No one disputes water is one of our most precious resources and crucial to life. A human being can survive several weeks without food, but for not more than 48 hours without water.

The U.S. uses 322 billion gallons of water each day, with 39 billion gallons processed for drinking and the remainder being used in irrigation and hydroelectric power. The average American uses 80 to 100 gallons of water per day.

We need water – and a lot of it – but the systems that deliver it are crumbling. Aging water infrastructure is a pervasive and growing problem that can affect health and safety, the environment and the financial well-being of citizens, municipalities and utilities.

Subscribe to Monthly Emails


Recent Posts

Scrapper Leaves Daycare Dismayed & Without Heat

    One Monday, Lourelle and Daige arrived at their New Jersey daycare, ready to welcome more than 100 children, but the building wasn't heating up the way it should ... Most of Daige and Lourelle’s days at a New Jersey daycare were filled with the laughter...

Disintegrating Long Island Sewer Line Leads to $7,200 Repair

    A backed-up utility sink led to a shocking savings for one HomeServe customer. Barrett and his wife came across a troubling discovery in their basement one late summer day: the slop sink near their washing machine was bubbling up with water. The reason...

Blog Article Categories