Around 8 to 10 million cubic miles of Earth's water is considered fresh water, of which some 6 to 7 million cubic miles (more than two-thirds) is frozen in glaciers and the ice caps in Greenland and Antarctica.
41 million cubic kilometers, or about 3%.
There is less than 1% of fresh water in the whole world. There is a posibility that the water you are drinking now might have already been in someones mouth a thousand years ago. But it would be cleaned and purified.
About 2% of the total water on Earth is polluted to the point that humans cannot drink it.97% is ocean water, and a lot of water is locked in the ice caps or aquaphors far underground, so this is a significant amount. Only about 1% is drinkable for humans.
* 97% is ocean water, too salty to drink or use for irrigation fresh water : 2.5% of the total
3% of the earths water, is fresh water
Earths fresh sater has a percentage of 35
The amount of Earth's water that is usable as a freshwater resources can vary. There is a very large percentage of freshwater available, but much of it is unobtainable.
The largest source of freshwater on earth is ice sheets, glaciers, and icebergs. The Great Lakes are the largest fresh water on the planet.
3%
only 3% is fresh water
By 2% it means 2% of the entire earth's water is fresh water and the rest is salt water, mineral water, etc. the two percent are the lakes, streams, rivers, aquifers, and yes, groundwater- any source of fresh water on the earth...it makes me suddenly feel thirsty
The amount of Earth's water that is usable as a freshwater resources can vary. There is a very large percentage of freshwater available, but much of it is unobtainable.
3% of the earths water, is fresh water
The largest source of freshwater on earth is ice sheets, glaciers, and icebergs. The Great Lakes are the largest fresh water on the planet.
Assuming you mean "How much of the water on Earth is fresh water", about 5% of the water on the Earth is fresh water, as opposed to about 95% salt water. To anser your question directly though, 100% of the fresh water we know about is on Earth. There is some water on other celestial bodies, but I wouldn't exactly call it fresh water.
3% of Earth's water is drinkable. 99% of that 3% is locked in glaciers. The rest of the water is salt water.
1% of water is usable in this case .Since only 3% of water is usable as fresh water, 2% is unavailable in frozen form leaving approximately 1% of the earth's water usable.
The total amount of Earths total water supply that is usable fresh water is less then two percent. The rest is salt water or pond water.
there is 45 million gallons of fresh water in glaciers
3%
0.3
The Earth's total surface is 80% water and only 2.5% is fresh water.
It is estimated that about 70% of the earth's fresh water is frozen in Antarctica's ice sheet.