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India

Water.org’s program in India provides safe drinking water and adequate sanitation facilities to the families living in rural and urban Indian communities in five states - Andhrah Pradesh, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, and Tamil Nadu. Water.org offers both grant and WaterCredit programs in India.

Rural projects are located in the District of Tiruchirappali in the southeastern state of Tamil Nadu and in Ganjam in the state of Orissa. The rural communities have have large populations of a 1,000 or more with houses built in tight clusters. The proximity of the dwellings in these villages makes the villages ideal candidates for tubewells capped with shared hand pumps.

Urban projects are located in the slums of Tiruchirappali, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Delhi, and Indore.

India

Capital
New Delhi
Population
1.2 billion
No Water
128 million
No Sanitation
839 million
Infant Mortality
2%
Below Poverty
25%

Regional News

WaterCredit workshop in Chennai, India—8-Mar
India is the largest user of groundwater—5-Mar
Fluoride poisons children in Jharkhand, India—4-Mar
Mumbai digs deeper to end water woes—2-Mar
Rajasthan Cabinet discusses water crisis—26-Feb
US helping India, Pak to resolve water dispute—20-Feb
80% Mumbaikars don’t get water from tap—16-Feb
Water crisis triggers violent protest in Mumbai—14-Feb
India Supreme Court orders WAR for Water—9-Feb
Drinking water crisis in Guwahati, India—8-Feb
Mumbai citizens step in to help save water—2-Feb

Photos

We archive all of our pictures on Flickr. Below is just a small sample of what you will find on our account. Educational use of photos is permitted provided appropriate attribution to Water.org or the photographer is indicated.

More photos…

The Water & Sanitation Crisis

India’s huge and growing population is putting a severe strain on all of the country’s natural resources. Most water sources are contaminated by sewage and agricultural runoff. India has made progress in the supply of safe water to its people, but gross disparity in coverage exists across the country. Although access to drinking water has improved, the World Bank estimates that 21% of communicable diseases in India are related to unsafe water. In India, diarrhea alone causes more than 1,600 deaths daily—the same as if eight 200-person jumbo-jets crashed to the ground each day. Hygiene practices also continue to be a problem in India. Latrine usage is extremely poor in rural areas of the country; only 14% of the rural population has access to a latrine. Hand washing is also very low, increasing the spread of disease. In order to decrease the amount of disease spread through drinking-water, latrine usage and hygiene must be improved simultaneously.

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