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California converts sewage water into drinking water
California’s drought and water shortage has forced the state to result to converting toilet water into drinking water. Southern California has built a 500-million-dollar state-of-the-art water treatment plant which turns raw sewage into pure drinking water. The facility treats the water with a advance filtration technique such as reverse osmosis where high pressure sends water through ultra fine membranes (hoses) and ultra violet light used in removing of contaminants. The water starts out as a brown ice tea looking substance after treatment the end result is a clean and clear product for drinking. The plant believes this high tech process is the wave of the future environmentally friendly, cost competitive, and it all recycles. The conversion of waste water into drinking water could help meet the increased demand for one of life’s essential necessities. California’s water plants and authorities biggest challenge for the conversion plans are not the technology but selling the public on the process known as from toilet-to-tap.