If in the UK the farmer would need a water abstraction licence, even if the water was just about to go out to sea.
Even though the abstraction is so close to the sea, it still might harm the environment nearby. It could reduce the level of the water in the drain, drying it and nearby fields out, or it might even allow the sea to flood back up the drain, killing any freshwater fish with salt (and not doing too much good to the fields either). What happened would depend upon whether there is a sea-wall, which side of the wall the abstraction point was, how much was being taken, and the natural flow rate.
If the abstraction was not too great, a UK farmer would probably get a licence without much difficulty.
2007-06-25 21:29:11
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answer #1
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answered by richard_new_forester 3
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since you ask about the "sea" I presume you're not in the US, and most things here are regulated. You said the water drains into the sea. I would ask where the water comes from. If it's from other farms then it's considered runoff and may have contanimants (like pesticides) in it and may not be drinkable but "may" be ok for farming. Although it would be a good idea to ask the government if that is ok for you to do, if you're merely concerned about the situation then remind yourself that if you asked and someone became aware of what people were doing then many farmers would be hurt. Why not let someone else take issue with that? People merely try to survive.
2007-06-26 00:04:06
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answer #2
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answered by sophieb 7
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Ask the stone quarries that question. After they finish putting a giant whole in the earth, they fill it with water. How much water do they lower my water table by?
A one inch rain is equivalent to 25000 gallons of water per acre. Tanking water in is virtually impossible. Most irrigation is done from quarries, rivers, creeks and ponds. At what cost to the enviroment? Irrigation has been done for ages. The water takes a different route to the same place. Evaporates in the sky to be rained somewhere else, where it will flow into another body of water or filtered through the earth into underground aquifers. etc etc etc Water constantly recycles. Greater worry is the shift of global warming where there isnt much water to recycle. o.O
2007-06-27 15:05:17
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Nope. Throwing any merchandise at somebody is attack, no rely if it hits or not, and if it does hit them, it fairly is considered "battery". A water balloon is innocuous, of direction, yet that isn't end some crybaby from taking you to court...and triumphing. Throwing products out of your vehicle: what this is declared as relies upon on what state you're in, however the vehicle Code in merely approximately any state could evaluate it reckless habit a minimum of, "launching a missile" (I youngster you not) at worst. in case you're in shifting site visitors while that water balloon hits yet another vehicle, you're gonna be in a worldwide of harm interior the eyes of the regulation.
2016-09-28 11:23:20
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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only 1 correct answer, give the points to Richard.....
a farmer or anyone needs a licence to remove an agreed amount of water.
the amount is decide upon by the agency, depending on the natural average flow of the stream, size of an aquifier etc.. counting the damage that could be done to life in the stream if it level was lowered etc..
It could be limit of x number of litres per day, or an annual limit.
2007-06-27 11:04:49
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answer #5
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answered by dsclimb1 5
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Yes dear, there is no harm to take few tankers of water for the fields, the huse sea will never mind.
2007-06-25 20:27:24
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answer #6
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answered by SPSC9999 1
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If the water is already going to be drained into the ocean, putting into a field instead couldn't be any worse.
Fish tend to be especially sensitive to toxic chemicals, so if there's good fishing in this drainage, chances are the water is safe.
2007-06-25 16:52:33
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answer #7
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answered by lithiumdeuteride 7
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It's legal and won't hurt anything.
If the farmers are going on private property to fill the tankers, then it's illegal unless they have permission from the property owner.
2007-06-26 03:52:19
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answer #8
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answered by flutterbye 2
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I don't believe so, but probably the best place to find out would be your nearest Department of Ecology or Fish and Wildlife (probably DOE would be the best)
2007-06-25 17:20:37
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answer #9
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answered by mannon 6
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U can take a horse to water but a pencil must be lead
2007-06-26 05:05:46
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answer #10
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answered by Soup Dragon 6
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