Maybe a picture from the USGS will help:
http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/2010/pictures/full-size/global-water-volume-large.jpg
That is the volume of the oceans to the planet. It is very doable.
oops: too big of pic, here is the website-
http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/2010/gallery/global-water-volume.html
Doing the math, I get roughly about 42.5 years for 100 10k ton lift capacity ships to lower earth's hydrographic percentage by 10% working 360 days a year. Very roughly, with there being 1.4 billion km^3 of water over about 360 million km^2 (70% of a 6400km radius sphere's surface area) to a mean depth of 3.8 km. Less if one goes by a higher than 9cubic meters in a ton.
http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/2010/pictures/full-size/global-water-volume-large.jpg
That is the volume of the oceans to the planet. It is very doable.
oops: too big of pic, here is the website-
http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/2010/gallery/global-water-volume.html
Doing the math, I get roughly about 42.5 years for 100 10k ton lift capacity ships to lower earth's hydrographic percentage by 10% working 360 days a year. Very roughly, with there being 1.4 billion km^3 of water over about 360 million km^2 (70% of a 6400km radius sphere's surface area) to a mean depth of 3.8 km. Less if one goes by a higher than 9cubic meters in a ton.
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