UnescoWater
    
 Water Celebrations


MEETING BASIC NEEDS

To ensure our basic needs, we all need 20 to 50 litres of water free from harmful contaminants each and every day.
A child born in the developed world consumes thirty to fifty times as much water resources as one in the developing world.

Targets

UN Millennium Development Goal (2000):
'Reduce by half, by 2015, the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water.'

World Summit on Sustainable Development, Plan of Action (2002):
'... we agree to halve, by the year 2015, the proportion of people who are unable to reach or to afford safe drinking water (as outlined in the Millennium Declaration) and the proportion of people who do not have access to basic sanitation.'

Water supply, distribution of unserved populations

Sanitation, distribution of unserved populations

Water supply, distribution of unserved populations, figure extracted from the WWDR Sanitation, distribution of unserved populations, figure extracted from the WWDR
Asia shows the highest number of people unserved by either water supply or sanitation; yet it is important to note that proportionally, this group is bigger in Africa because of the difference of population size between the two continents.
[Figure source]: Extracted from the Executive Summary of the WWDR. WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme, 2002. Updated in September 2002.

Water and health

Diarrhoeal diseases
   - Every day, diarrhoeal diseases cause some 6,000 deaths, mostly among children under five.
   - In 2001, 1.96 million people died from infectious diarrhoeas; 1.3 million were children under five.
   - Between 1,085,000 and 2,187,000 deaths due to diarrhoeal diseases can be attributed to the 'water, sanitation and hygiene' risk factor, 90 percent of them among children under five.
   - With simple hygiene measures such as washing hands after using the toilet or before preparing food, most of these deaths are preventable.

Malaria
   - Over 1 million people die from malaria every year.
   - About 90 percent of the annual global rate of deaths from malaria occur in Africa south of the Sahara.
   - Malaria causes at least 300 million cases of acute illness each year.
   - The disease costs Africa more than US$12 million annually and slows economic growth in African countries by 1.3 percent a year.
   - Sleeping under mosquito nets would be one simple but effective way to prevent many cases of malaria, especially for children under five.

Schistosomiasis (bilharziasis)
   - More than 200 million people worldwide are infected by schistosomiasis.
   - 88 million children under fifteen years are infected each year with schistosomes.
   - 80 percent of transmission takes place in Africa south of the Sahara.

 

Water and sanitation

1 billion people) lack access to improved water supply

2.4 billion people lack access to improved sanitation

Access to piped water through household connections
   - Latin America and the Caribbean: 66%
   - Asia: 49%
   - Africa: 24%

Access to sanitation linked to a sewage system:
   - Latin America and the Caribbean: 66%
   - Asia: 18%
   - Africa: 13%

To achieve the above targets:
   - an additional 1.5 billion people will require access to some form of improved water supply by 2015, that is an additional 100 million people each year (274,000/day) until 2015;
   - access to drinking water globally means providing services for about 1.9 billion people are required to gain access to improved sanitation, that is an additional 125 million people each year (342,000/day) until 2015;
   - in urban areas, more than 1 billion additional people will need access to both water supply and sanitation over the next fifteen years in order to meet the targets

 

Definitions:
Malaria: transmitted by mosquitoes, malaria is characterized by extreme exhaustion associated with paroxysms of high fever.

Schistosomiasis: a disease caused by a worm that is often found in irrigation ditches and still river water.


Most of these information are based on figures provided by the World Health Organization (WHO).

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