In the present day, the amount of water being added to the Earth’s ecosystem from space debris is negligibly tiny compared to the amount that’s already here.
As a rough estimate, about 40,000 tonnes of matter falls to Earth from space every year—and that’s a *total* estimate, most of which is rocky dust and not icy bodies (this close to the Sun, ice tends to sublimate into water vapor and not form solid chunks). The Earth’s hydrosphere contains about 1,400,000,000,000,000,000 tonnes of water, so even if all the space debris hitting us was pure ice chunks, it would increase the amount of water on earth by 0.00000000000286% per year, and it would take 3,500,000,000,000 years (8,000 times the age of the Earth) to double the amount of water on the planet.
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