A glance at the provided table delineates the utilization of water allocated for three primary purposes in four distinct nations.
Overall, more water is consumed by agriculture in both the Egypt and Saudi Arabia regions, while New Zealand and Canada are preoccupied with industry. Another salient feature is that all countries using water for households are the least.
Standing at 82%, the vast majority of Egypt’s water, which is used for agriculture purposes, is the highest, while only a mere 8% of the water used globally goes to homes. Similarly/likewise, in Saudi Arabia, where 64% of water is consumed for agricultural usage but a trivial percentage is for residential use, making up 6%. Furthermore, the figure for industry in Saudi Arabia (30%) triples than that of Egypt (10%).
Conversely, New Zealand and Canada allocate more water amounts for industrial usage, which are 46% and 70%, respectively. There is an inverse relationship between domestic use and agriculture in these two countries, where New Zealand consumed more water for agriculture at 44%, only a small rate of 10% that of Canada. At the same time, the opposite is true for household usage, which is that 10% of water is consumed in the former area and exactly half of it in the latter.
