Water is a fundamental human need. Each person on earth requires at least
20 to 50 liters of clean, safe water a day for drinking, cooking, and simply keeping
Themselves clean.
Polluted water isn’t just dirty –it’s deadly. Some 1.8 million people die every year of diarrheal diseases like cholera. Ten of millions of others are seriously sickened by a host of water-related ailments—many of which are easily preventable.
The united nations considers universal access to clean water a human basic right, and an essential step towards improving living standards worldwide. Water-poor communities are typically economically poor as well, their residents trapped in a ongoing cycle of poverty.
Education suffers when sick children miss school. Economic opportunities are routinely lost to the impacts of rampant illness and the time-consuming processes of acquiring water where it is not readily available. Children and women bear the brunt of these burdens.
Water is obviously essential for hydration and for food production—but sanitation is an equally important, and complementary, use of water A lack of proper sanitation services not only breeds disease, it can rob people of their basic human dignity.