Close to nine out of every 10 people in the world now has access to 
clean, safe drinking water, finds a report issued today by UNICEF and 
the World Health Organization. 
The new statistic means that the world has achieved the Millennium 
Development Goal of halving the proportion of people without access to 
safe drinking water in advance of the 2015 deadline. The safe drinking 
water target is part of the Environmental Sustainability Goal.
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| These women from Darfur, who crossed into eastern Chad, now have easier access to clean water. (Photo by Daniel Cima / IFRC) | 
Between 1990 and 2010, more than two billion people gained access to 
improved drinking water sources, such as piped supplies and protected 
wells. By 2010, 89 percent of the world's population, or 6.1 billion 
people, used improved drinking water sources, exceeding the target of 88
 percent.
"Today we recognize a great achievement for the people of the world," 
said UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. "This is one of the first MDG 
targets to be met. The successful efforts to provide greater access to 
drinking water are a testament to all who see the Millennium Development
 Goals not as a dream, but as a vital tool for improving the lives of 
millions of the poorest people."
The eight Millennium Development Goals were agreed in September 2000 at 
UN Headquarters in New York. There, heads of all the world's countries 
adopted the United Nations Millennium Declaration, committing their 
nations to a new global partnership to reduce extreme poverty and 
setting out the eight targets - each with a deadline of 2015.
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| Women in Burkina Faso draw clean water from a new well, February 2012 (Photo by Ryan's Well Foundation) | 
The new report, "Progress on Drinking Water and Sanitation 2012," issued
 today by the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and
 Sanitation, says that by the target date of 2015, 92 percent of the 
global population will have access to improved drinking water.
"Providing sustainable access to improved drinking water sources is one 
of the most important things we can do to reduce disease," said WHO 
Director-General Dr. Margaret Chan. "But this achievement today is only 
the beginning. We must continue to ensure this access remains safe. 
Otherwise our gains will be in vain."
"For children this is especially good news," said UNICEF Executive 
Director Anthony Lake. "Every day more than 3,000 children die from 
diarrhoeal diseases. Achieving this goal will go a long way to saving 
children's lives."
Lake warned that at least 11 percent of the world's population, 783 
million people, are still without access to safe drinking water, and 
billions are still without sanitation facilities.
"The numbers are still staggering," Lake said. "But the progress 
announced today is proof that MDG targets can be met with the will, the 
effort and the funds."
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| Latrine construction in Oklong, Cambodia (Photo by Temple Garden Foundation) | 
The world is still far from meeting the Millennium Development Goal 
target for sanitation, and is unlikely to do so by the target date of 
2015. Currently 2.5 billion people lack improved sanitation, the report 
shows.
Only 63 percent of the world's people now have improved sanitation 
access, a figure projected to increase to 67 percent by 2015. But that 
figure is still well below the 75 percent MDG target.
UNICEF and WHO say that since the measurement of water quality is not 
possible globally, progress towards the MDG target of safe drinking 
water is measured through gathering data on the use of improved drinking
 water sources. 
 
WHO and UNICEF report that "immense challenges" remain. Global figures 
mask massive disparities between regions and countries, and within 
countries.
 
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