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News / Nation & World

U.N. report: Millions die without clean water

U.N. report finds lack of access kills more than floods, drought, other disasters

By MICHAEL WEISSENSTEIN, Associated Press
Published: March 23, 2023, 3:49pm
2 Photos
People wait for their turn to collect drinking water from a mobile water tanker on World Water Day in a residential area in New Delhi, India, Wednesday, March 22, 2023. From droughts stifling once-reliant sources to destructive downpours and floods, what the world does about its water woes is the central question at the U.N.'s three-day water conference that begins Wednesday which also marks the 30th anniversary of World Water Day.
People wait for their turn to collect drinking water from a mobile water tanker on World Water Day in a residential area in New Delhi, India, Wednesday, March 22, 2023. From droughts stifling once-reliant sources to destructive downpours and floods, what the world does about its water woes is the central question at the U.N.'s three-day water conference that begins Wednesday which also marks the 30th anniversary of World Water Day. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri) (sunday alamba/Associated Press) Photo Gallery

UNITED NATIONS — A lack of drinking water and healthy sanitation infrastructure is dire around the world and getting worse, United Nations experts warned in a report issued Thursday.

The report finds that many millions of the world’s 7.78 billion people don’t have enough clean water or sanitation infrastructure that helps keep humans healthy by taking waste away from their homes.

On the second day of a U.N. conference on water, the report calls on the world “to talk about water and take water seriously,” in order to achieve global development goals, said Kaveh Madani, who trained as an engineer with a focus on water resources in Iran and directs the United Nations University, a global think tank.

The report “has some alarming statistics and results but it is better to disclose that early on, while we still have time,” Madani told reporters at U.N. headquarters in New York.

Report authors pointed out that the lack of access to basic water-related services kills more people globally than floods, droughts and other disasters, even in the age of global warming.

“Far more people die from lack of access to water, then die from lesser climate disasters … I’m not saying that people aren’t dying,” said Dr. Charlotte McAlister, a British-trained hydrologist and senior researcher at the U.N. University Institute. “But far more people are dying from lack of safe water, safely managed water and safely managed sanitation.”

One of several reports issued by U.N. agencies on water this week, it contains no overarching solution. But Thursday’s report tries to go beyond despair, saying that “important progress can be achieved in the remaining years.”

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