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There are a lot of basic human necessities that are required for a developed society. One of the biggest examples is access to clean drinking water. Even though there are a lot of people who take this for granted, access to clean drinking water is not necessarily a given. There are a lot of countries on Earth that do not have access to clean drinking water, and it leads to a host of other problems, particularly health issues. For example, if you do not have access to clean drinking water, it is difficult to power your basic bodily functions. Furthermore, a lack of access to clean water can make it hard to grow food, leading to other nutritional issues.
The vast majority of countries in the developed world have access to clean drinking water. This includes countries in North America, Europe, and most locations in Asia. There are plenty of places on Earth where virtually everyone has access to clean drinking water. For example, everyone in Singapore, Hong Kong, New Zealand, and Monaco has access to clean drinking water. In addition, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, and the United Kingdom are countries where virtually everyone has access to clean drinking water. In addition, the vast majority of people in Austria, the United States, Norway, Sweden, and Finland also have access to clean drinking water.
Unfortunately, there are a lot of places where people do not have access to clean drinking water. For example, virtually nobody in Chad has access to clean drinking water. People who live in the Central African Republic also do not have easy access to clean drinking water. Countries such as Ethiopia, Rwanda, and Sierra Leone also do not have reliable sources of clean drinking water. Given that Africa is a continent that is still developing, it should come as no surprise that the vast majority of people in Africa do not have access to a consistent supply of clean drinking water. It is this lack of basic resources that has contributed to a significant amount of strife in Africa.
Yes, the drinking water in the United States is very safe. Even if people do not have water filtration systems at home, the water that comes out of the tap is usually safe to drink. The United States puts fluoride in the water, which protects teeth against cavities. On the other hand, there are some water crises that have developed in the United States recently. For example, most people heard about what happened in Flint, Michigan. There were very high levels of lead in the water, contributing to a variety of health problems. In addition, there was a recent water crisis that took place in Mississippi. Much of the infrastructure in the United States is getting old, and proper maintenance is important for making sure people continue to have access to water.
Country | Access to Basic Water | Access to Safely Managed Water | Year Assessed |
---|---|---|---|
United States | 100% | 97.33% | 2022 |
Brazil | 100% | 85.77% | 2022 |
Mexico | 100% | 43.03% | 2022 |
Germany | 100% | 99.99% | 2022 |
Thailand | 100% | - | 2022 |
United Kingdom | 100% | 99.82% | 2022 |
France | 100% | 99.25% | 2022 |
Italy | 100% | 95.82% | 2022 |
South Korea | 100% | 99.19% | 2022 |
Spain | 100% | 99.59% | 2022 |
Australia | 100% | - | 2022 |
Chile | 100% | 98.77% | 2022 |
Romania | 100% | 81.99% | 2022 |
Netherlands | 100% | 99.97% | 2022 |
Belgium | 100% | 99.91% | 2022 |
United Arab Emirates | 100% | - | 2022 |
Czech Republic | 100% | 97.88% | 2022 |
Sweden | 100% | 99.75% | 2022 |
Portugal | 100% | 95.35% | 2022 |
Greece | 100% | 100% | 2022 |
Hungary | 100% | 92.59% | 2022 |
Israel | 100% | 99.32% | 2022 |
Austria | 100% | 98.9% | 2022 |
Switzerland | 100% | 94.25% | 2022 |
Turkmenistan | 100% | 94.83% | 2022 |
Hong Kong | 100% | 100% | 2022 |
Libya | 100% | - | 2022 |
Paraguay | 100% | 64.08% | 2022 |
Denmark | 100% | 96.73% | 2022 |
Singapore | 100% | 100% | 2022 |
Finland | 100% | 99.64% | 2022 |
Norway | 100% | 98.64% | 2022 |
Slovakia | 100% | 99.24% | 2022 |
New Zealand | 100% | 100% | 2022 |
Costa Rica | 100% | 80.52% | 2022 |
Kuwait | 100% | 100% | 2022 |
Uruguay | 100% | - | 2022 |
Puerto Rico | 100% | 99.86% | 2022 |
Qatar | 100% | 96.18% | 2022 |
Armenia | 100% | 86.91% | 2022 |
Slovenia | 100% | 98.27% | 2022 |
Bahrain | 100% | 98.98% | 2022 |
Estonia | 100% | 95.76% | 2022 |
Cyprus | 100% | 99.77% | 2022 |
Mauritius | 100% | - | 2022 |
Macau | 100% | 99.98% | 2022 |
Luxembourg | 100% | 99.46% | 2022 |
Malta | 100% | 100% | 2022 |
Maldives | 100% | - | 2022 |
Brunei | 100% | - | 2022 |
Iceland | 100% | 100% | 2022 |
New Caledonia | 100% | 96.64% | 2022 |
French Polynesia | 100% | 83.86% | 2022 |
Guam | 100% | 99.44% | 2022 |
Isle of Man | 100% | 97.21% | 2022 |
Andorra | 100% | 90.64% | 2022 |
Bermuda | 100% | - | 2022 |
Greenland | 100% | 96.74% | 2022 |
Faroe Islands | 100% | - | 2022 |
Northern Mariana Islands | 100% | 90.53% | 2022 |
Liechtenstein | 100% | 100% | 2022 |
British Virgin Islands | 100% | - | |
Gibraltar | 100% | 100% | 2022 |
Monaco | 100% | 100% | 2022 |
San Marino | 100% | 100% | 2022 |
Palau | 100% | 91.31% | 2022 |
Japan | 99% | 98.57% | 2022 |
Egypt | 99% | - | 2022 |
Argentina | 99% | - | |
Canada | 99% | 99.04% | 2022 |
Saudi Arabia | 99% | - | 2022 |
Jordan | 99% | 85.7% | 2022 |
Belarus | 99% | 94.61% | 2022 |
Bulgaria | 99% | 97.62% | 2022 |
El Salvador | 99% | - | 2022 |
Latvia | 99% | 96.29% | 2022 |
Trinidad and Tobago | 99% | - | 2022 |
Reunion | 99% | 94.32% | 2022 |
Bhutan | 99% | 36.65% | 2022 |
Montenegro | 99% | 85.07% | 2022 |
Bahamas | 99% | - | 2019 |
Guadeloupe | 99% | 97.59% | 2022 |
Martinique | 99% | 99.06% | 2022 |
Barbados | 99% | - | 2022 |
Samoa | 99% | 46.23% | 2022 |
Curacao | 99% | - | 2017 |
Tonga | 99% | 29.5% | 2022 |
United States Virgin Islands | 99% | 97.94% | 2020 |
Saint Kitts and Nevis | 99% | - | 2017 |
American Samoa | 99% | 98.36% | 2021 |
Turks and Caicos Islands | 99% | - | 2022 |
Saint Martin | 99% | 96.7% | 2022 |
Cook Islands | 99% | - | 2022 |
Wallis and Futuna | 99% | - | 2022 |
Saint Barthelemy | 99% | 100% | 2022 |
Tuvalu | 99% | - | 2022 |
Tokelau | 99% | - | 2022 |
China | 98% | - | 2022 |
Bangladesh | 98% | 58.51% | 2022 |
Vietnam | 98% | - | 2022 |
Iran | 98% | 93.98% | 2022 |
Colombia | 98% | 73.01% | 2022 |
Iraq | 98% | 59.66% | 2022 |
Azerbaijan | 98% | 88.32% | 2022 |
Palestine | 98% | 79.7% | 2022 |
Lithuania | 98% | 94.92% | 2022 |
North Macedonia | 98% | - | 2022 |
Suriname | 98% | 55.76% | 2022 |
Belize | 98% | - | 2022 |
Aruba | 98% | - | 2016 |
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | 98% | - | 2018 |
Antigua and Barbuda | 98% | - | 2022 |
Montserrat | 98% | - | 2022 |
Russia | 97% | 76.1% | 2022 |
Turkey | 97% | - | 2022 |
Uzbekistan | 97% | 58.83% | 2022 |
Malaysia | 97% | 93.82% | 2022 |
Tunisia | 97% | 79.29% | 2022 |
Dominican Republic | 97% | - | 2022 |
Saint Lucia | 97% | - | 2022 |
Nauru | 97% | - | 2019 |
Niue | 97% | 93.54% | 2022 |
Ecuador | 96% | 66.83% | 2022 |
Honduras | 96% | - | 2022 |
Serbia | 96% | 75.04% | 2022 |
Ireland | 96% | 97.33% | 2022 |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | 96% | 88.87% | 2022 |
Guyana | 96% | - | 2022 |
Mayotte | 96% | 93.45% | 2022 |
Seychelles | 96% | - | 2022 |
Grenada | 96% | - | 2017 |
Philippines | 95% | 47.46% | 2022 |
Algeria | 95% | 72.38% | 2022 |
Peru | 95% | 51.26% | 2022 |
Guatemala | 95% | 55.83% | 2022 |
Cuba | 95% | - | 2022 |
Panama | 95% | - | 2022 |
Georgia | 95% | 66.35% | 2022 |
Albania | 95% | 70.67% | 2022 |
Fiji | 95% | - | 2022 |
Cayman Islands | 95% | - | 2022 |
Dominica | 95% | - | 2017 |
Sint Maarten | 95% | - | 2017 |
Indonesia | 94% | - | 2022 |
South Africa | 94% | - | 2022 |
Ukraine | 94% | 89.02% | 2022 |
North Korea | 94% | 66.38% | 2022 |
Syria | 94% | - | 2022 |
Bolivia | 94% | - | 2022 |
French Guiana | 94% | 90.56% | 2022 |
India | 93% | - | 2022 |
Venezuela | 93% | - | 2022 |
Lebanon | 93% | 47.7% | 2022 |
Botswana | 93% | - | 2022 |
Oman | 92% | 90.56% | 2022 |
Moldova | 92% | 74.07% | 2022 |
Pakistan | 91% | 35.84% | 2022 |
Nepal | 91% | 17.58% | 2022 |
Kyrgyzstan | 91% | 70.09% | 2022 |
Jamaica | 91% | - | 2022 |
Vanuatu | 91% | - | 2022 |
Saint Pierre and Miquelon | 91% | 83.13% | 2020 |
Poland | 90% | 98.33% | 2022 |
Cape Verde | 90% | - | 2022 |
Micronesia | 90% | - | 2020 |
Sri Lanka | 89% | - | 2022 |
Ghana | 88% | 41.41% | 2022 |
Morocco | 87% | 79.95% | 2022 |
Gabon | 87% | - | 2022 |
Timor Leste | 87% | - | 2022 |
Senegal | 86% | - | 2022 |
Namibia | 86% | - | 2022 |
Gambia | 86% | 44.72% | 2022 |
Laos | 85% | 17.68% | 2022 |
Marshall Islands | 85% | - | 2022 |
Mali | 84% | - | 2022 |
Mongolia | 84% | 30.06% | 2022 |
Myanmar | 82% | 58.83% | 2022 |
Afghanistan | 82% | 27.59% | 2022 |
Tajikistan | 82% | 55.24% | 2022 |
Nicaragua | 82% | 55.52% | 2020 |
Nigeria | 80% | 21.67% | 2022 |
Comoros | 80% | - | 2019 |
Cambodia | 78% | 27.76% | 2022 |
Mauritania | 78% | - | 2022 |
Sao Tome and Principe | 77% | 36.17% | 2022 |
Liberia | 76% | - | 2022 |
Djibouti | 76% | - | 2022 |
Kiribati | 76% | 14.69% | 2022 |
Republic of the Congo | 74% | 45.9% | 2021 |
Lesotho | 74% | 28.91% | 2022 |
Ivory Coast | 73% | 35.2% | 2022 |
Eswatini | 73% | - | 2022 |
Malawi | 72% | - | 2022 |
Guinea | 71% | - | 2022 |
Togo | 71% | 19.56% | 2022 |
Cameroon | 70% | - | 2022 |
Zambia | 68% | - | 2022 |
Benin | 67% | - | 2022 |
Haiti | 67% | - | 2022 |
Solomon Islands | 67% | - | |
Sudan | 65% | - | 2022 |
Rwanda | 65% | 12.1% | 2022 |
Sierra Leone | 65% | 10.62% | 2022 |
Equatorial Guinea | 65% | - | 2017 |
Kenya | 63% | - | 2022 |
Mozambique | 63% | - | 2022 |
Yemen | 62% | - | 2022 |
Zimbabwe | 62% | 29.54% | 2022 |
Burundi | 62% | - | 2022 |
Guinea Bissau | 62% | 24.33% | 2022 |
Tanzania | 61% | - | 2022 |
Uganda | 59% | 16.65% | 2022 |
Angola | 58% | - | 2022 |
Somalia | 58% | - | 2022 |
Madagascar | 53% | 20.54% | 2022 |
Ethiopia | 52% | 12.58% | 2022 |
Chad | 52% | 5.59% | 2022 |
Eritrea | 52% | - | 2016 |
Burkina Faso | 50% | - | 2022 |
Papua New Guinea | 50% | - | 2022 |
Niger | 49% | - | 2022 |
South Sudan | 41% | - | 2022 |
Central African Republic | 36% | 6.18% | 2022 |
DR Congo | 35% | 18.99% | 2022 |
Kazakhstan | - | 89.33% |