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Drinking Water

Drinking
water is water that is intended to be ingested by humans. Water of sufficient
quality to serve as drinking water is termed potable water whether it is used as
such or not. Although many fresh water sources are utilised by humans, some
contain disease vectors or pathogens and cause long-term health problems if they
do not meet certain water quality guidelines. Water that is not harmful for
human beings is sometimes called safe water, water which is not contaminated to
the extent of being unhealthful. The available supply of drinking water is an
important criterion of carrying capacity, the population level that can be
supported by planet Earth.
As of the
year 2006 (and pre-existing for at least three decades), there is a substantial
shortfall in availability of potable water, primarily arising from
overpopulation in lesser developed countries. As of the year 2000, 37 percent of
the populations of lesser developed countries did not have access to safe
drinking water. Implications for disease propagation are significant. Many
nations have water quality regulations for water sold as drinking water,
although these are often not strictly enforced outside of the developed world.
The World Health Organization sets international standards for drinking water. A
broad classification of drinking water safety worldwide could be found in Safe
Water for International Travelers.
Typically
water supply networks deliver a single quality of water, whether it is to be
used for drinking, washing or landscape irrigation; one counterexample is urban
China, where drinking water can be optionally delivered by a separate tap. In
the United States, public drinking water is governed by the Safe Drinking Water
Act (SDWA). Among other provisions, it protects the right of employees to report
potential violations. 42 U.S.C. 300j-9(i). Within 30 days of any retaliation, a
whistleblower can file a complaint with the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA).
The standard
test for bacterial contamination is a laboratory analysis of coliform bacteria,
a convenient marker for a class of harmful fecal pathogens. The presence of
fecal coliforms (like Escherichia coli) serves as an indication of contamination
by sewage.
Global
availability
Due to the
presence of overpopulation, which has been prevalent as early as 1975, adequate
water resources do not exist to provide safe drinking water for all people. The
issue of overpopulation is compounded by the realities of wealth distribution
and regional differences in fresh water storage capacity. Africa has been the first region to suffer pronounced widespread inadequate
potable water, but by around 2015, Asia will
certainly own the distinction of greatest water shortfall, due to the expanding
population of the continent.
According to
the United Nations over 1.1 billion people are currently without safe drinking
water. In highly developed countries such as Singapore, United Kingdom,
Australia, USA, Sweden, Denmark, Andorra, Finland, Canada and Mauritius,
virtually 100 % of the populations have access to potable water. The majority of
the people in the world who have unsafe water are concentrated in a few large
countries including China, Pakistan, Nigeria, Indonesia and Bangladesh.
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