That doesn't compute.
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You cannot. Bar is a measure of pressure whereas m3 per minute is a measure of flow rate. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
Bar is a unit used to measure pressure, one bar is the normal atmospheric pressure of the on the surface of the earth, and ten bar is when the pressure is ten times the normal atmospheric pressure on the surface of the earth.
If you mean in the ocean, approximately every 10 meters pressure increases by 1 bar. Assuming you want absolute pressure, at the surface you already have a pressure of approximately 1 bar - the atmospheric pressure. You can base your calculations on that.
Water pressure increases by approximately 1 bar for every 10 meters of depth in freshwater. At a depth of 10 meters, the water pressure would be about 1 bar, in addition to the atmospheric pressure at the surface, which is roughly 1 bar as well. Therefore, the total pressure at 10 meters depth would be about 2 bars.
90 meters. Every 10 meters, the pressure increases by approximately 1 bar, to this, you have to add the atmospheric pressure, which is also approximate 1 bar.