
Thirst for Change: The Critical Need for Safe Drinking Water in Developing Countries
- Published:
- Updated: December 16, 2024
Summary
Access to safe drinking water is a fundamental human right, yet billions in developing countries lack this necessity. Contaminated sources lead to severe illnesses and hinder economic growth. The problem’s extent, its causes, and its impact on health and development underscore the urgent need for action.
- Extent: 2 billion lack safe water, causing widespread illness and death.
- Causes: Insufficient infrastructure, population growth, climate change contribute to contamination.
- Impact: Major health issues, economic setbacks, perpetuate poverty cycles.
Safe water is a human right, but for billions of people living in developing countries, it isn’t available. In these countries, polluted water causes mass diseases and death, driving poverty and stifling growth. There is no doubt that developing nations desperately need clean water, and it’s high time to do something about it.
The Extent of the Problem
2 billion people lack access to clean water, the World Health Organization (WHO) says. It means they’re water whose contents are loaded with pollutants such as human and animal waste, chemicals and heavy metals. The consequences of drinking water with contamination are grave and include diarrhoea, cholera, typhoid and other waterborne disease. These are diseases that not only kill and suffer, but also sap resources from already struggling economies and prevent people from working and supporting themselves and their families. Poor access to clean water affects entire communities and means fewer people get jobs and have poorer lives.
What Causes Contaminated Water?
Lack of routine school water testing services in developing countries adds complexity to contaminated drinking water. Less infrastructure and less investment in copper and lead copper and lead school water testing is to blame. Most of the rural areas depend on contaminated wells and boreholes that have not been adequately maintained and protected. Rapid growth and urbanisation putting overstretching water supplies further complicate the situation. It is also because of climate change (change in the weather and increase in natural disasters) that water may contaminate and cause water supplies to fail, leading to a decrease in the water supply to school.
The Impact on Health and Economic Development
The damage done by tainted water on health and growth in the developing world is irreversible. Water illnesses kill more children than all diseases that kill over five, and they keep people out of work and out of the economy. A child who has a waterborne illness, for instance, can’t go to school, and a parent who’s ill can’t work and support the family. Further, the expense of waterborne disease eats up resources already slashed by insufficient health care networks, depleting funds available to meet more urgent issues. Inadequate access to safe drinking water also limits economic growth because people can’t work and be productive – so poverty continues.

The Path to Safe Drinking Water
The journey to water purification in developing countries is hard and long, but it is possible. That will require infrastructure investments, education and awareness-raising, and grassroots action.
Infrastructure investment: Developing countries need to upgrade water treatment plants and construct new water infrastructure for drinking water security. This will take enormous investment by government and private sector institutions, international aid agencies and more. So, for instance, new water treatment technologies and the construction of centralised water networks can expand access to clean water, provide jobs and fuel growth.
Awareness and education: Ensuring that people are educated about the need for clean water and its availability is essential if communities are to take action on the issue. This will mean individualized awareness-raising and training campaigns for residents, as well as training for health care professionals and water-treatment facility operators. For instance, citizen-led programs that remind people to maintain wells and to keep them free from contamination can help make sure fresh water is maintained and accessed.
Public-private partnerships: Public-private partnerships are part of the solution to water contamination in developing countries. These may be as straightforward as community well construction, or as complex as building decentralized water systems. The more local initiatives can be more sustainable and efficient than top-down ones because it lets citizens solve issues on their own. Communities with local participation in water treatment design, construction and maintenance, for instance, could make the systems sustainable and appropriate for local people.
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