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Can
We Drink The Ocean?
by
Stephen Marshak
"Water, water, everywhere, /Nor any drop to drink"Samuel
Taylor Coleridge’s famous lament (in The Rime of the Ancient Mariner),
echoed by many a castaway languishing on a raft, holds true on a
global basis too. With so much ocean water around, why do we constantly
hear of water shortages? Simply because we can’t drink seawater or
use it for industrial or agricultural purposes. Seawater, as we have
seen, contains about 3.5% salt, while drinking water cannot contain
more than 0.05%. We can, however, extract drinking water from seawater
by distilling it. A distillation plant, or desalinizationplant, consists
simply of a furnace that boils seawater. Only freshwater goes into
the steam, leaving the salt behind; the plant then transforms the
steam back into water by cooling it in a coil of glass tubing. But
while the method is simple the cost is high, for it takes a lot of
energy to boil water. As a result, the water obtained from a desalinization
plant costs about ten times more than fresh-water pumped out of the
ground. Consumers can justify the cost of distilled drinking water
only in places like the Netherelands Antilles, a group of desert
islands north of Venezuela, which completely lack natural freshwater
supplies and cannot receive water by pipeline. Because of the cost
of desalinization, some Middle Eastern nations have considered towing
huge icebergs from Antarctica up to the Persian Gulf, since water
leaves salt behind when it freezes. But most of the glacier would
melt before it even reached its destination, and the cost of towing
it would be prohibitive.
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