Dying of Thirst: The Global Clean Water Crisis (#1 by Gospel for Asia)

WILLS POINT, TX — Gospel for Asia (GFA) Special Report #1 — Discussing the world’s quest for access to clean water that is safe to drink.

Photo credit Giacomo Pirozzi, UNICEF
The statistics are mind-numbing.
502,000 people die each year from diarrhea — caused by unsafe drinking water.[1]
2.1 billion people have no access to safely managed drinking water.[2]
159 million people get their drinking water directly from surface water sources.[3]
263 million must travel more than 30 minutes daily to collect their water.[4]

Safe drinking water is something most of us take for granted. But for millions of people, the only water they have is contaminated. And millions more are at risk of having no water at all. According to the United Nations, 1.9 billion people (27 percent of the world’s population) live in “potentially severely water-scarce” areas.[5]
They wake up each morning knowing they must fight to survive.
For those of us who enjoy ready access to clean water, these numbers are difficult to grasp. But for the individuals they represent, life is simple: They wake up each morning knowing they must fight to survive. The day might begin with a long journey to a watering hole. Everything else depends on that crucial task. For others, the day begins and ends in wretched poverty — because chronic illness prevents them from working. And for some, a normal day means watching their children die slowly from waterborne disease.

This is the heartbreaking reality for people around the globe. The widespread lack of clean water is a crisis we can’t ignore. But to address it, we must understand it.

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