheeting, build a photo voltaic nonetheless. that's in fact a sprint greenhouse with a chamber for containing some seawater, and a basin around the ingredient for catching condesation. The solar warms the seawater and evaporates it. Then the water condenses on the window fabric (glass or plastic) and drips into the basin. They sell those issues and positioned them in existence rafts. in any different case, you're possibly caught boiling it and attempting to seize the water vapor in some form of condenser. opposite osmosis could artwork additionally, yet your constrained factors could or many no longer incorporate an suitable membrane and pump.

2016-12-11 13:29:34 · answer #2 · answered by mijarez 4 · 0 0

Why not just give them clean water to begin with. No need to convert seawater. It is more expensive to convert seawater.

2006-08-22 14:02:31 · answer #3 · answered by arizona wolfman 5 · 0 0

It is very hard to get salt out of water in a manner that takes little energy. For the same coast that it would take to convert the water, you can just get water from somewhere else. The funny thing is that the human race has gotten too big too fast and we'll run out of drinking water unless we find a way to take the salt out of sea water effectivly.

2006-08-22 14:03:05 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Water treatment is not cheap. Many processes and chemicals are involved in the process and they can take a while to actually work out.

As far as the distribution of water to the poor I believe they do distribute water at places like homeless shelter diners and soup kitchens, things of that sort.

2006-08-22 14:06:44 · answer #5 · answered by I want my *old* MTV 6 · 0 0

It is happening. A local scientist in South Africa has done a step further and is also combining the process with using the movement of waves to creating electricity for communities along the coastline :)

2006-08-25 18:28:03 · answer #6 · answered by MeerKatje 3 · 0 0

We do already, but not for the whole population of homeless people. The reason why its not made for the homeless.....are they going to pay for it? Who will? We the taxpayers will pay. And we already pay enough as it is. However the govenment could pass some sort of bill to fund a project like this. But then again, either they pay for it out of their "pockets", or we get stuck paying for it.

2006-08-22 14:06:28 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It is cost prohitibitve. It would be cheaper to sanitize fresh water through boiling or micro-filtering.

2006-08-22 14:02:40 · answer #8 · answered by ziz 4 · 0 0

It is being done, but it is expensive, and with the passing of time it keeps getting cheaper to do it.

That is my answer from Washington, D.C.

2006-08-22 14:06:58 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I think some countries in fact do but its a very expesive process for very little product

2006-08-22 14:02:30 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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