The Global Water Crisis
2.2 billion people lack safe water. This is where, and why.
- 703M
- no basic water service
- 1 in 4
- people worldwide affected
- 27
- country & regional reports
What is the global water crisis?
The global water crisis is the ongoing shortage of safe drinking water and adequate sanitation affecting communities worldwide. Roughly 2.2 billion people lack safely managed drinking water services. About 703 million have no basic water access at all.
The crisis has many causes: climate change, population growth, pollution, conflict, and decades of underinvestment in water infrastructure. It is not evenly distributed. Communities in sub-Saharan Africa, conflict zones in the Middle East, and parts of South Asia face the most severe challenges. Within those regions, rural communities and women and children bear the greatest burden, often walking hours each day to collect water of uncertain quality.
Key facts and numbers
Five numbers that define the crisis. Sources cited.
Water crisis reports by country
Reports on 27 countries and regions. Use the map, sort by severity, or browse by region.
| Country | Region | Severity ↓ | % with basic access | Primary driver | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01 | Sudan | Africa |
60%
|
Conflict | Report | |
| 02 | DR Congo | Africa |
46%
|
Infrastructure | Report | |
| 03 | Yemen | Middle East & North Africa |
55%
|
Conflict | Report | |
| 04 | Haiti | The Americas |
65%
|
Infrastructure | Report | |
| 05 | Kenya | Africa |
72%
|
Drought | Report | |
| 06 | Women in Kenya | Africa | — | Gender | Report | |
| 07 | Sierra Leone | Africa |
63%
|
Infrastructure | Report | |
| 08 | Ethiopia | Africa |
50%
|
Drought | Report | |
| 09 | Tanzania | Africa |
61%
|
Rural access | Report | |
| 10 | Lesotho | Africa |
71%
|
Sanitation | Report | |
| 11 | Eswatini | Africa |
69%
|
Sanitation | Report | |
| 12 | Rural & Urban Africa | Africa | — | Regional | Report | |
| 13 | Middle East | Middle East & North Africa | — | Regional | Report | |
| 14 | Turkey, Syria, Iraq | Middle East & North Africa | — | Shared basin | Report | |
| 15 | Iran | Middle East & North Africa |
94%
|
Depletion | Report | |
| 16 | Israel, Palestine, Jordan | Middle East & North Africa | — | Shared basin | Report | |
| 17 | India | Asia |
93%
|
Depletion | Report | |
| 18 | Women in India | Asia | — | Gender | Report | |
| 19 | Bangladesh | Asia |
98%
|
Arsenic | Report | |
| 20 | Cambodia | Asia |
79%
|
Pollution | Report | |
| 21 | Asian Food Crisis | Asia | — | Regional | Report | |
| 22 | South Africa | Africa |
94%
|
Drought | Report | |
| 23 | Arab Gulf | Middle East & North Africa | — | Depletion | Report | |
| 24 | Egypt | Middle East & North Africa |
99%
|
Scarcity | Report | |
| 25 | Nepal | Asia |
92%
|
Glacial melt | Report | |
| 26 | Thailand | Asia |
100%
|
Pollution | Report | |
| 27 | Vietnam | Asia |
97%
|
Salinity | Report |
Africa
11 reportsKenya
Water access strained in Western Kenya and the semi-arid Southeast. Drought and erratic rainfall stress rural communities.
Women in Kenya
How water scarcity disproportionately affects women and girls in Kenyan communities.
Sierra Leone
Declining water tables are leaving hand-dug wells unreliable. Deep borehole conversions are underway.
Sudan
Conflict has shattered water infrastructure. Aquifers contaminated, millions displaced without reliable water.
Ethiopia
Recurring drought and population growth strain water sources. Rural access lags urban areas.
South Africa
Major cities including Cape Town have come close to depleting reservoirs in recent dry years.
Tanzania
Water access challenges across rural regions. Infrastructure gaps in dry zones.
Lesotho
Exports water to South Africa while struggling to deliver it to its own rural population.
Eswatini
Rural water access challenges across the country, especially in highland districts.
DR Congo
Abundant freshwater resources, but severe access gaps from conflict and infrastructure collapse.
Rural & Urban Africa
How water access differs between African cities and the rural communities around them.
Middle East & North Africa
7 reportsMiddle East
Regional view of water scarcity across the Middle East and North Africa.
Arab Gulf
Gulf states meet most water demand with desalination as natural freshwater runs out.
Turkey, Syria, Iraq
The Tigris and Euphrates basins are under stress from dams, conflict, and drought.
Iran
Severe aquifer depletion. Major cities face water rationing. Climate change is accelerating the crisis.
Egypt
Per-capita water availability is among the lowest globally. Population growth and pressure on the Nile drive scarcity.
Yemen
Conflict has destroyed water infrastructure. Cholera outbreaks track shortages of safe water.
Israel, Palestine, Jordan
Shared water sources with unequal access. Political conflict intersects with regional water stress.
Asia
8 reportsIndia
The world’s largest groundwater user. Rapid depletion threatens agriculture and urban supplies.
Women in India
How water collection falls on women and girls, affecting education and economic participation.
Bangladesh
Arsenic contamination affects tens of millions. Safe water is elusive despite abundant surface water.
Nepal
Glacial melt is disrupting traditional water sources. Remote communities walk long distances for water.
Cambodia
Mekong River dependence and seasonal flooding create complex water access challenges.
Thailand
Industrial pollution and agricultural runoff affect water quality across the country.
Vietnam
Water pollution from industrialization. Saltwater intrusion threatens the Mekong Delta.
Asian Food Crisis
How water scarcity in Asia is driving food insecurity and reshaping farming.
Water scarcity topics
Primers, data, and reports on the populations most affected by water scarcity.
What is water scarcity?
A plain explanation of water scarcity, its causes, and how it differs from a water crisis.
ReadWater scarcity statistics
Current data on global water scarcity, access rates, and trends.
ReadScarcity & children
How lack of safe water harms children’s health, education, and development.
ReadScarcity & agriculture
Farming uses the largest share of fresh water. What scarcity means for global food supply.
ReadScarcity & sanitation
The link between water access and safe sanitation infrastructure.
ReadScarcity & privatization
How private ownership of water resources affects access in developing economies.
ReadScarcity & displaced persons
How forced displacement intersects with water access in refugee and IDP populations.
ReadWater scarcity in the U.S.
Water access challenges within the United States, from the Southwest to Appalachia.
ReadWater & women’s empowerment
How clean water enables women’s economic and educational participation.
ReadWomen and water inequality
The gendered burden of water collection and its effects on women and girls worldwide.
ReadResearch and further reading
Reports, health context, and topic-specific resources.
Health and water
Regional reports
Related articles
Where The Water Project works
We fund water projects in Kenya, Sierra Leone, and Uganda. These pages describe the communities, the work, and the impact.
What causes the global water crisis?
Five overlapping forces drive the crisis. Every country faces a different mix.
Climate change
Shifting rainfall patterns, longer droughts, and glacier melt disrupt water sources communities have relied on for generations. Wet seasons that once arrived on schedule now skip or shorten.
Population growth & urbanization
Demand for water outpaces what infrastructure can deliver. Booming cities strain aging systems, and rural areas lose access as water tables fall.
Pollution
Industrial runoff, untreated sewage, and agricultural chemicals contaminate freshwater sources. Water that looks clean can carry disease.
Conflict
War destroys water systems and displaces communities to places without established infrastructure. Yemen, Sudan, and Syria are recent examples.
Poverty & underinvestment
Communities without resources cannot build or maintain water infrastructure. When wells break, they stay broken.
How water and poverty intersectWhat is being done to solve the water crisis?
Solutions exist, and they work. Access to clean water has expanded over the last twenty years through a combination of government investment, NGO programs, and community-led initiatives.
- 01 Drilling deep borehole wells where groundwater is reliable
- 02 Protecting natural springs that provide water year-round
- 03 Building rainwater harvesting systems for seasonal storage
- 04 Constructing sand dams to capture and slowly release water
- 05 Training community members to maintain water infrastructure long-term