Of the 1,385 million cubic kilometers of water on Earth, only 5% can satisfy agriculture and human needs. Furthermore, 97.5% is salt water not available. In addition, 70% of ready-made freshwater is trapped in glacier ice, permafrost, underground aquifers and can not be used by humans. Therefore, this means that less than 1 percent of freshwater is readily available for sustainable use. In the next 25 years worldwide water usage is expected to double every 20 years and by 2050 it will deplete 90% of the world's freshwater supply.
The supply of freshwater will affect the wealthy and the poor. For rich countries, the supply of freshwater means that the world economy is stable. For the poor, it is the foundation of life, livelihood and health. The invention of their water was called "rain maker". Rainmaker insists that how to convert seawater and sewage into distilled water and drinking water of all levels and agricultural water is imitative. This machine has no wearable parts and it is fully automated. The machine can produce 1000 gallons of water per minute. This idea can be realized by installing a desalination plant in the ocean or by installing hundreds of such machines in a barge several miles away. The bottom machine does not pump water, water just flows in there, ensuring the safety of wildlife.
This document is meant to address the growing disparity between wealthy people and poor in developing countries and how we can create situations where globalization policies reduce this gap I will. In many developing countries, there are only poor and wealthy people. Developed countries are characterized by existence of middle class. When developing countries can create a middle class fully functioning in society, the contrast between wealth and the poor seems to have run out.
Due to the expansion of globalization and its negative impact, there is a big gap in income distribution between rich and poor countries in the same country, and rich and poor countries. Mining natural resources is another aspect of the negative impact of globalization. The strategy for increasing production and expanding the use of natural resources and infrastructure development is an important element of economic growth and development goals. The globalization process is the result of several development strategies that have been adopted. These processes lead to inappropriate use of natural resources, poor quality of life for certain groups of people, and social injustice. Refuse the refusal of globalization in the form of communism and socialism