drinking
87% of the world's fresh water supply is used in agriculture -- mostly to water crops.
Of all the water on Earth, around 2.75% of it is fresh drinking water.
The world's total water supply is estimated to be around 1.4 billion cubic kilometers, but only about 2.5% of this is fresh water. Of the fresh water, only a small fraction is easily accessible and clean for human use.
Less than 1% of the world's water is fresh water, with only a small fraction of that being readily accessible for human use. The majority of fresh water is trapped in glaciers, ice caps, and underground aquifers.
The fresh water in Greenland and in Antarctica is all stored as ice, making it mostly inaccessible for casual fresh-water use.
Drink
Yes!! because fresh water available in the world is just nice to support basic needs of living things. like bathing drinking washing. however people around the world are abusing it especially large factories as they use water to cool down their machines, use excessive water for cleaning and companies producing drink use more water than what they produce.
Only about 1% of the world's fresh water supply is easily accessible and ready for human use. The rest is stored in glaciers, ice caps, or deep underground aquifers.
The main difference is that fresh water is liquid and found in rivers, lakes, and streams, while a glacier is frozen water in the form of ice in the polar regions or high mountains. Additionally, fresh water is more readily available for human consumption and use, while glaciers store massive amounts of ice that can impact the global climate and sea levels when they melt.
yes!
three percent of all the earths water is fresh water
three percent of all the earths water is fresh water