Quote:
Originally Posted by gpsman1
Water useage in perspective:
It is estimated that it may take around 1,750 gallons of water to produce a bushel of
corn. That sounds like a lot, but did you know it takes 684,000 gallons of water per acre
per year to irrigate a golf course? And that, on average, a homeowner uses 21,600
gallons to water his or her lawn each year? Source: Nebraska Corn Board
In the United States, 96 percent of corn used for ethanol production is not irrigated.
Therefore, the current accepted statistic of 785 gallons of water per gallon of ethanol
when irrigating applies to only 4 percent of total ethanol produced today. The ethanol
industry only produces 260 million gallons of ethanol per year with irrigated corn crops
out of a total of 6.5 billion gallons. Source: National Renewable Energy Laboratory
According to a recent article by the Associated Press, a typical 40 million gallon per year
ethanol plant uses about 330,000 gallons of water per day. But did you know that an
urban area of roughly 180,000 residents (roughly the size of Overland Park, Kansas)
uses 23 million gallons of water per day and the city of Chicago pumps 500 million
gallons per day from Lake Michigan.
On average a corn plant needs 30 inches of water per year to produce a maximum yield.
Within the next two years, we will see drought resistant corn that can produce a
maximum yield with only 15 inches of water. Thats a 50 percent reduction in water
needs! Source: Monsanto, Syngenta and Pioneer Seed Company
According the U.S. Geological Survey, an acre of corn gives off 3,000-4,000 gallons of
water each day through transpiration. As a corn plant grows, it takes in water, but it also
transpires water, releasing it into the atmosphere and starting the hydrologic cycle all
over again. This process is known as water transpiration. Source: U.S. Geological Survey
On average, the production of one gallon of ethanol requires three gallons of water. It
takes approximately 2.5 gallons of water to produce one gallon of gasoline. However,
with new developments, it is estimated that it will take between 2 -2.5 gallons
of water for each gallon of ethanol. Source: National Renewable Energy Laboratory
If a person turns on the faucet four times a day for an average of 2 minutes he uses 24 gallons of water per day, 730 gallons per month and 8760 gallons per year. If the average person drives 12,000 miles per year, uses approximately 600 gallons of fuel with an average of 20 miles per gallon, and drives using an E10 blend, only 1590 gallons of water was used to produce the fuel.
In most cases, a third of the water used in ethanol production is reused within the
production process. The remaining water is evaporated in the atmosphere or discharged
into drainage pumps where it is filtered and held in a drainage pond for reuse.
© 2008 Ethanol Promotion and Information Council, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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Ok. I got it. Chicago, a city of around 3 million uses a lot of water from Lake Michigan. As a vice-president famously stated. . . "So?" Los Angeles also uses a lot of water in spite of the fact it's in a drought zone. Big cities, little cities - even the farmer who grows the corn is using water which in many cases flows into his septic tank.
Right: Corn transpires, and sends it's water into the atmosphere. However, the prevailing westerlies will carry that water to, hmm Chicago? Rain for the Plains comes across the mountains.
California grows a lot of corn - and right now the state water management district is trying to work out how to parse that water.
More to the point, that aquifer under the Plains is being drawn down at an alarming rate.
Yep. You certainly have hit the nail. Water is important, and how it will be used in the future is becoming an issue.