But this is a local phenomenon. Depletion at one point will not cause this problem at a remote location.
So, in essence your saying that depletion of a water source would only effect that location and no other? I can't see how that could be. If water in maine, on a very small scale even; say a pin drop, were to evaporate there winds would carry it out to the Atlantic atleast. Then again if the water is not there to evaporate and get put back into the system to produce more rain..what then....no rain? droughts?..and this would go for sweet water and salt water....sure the oceans will hopefully never dry up....hope..hope....hope... but the system ultimately deprived of water from bottled water and the boat loads of other sources in every grocery store across america (and many other countries) could feel the impact. I mean for just a moment, even though I would never feel right saying this, walk into your local wal-mart or costco. How many products have water in them? Now multiply by 3000 or more. Now go to England, Russia, Turkey, Canada, or Brazil. Every nation of the world has bottled water. I know no where near as much as the U.S. , but they have some. Now with billions of gallons of water not doing it's job of evaporating then finding a nice cloud to flow out of (yeah I know it's not sound scientific language), what has the end product become? Is this just a local problem? god I hope I'm wrong...but to me this seems like an epidemic. To me it seems like it will never get better, water is in high demand across the globe. Now where did all that sweet water go that was so plentiful years and years ago, I know the population has risen 10 fold in less than 200 years, and this isn't helping matters any. Now I'm just rambling on so I will leave you with those points to discuss. Thanks and I will be glad to hear your responses later.
P.S. Thanks for the welcome sign and also to the many who have posted, this is a work in progress so the debate shall go on.