Rainwater harvesting | Wikipedia audio article

Rainwater harvesting | Wikipedia audio article

Rainwater harvesting | Wikipedia audio article

This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Rainwater harvesting

00:00:46 1 History of rain water harvesting
00:04:01 1.1 Current uses
00:04:10 1.1.1 Canada
00:04:45 1.1.2 India
00:07:13 1.1.3 Israel
00:08:07 1.1.4 New Zealand
00:08:27 1.1.5 Sri Lanka
00:08:56 1.1.6 South Africa
00:09:36 1.1.7 United Kingdom
00:10:11 1.1.8 Other countries
00:13:11 2 New approaches
00:14:47 2.1 Nontraditional
00:15:24 2.2 Rainwater harvesting by freshwater-flooded forests
00:16:00 2.3 Rainwater harvesting by solar power panels
00:16:57 3 Advantages
00:18:04 3.1 Independent water supply
00:18:51 3.2 Supplemental in drought
00:19:53 3.3 Life-cycle assessment
00:21:10 4 System setup
00:22:44 5 Applications of rainwater harvesting
00:22:54 5.1 Agriculture
00:24:04 5.2 Domestic use
00:25:34 5.3 Industry
00:26:42 6 Quality
00:28:49 7 See also

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SUMMARY
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Rainwater harvesting is the accumulation and storage of rainwater for reuse on-site, rather than allowing it to run off. Rainwater can be collected from rivers or roofs, and in many places, the water collected is redirected to a deep pit (well, shaft, or borehole), a reservoir with percolation, or collected from dew or fog with nets or other tools. Its uses include water for gardens, livestock, irrigation, domestic use with proper treatment, indoor heating for houses, etc. The harvested water can also be used as drinking water, longer-term storage, and for other purposes such as groundwater recharge.
Rainwater harvesting is one of the simplest and oldest methods of self-supply of water for households usually financed by the user.

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