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WHO Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data World Health Organization and United Nations Childrens Fund Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation (JMP). Progress on Drinking Water and Sanitation: Special Focus on Sanitation. UNICEF, New York and WHO, Geneva, 2008. 1. Water supply - standards. 2. Sanitation. 3. Water treatment standards. 4. Potable water standards 5. Water resources development 6. Millennium Development Goals. I. WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation. ISBN 978 92 806 4313 8 ISBN 978 92 4 156367 3 (NLM classification: WA 670)
UNICEF and World Health Organization, 2008 All rights reserved. The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of UNICEF or the World Health Organization concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Dotted lines on maps represent approximate border lines for which there may not yet be full agreement. The figures in the country tables on pages 41-53 of this report have been estimated by the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation (www.wssinfo.org) to ensure compatibility, thus they are not necessarily the official statistics of the concerned country, area or territory, which may use alternative rigorous methods. The mention of specific companies or of certain manufacturers products does not imply that they are endorsed or recommended by UNICEF or the World Health Organization in preference to others of a similar nature that are not mentioned. Errors and omissions excepted, the names of proprietary products are distinguished by initial capital letters. UNICEF and the World Health Organization do not warrant that the information contained in this publication is complete and correct and shall not be liable for any damages incurred as a result of its use. UNICEF and the World Health Organization welcome requests for permission to reproduce or translate their publications whether for sale or for noncommercial distribution. Applications and enquiries should be addressed to UNICEF, Division of Communication, 3 United Nations Plaza, New York 10017, USA (fax: +1 212 303 7985; e-mail: nyhqdoc.permit@unicef.org) or to WHO Press, World Health Organization, 20 Avenue Appia, 1211 Geneva 27, Switzerland (fax: +41 22 791 4806; e-mail: permissions@who.int). Printed in the United States of America Cover: The provision of hand-washing facilities near toilets is critical for supporting school-based hygiene education efforts. Heshima Primary School, Nairobi, Kenya.
Contents
2 3 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20
Foreword The purpose of this report 2008: International Year of Sanitation An new way to look at sanitation practices: the sanitation ladder Progress towards the sanitation target Urban-rural disparities in sanitation coverage Improved sanitation Shared sanitation Unimproved sanitation facilities Open defecation A different perspective on progress
22 24 26 28 29 30 32 33 38 41 54
The drinking water ladder Progress towards the drinking water target Urban-rural disparities in drinking water coverage Piped water on premises Other improved sources of drinking water Unimproved sources of drinking water A different perspective on progress Expanding data collection JMP methodology Country, regional and global estimates on water and sanitation Millennium Development Goals: regional groupings
1
Foreword
Sanitation and drinking water at the heart of human health and development
2008 is the International Year of Sanitation. Accordingly, this report by the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation (JMP) has sanitation as its focus. The importance of sanitation is indisputable. It is a crucial stepping stone to better health: sanitation offers us the opportunity to save the lives of 1.5 million children a year who would otherwise succumb to diarrhoeal diseases, and to protect the health of many more. It is fundamental to gender equity as it protects womens dignity. And it is key to economic development: investments in sanitation protect investments made in other sectors, such as education and health, and bring measurable economic returns. However, the data in this report show that the world is not on track to meet the MDG sanitation target, and 2.5 billion people still lack access to improved sanitation, including 1.2 billion who have no facilities at all. The message is clear: We need to greatly accelerate progress in sanitation, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa and Southern Asia. The number of people who still do not have access to improved sanitation is staggering, and we know that the disease, loss of earnings and indignity lock huge numbers of people into poverty. But the news is not all bad. Although greater impetus is needed, the data show that people are choosing to move up the sanitation ladder, abandoning open defecation and revealing a demand for sanitation facilities. In the case of drinking water supply, the news is good. For the first time, the number of people without improved drinking water has dropped below one billion. More than half of the global population now benefits from piped water reaching their homes, and the numbers using unimproved water supplies are going down. But we must maintain our efforts and galvanize the global community to continue to advance, focusing on those countries and regions, such as sub-Saharan Africa, which are struggling to stay on track. The overall message from this report is positive. Progress can be made, and the sanitation and drinking water battle can be won. Our agencies are proud to present this report on status, and to press forward together.
This report details global progress towards the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) target for drinking water and sanitation, and what these trends suggest for the remainder of the Water for Life Decade 2005-2015. In recognition of the large sanitation deficit, and the declaration of 2008 as the International Year of Sanitation, the report has a special focus on sanitation. It opens with a review of the current status of sanitation and an assessment of progress towards the sanitation target included in the MDGs. The report also introduces a separate assessment of global, regional and country progress using the sanitation ladder a new way ofanalysing sanitation practices that highlights trends in using improved, shared and unimproved sanitation facilities and the trend in open defecation. Trends in drinking water coverage are presented in a similar format. They are disaggregated in a drinking water ladder, which shows the percentage of the world population that uses piped
connections into a dwelling, plot or yard; other improved water sources; and unimproved sources. New data are also presented on the time taken to collect drinking water. The data show the proportion of people that spend more than 30 minutes on a single water-hauling trip and are thus likely to compromise their daily water consumption. In addition, survey data on who usually fetches water are presented to show how this burden is distributed among women, men, girls and boys. Finally, the report provides a new perspective on progress. The country, regional and global estimates, starting on page 41, include a statistic on the proportion of the population that gained access to improved drinking water and sanitation since 1990. The intention is to recognize those countries that have made significant progress despite major obstacles, including low levels of coverage in 1990, rapid population growth or both. 3
SANITATION
2008
Without improved sanitation, people suffer from ill health, lost income, inconvenience and indignity. Yet billions of people around the world lack basic sanitation. In recognition of the urgent need for greater political awareness and action on sanitation, the United Nations General Assembly declared 2008 as the International Year of Sanitation. The goal is to raise awareness and accelerate progress towards the MDG target of halving the proportion of people without sustainable access to basic sanitation by 2015. The five key messages of the International Year of Sanitation are: Sanitation is vital for human health Sanitation generates economic benefits Sanitation contributes to dignity and social development Sanitation helps the environment Sanitation is achievable! More information is available at: www.sanitation2008.org
INTERNATIONAL YEAR OF
SANITATION
Open defecation: Defecation in fields, forests, bushes, bodies of water or other open spaces, or disposal of human faeces with solid waste.
Unimproved sanitation facilities: Facilities that do not ensure hygienic separation of human excreta from human contact. Unimproved facilities include pit latrines without a slab or platform, hanging latrines and bucket latrines. Shared sanitation facilities: Sanitation facilities of an otherwise acceptable type shared between two or more households. Shared facilities include public toilets. Improved sanitation facilities: Facilities that ensure hygienic separation of human excreta from human contact. They include: Flush or pour-flush toilet/latrine to: - piped sewer system - septic tank - pit latrine Ventilated improved pit (VIP) latrine Pit latrine with slab Composting toilet.
The sanitation ladder shows that more than half of those without improved sanitation already use some type of sanitation facility.
6
Coverage (%)
Figure 2 shows that open defecation is declining in all regions: dropping from 24 per cent worldwide in 1990 to 18 per cent in 2006. Open defecation is still most widely practised in Southern Asia and sub-Saharan Africa by 48 per cent and 28 per cent of the population, respectively. In contrast, open defecation is common among only 3 per cent of the people in Eastern Asia. In four of the seven developing regions for which data are available, less than 10 per cent of the population practises open defecation.
62
World Unimproved
5 5 28 6 17 8 7 1618
Unimproved
5 5 6 31 17 15 5 22 16 23
Open defecation
4 4 18 25 44 12 7 22 4 31 3
24 14
65 7
17
17
4 6 84 76 62 53 41 54
MDG target
8
84 76 67 62 50 68
79
79 65
62 48
65
48
41
1990
2006
1990
2006
1990
1990 2006
2006 1990
1990 2006
2006 1990
1990 2006
2006 1990
1990 2006
2006 1990
1990 2006
1990
Southern Asia
Sub-Saharan Africa
Latin America Latin America Southern Sub-Saharan South-eastern South-eastern Western Northern Eastern Asia & Caribbean Africa Asia Asia Africa & Caribbean Asia Asia
WorldEastern Asia
Deve reg
Figure 2 Trends in the proportion of the population using an improved, shared or unimproved sanitation facility or practising open defecation, by MDG regions in 1990 and 2006
*Oceania and the Commonwealth of Independent States are not included due to lack of complete data.
-1
+5
+8
100
89 84
99
80
79
76 67 65 52 53 62
Coverage (%)
60 40 20 0
Commonwealth of Independent States
33
31
Sub-Saharan Africa
Northern Africa
South-eastern Asia
Western Asia
Southern Asia
Eastern Asia
Oceania
Developing regions
Developed regions
Figure 3 Coverage with improved sanitation facilities, by region in 2006 and percentage-point change 1990-2006
Table 1
Regional and global progress towards the MDG sanitation target Sanitation coverage (%) 1990 2006
84 79 76 67 65 99 89 52 33 31 53 62 79 68 62 50 48 99 90 52 21 26 41 54
Region
Western Asia Latin America & Caribbean Northern Africa South-eastern Asia Eastern Asia Developed regions Commonwealth of Independent States Oceania Southern Asia Sub-Saharan Africa Developing regions World
Progress
On track On track On track On track On track On track Not on track Not on track Not on track Not on track Not on track Not on track
World
M D G s a n ita tio n ta rg e t 2 0 0 6
Most countries that are not on track to meet the MDG sanitation target are in sub-Saharan Africa and in Southern Asia
On track
Coverage in 2006 was less than 5 per cent below the rate it needed to be for the country to reach the MDG target, or coverage was higher than 95%
Not on track
Coverage in 2006 was more than 10 per cent below the rate it needed to be for the country to reach the MDG target, or the 1990-2006 trend shows unchanged or decreasing coverage
Coverage in 2006 was 5 per cent to 10 per cent below the rate it needed to be for the country to reach the MDG target
No or insufficient data
2006
2015
80
78
74 58
59 52 43
Population (billions)
The worlds urban sanitation coverage has risen to 79 per cent, while rural coverage has reached 45 per cent. The Urban Rural largest disparity between urban and rural sanitation coverage Figure 6 Urban and rural sanitation coverage, 2006 3.5 is found in Oceania, Latin America and the Caribbean, and 3.0 Southern Asia. The urban-rural sanitation disparity is smallest in Eastern Asia, but even 2.5 there it shows a 15 percentage-point difference.
2.0
In 2006, the worlds population was almost equally divided between urban and rural 1.5 dwellers. Nevertheless, more than 7 out of 10 people without improved sanitation were 1.0 rural inhabitants. That said, rapid population growth in urban areas poses a growing 0.5 challenge: The number of urban dwellers using improved sanitation has risen by 779 million since 1990, but has not kept pace with urban population growth 0.0 of 956 million.
1990
Urban
3.5
Improved Shared Unimproved Open defecation One billion people in rural areas still practise open defecation 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 1990 Improved Shared
Population (billions)
3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 1990 Improved 2006 Open defecation
Rural
Unimproved
n (billions)
10
Urban-rural disparities in the use of improved sanitation facilities are significant in most developing regions
Less than 50% 50% - 75% 76% - 90% 91% - 100% No or insufficient data
Less than 50% 50% - 75% 76% - 90% 91% - 100% No or insufficient data
11
Improved sanitation
THE SANITATION LADDER: Improved
Improved sanitation facilities:
Facilities that ensure hygienic separation of human excreta from human contact. They include: Flush or pour-flush toilet/latrine to: - piped sewer system - septic tank - pit latrine Ventilated improved pit latrine Pit latrine with slab Composting toilet
Sixty-two per cent of the worlds population uses improved sanitation, up from 54 per cent in 1990. The lowest coverage is found in sub-Saharan Africa, where only 31 per cent of the population uses improved sanitation, up just 5 percentage points since 1990. Improved sanitation coverage is also low in Southern Asia, but significant efforts since 1990 have moved regional coverage from 21 per cent to 33 per cent in 2006 more than doubling the number of people who use improved sanitation facilities.
The richest are three times more likely to use improved sanitation than the poorest
100
Coverage (%)
80 60 40 20 0
28 53 40 70
85
Poorest
2nd
3rd
4th
Richest
The vast majority of those without improved sanitation are in Asia and sub-Saharan Africa
Despite increases in coverage, more than 2.5 billion people remain without improved sanitation. Almost 1.8 billion of them 70 per cent live in Asia; 22 per cent of them, more than half a billion people, live in sub-Saharan Africa.
Less than 50% 50% - 75% 76% - 90% 91% - 100% No or insufficient data
12
More than 2.5 billion people do not use an improved sanitation facility; almost 1.8 billion of them are in Asia
At least two thirds of the population in 34 countries are not using improved sanitation facilities. Only eight of these countries are outside sub-Saharan Africa. Despite low sanitation coverage, it is worth noting that, in these 34 countries, 274 million people gained access to improved sanitation since 1990. Moreover, several of these countries managed to double their 1990 sanitation coverage. The use of improved sanitation facilities is substantially lower among the poor than the rich. An analysis across 38 developing countries shows that the poorest 20 per cent of the population has only one third the access to improved sanitation as the richest quintile. In sub-Saharan Africa, inequality is higher still: The richest 20 per cent of the population is five times more likely to use an improved sanitation facility than the poorest 20 per cent.
Eastern Asia, 485 South-eastern Asia, 187 Western Asia, 33 Sub-Saharan Africa, 546 Latin America & Caribbean, 121 Northern Africa, 37 Commonwealth of Independent States, 29 Developed regions, 12 Oceania, 4
Figure 13 Population without improved sanitation, by region in 2006 (millions) Table 2 Countries in which coverage with improved sanitation was 33 per cent or less in 2006
Eritrea Niger Chad Ghana Ethiopia Sierra Leone* Madagascar Togo Burkina Faso Guinea Haiti Congo Rwanda Somalia* Cte d'Ivoire Mauritania Sao Tome and Principe* Micronesia (Federal States of ) Nepal Cambodia* India Senegal Afghanistan* Benin Nigeria Central African Republic Democratic Republic of the Congo Mozambique* Liberia Solomon Islands Guinea-Bissau* Kiribati Uganda United Republic of Tanzania
Improved sanitation coverage (%) 1990 2006 Number of people who gained access to improved sanitation (thousands) 1990-2006
3 3 5 6 4 8 13 5 13 29 29 20 20 29 9 14 26 12 26 11 15 40 29 22 29 35
5 7 9 10 11 11 12 12 13 19 19 20 23 23 24 24 24 25 27 28 28 28 30 30 30 31 31 31 32 32 33 33 33 33
143 714 640 1,465 6,858 147 1,353 222 1,365 991 -162 38 605 1,905 340 11 -1 5,922 3,026 198,442 1,324 1,894 2,025 18,849 982 12,660 2,993 282 62 190 15 4,841 4,284
* No 1990 data were available, therefore the estimates are derived from the population that gained access to improved sanitation over the period 1995-2006.
13
Shared sanitation
THE SANITATION LADDER: SHARED
Shared sanitation facilities:
Sanitation facilities of an otherwise acceptable type that are shared between two or more households, including public toilets.
Note: Data on shared sanitation facilities presented here exclude shared facilities that are unimproved, such as shared pit latrines without a slab or shared open pits. Sanitation facilities that are shared among households whether fully public or accessible only to some are not considered improved facilities, according to the definition used for the MDG indicator. While the use of shared sanitation does reflect demand, limited data confirm the widely held perception that many of these facilities, especially public ones, fail to ensure hygienic separation of human excreta from human contact. Serious concern has also been expressed about the actual accessibility of such facilities throughout the day and about the security of users, especially at night. Further research on the nature and acceptability of shared facilities is needed. The proportion of people using shared sanitation facilities is 10 per cent or less in all developing regions except sub-Saharan Africa, where they are used by 18 per cent of the population. Recent household surveys, namely Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) and Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS), provide information about the number of households sharing a sanitation facility. The analysis in Table 3 shows that, for most countries in which at least 10 per cent of the urban population shares a sanitation facility of an acceptable technology, the majority share a facility with five or fewer households. An exception is Ghana, where a considerably larger proportion of households in both urban and rural areas share sanitation facilities with more than five households. Table 3 Percentage of households sharing a sanitation facility of an acceptable type
Country
Malawi Gambia Mongolia Sierra Leone Somalia Togo Haiti Iraq Central African Republic Jamaica Burundi Bangladesh Cte d'Ivoire Ghana
2-5 households
37 32 29 26 23 23 19 19 18 14 14 14 12 10
14
Table 4
Sharing sanitation facilities is three times more likely in urban than in rural areas of the developing world.
Shared sanitation remains largely an urban phenomenon
The 2006 coverage estimates confirm that more than two thirds of shared sanitation users are urban dwellers. In Eastern Asia, 92 per cent of the users of shared facilities are found in urban areas. In urban areas of sub-Saharan Africa, every third person uses a shared sanitation facility. This finding reflects the limited sanitation options available in many congested cities and towns, an issue that is likely to become increasingly serious if urban and peri-urban populations continue to grow at current rates.
Sanitation practices in countries with the highest use of shared sanitation facilities
Improved (%)
10 20 36 42 52 50 11 59 50 46 60 12 30 52 12 24 76 31 36 43 79 19 28
Shared (%)
51 37 37 37 34 28 26 23 23 23 22 22 21 20 19 18 18 17 16 15 15 15 15
Unimproved (%)
19 34 25 10 10 9 36 8 7 5 7 10 29 6 32 28 4 30 37 16 2 40 33
Sharing sanitation facilities is more prevalent in regions with the lowest sanitation coverage
% 100 80 60
Countries in which 15 per cent or more of the total population uses a shared sanitation facility, 2006
Urban
40
31
Rural
20
11
20 6
15 8 1 5 6 7 6
15
11
Developing regions
Southeastern Asia
Northern Africa
Figure 14 Percent of population using shared sanitation in urban and rural areas, by region in 2006 15
Western Asia
World
Use of unimproved sanitation facilities is four times higher in rural than in urban areas
% 100
80
Urban
60
38 26 25
Rural
40
20
7
19 4 6
21 13 4 0
18 8 8 7
21 5
19
0 Southeastern Asia Eastern Asia Sub-Saharan Africa Northern Africa Latin America & Caribbean
Western Asia
Developing regions
Southern Asia
Figure 15 Use of unimproved sanitation facilities in urban and rural areas, by region in 2006 16
World
17
Open defecation
THE SANITATION LADDER: OPEN DEFECATION
Open defecation:
Defecation in fields, forests, bushes, bodies of water or other open spaces, or disposal of human faeces with solid waste. The practice of open defecation is decreasing
The proportion of people practising open defecation has decreased in developing regions, dropping from 31 per cent in 1990 to 23 per cent in 2006. Almost two thirds of those who practise open defecation 778 million people live in Southern Asia. Despite the drop in percentage terms, population growth means that the number of people who practise open defecation today is little changed from 1990. In sub-Saharan Africa, 221 million people are defecating in the open, the second largest total for any region. Nevertheless, the proportion of the population practising open defecation is 20 percentage points higher in Southern Asia. Nearly one third (31 per cent) of the worlds rural population practises open defecation. In Southern Asia, the figure is a remarkable 63 per cent. The relatively high proportion of the rural population who practise open defecation in Latin America and the Caribbean (23 per cent) and Western Asia (14 per cent) is noteworthy, especially in contrast with the urban areas of these regions.
Open defecation is the last recourse for those without any form of sanitation those at the bottom of the sanitation ladder who must endure the daily indignity of defecating in open, often publicly accessible, spaces. Open defecation is of fundamental importance to development because of the health hazard it poses to anyone living nearby. If some members of a community continue to defecate in the open, then the whole community is at greater risk of diarrhoeal diseases, worm infestations and hepatitis than people living in communities where open defecation is not practised.
Open defecation is six times more frequent in rural than in urban areas
% 100 80 60 40 20 0 Southern Asia Sub-Saharan Africa South-eastern Asia
15 8 63
Urban
39 24 10 2 23 14 0 0 9 4 2
Rural
35
31
Western Asia
Developing regions
Northern Africa
Figure 16 Proportion of urban and rural populations practising open defecation, by region in 2006
18
Eastern Asia
World
Table 5
Countries with a decline of 15 percentage points or more in the practice of open defecation, 1990-2006
1990
84 76 67 91 35 38 39 25 54 36 31 45 29 18 30 65 75 20 22 21 73 39 20
2006
50 46 37 64 10 14 16 2 31 14 11 26 11 0 12 48 59 4 6 6 58 24 5
1990-2006
34 30 30 27 25 24 23 23 23 22 20 19 18 18 18 17 16 16 16 15 15 15 15
800
Population (millions)
600
1,042
Globally, 1.2 billion people practise open defecation, 83 per cent of whom live in 13 countries
(millions) India, 665 Indonesia, 66 Ethiopia, 52 Pakistan, 50 China, 37 Nigeria, 29 Brazil, 18 Bangladesh, 18 Sudan, 14 Nepal, 14 Niger, 11 Viet Nam, 10 Mozambique, 10 Rest of world, 205
400
200
158
Urban Rural
Figure 17 Number of people practising open defecation, by urban and rural areas in 2006
Figure 18 Population practising open defecation, by countries with highest prevalence in 2006 (millions) 19
Table 6 Countries with the largest proportion of population that gained access to improved sanitation, 1990-2006
Table 7
Countries not on track to meet the MDG sanitation target with the largest proportion of population that gained access to improved sanitation, 1990-2006
20
DRINKING WATER
21
UNIMPROVED
Unimproved drinking water sources: Unprotected dug well, unprotected spring, cart with small tank/drum, tanker truck, and surface water (river, dam, lake, pond, stream, canal, irrigation channels), bottled water.
Other improved drinking water sources: Public taps or standpipes, tube wells or boreholes, protected dug wells, protected springs and rainwater collection.
Piped water on premises: Piped household water connection located inside the users dwelling, plot or yard.
22
The population not using improved drinking water sources has fallen below one billion
Today, 87 per cent of the worlds population uses drinking water from improved sources: 54 per cent uses a piped connection in their dwelling, plot or yard, and 33 per cent uses other improved drinking water sources. This translates into 5.7 billion people worldwide who are now using drinking water from an improved source, an increase of 1.6 billion since 1990. About 3.6 billion people use a piped connection that provides running water in or near their homes. Estimates for 2006 show that the population reliant on unimproved drinking water sources is below one billion, and now stands at 884 million. Improved drinking water coverage in sub-Saharan Africa is still considerably lower than in other regions. Nevertheless, it has increased from 49 per cent in 1990 to 58 per cent in 2006, which means that an additional 207 million Africans are now using safe drinking water.
Figure 19 Proportion of the worlds population using a piped drinking water connection, another improved drinking water source or an unimproved source, 2006
13
89
Improved drinking water coverage, according to the MDG indicator
33
Coverage (%)
54
DRINKING WATER SUPPLY COVERAGE Piped water on premises Coverage is improving in all regions*
7 6 16 22 21 17 12 8 12 8 14 7 10 6 12 16 8 26 12 15 17
Other improved
8 27 14 17 30
Other improved
2 7 16 13 27 1 6 14 23
Unimproved
12 13
14 14
10
12 29 26 15
13 29 42 51 33
14 17 30
10 22
32 21
10
32 42
51 38
17 65 54 80 71 73 67 58 51 20 78 69 80 71 73 73 67 58 80 57 78
29 54 65 35
54
17 35 54 80
91 57 93 42 33 48 32 22 16 16 16 54 36
69
42
33 51
73
32 22 16 16
46 36 20
16
1990
2006 1990
2006 1990
2006 1990 1990 2006 2006 1990 1990 2006 1990 2006 1990 2006 1990 2006 1990 2006 1990 2006 2006 1990
1990 20062006 1990 2006 1990 2006 1990 1990 2006 1990 2006 2006
MDG target
1990
Northern Africa
Western Southern South-eastern Sub-Saharan Common-Eastern Latin America Northern Western Eastern Developing Southern Developed South-eastern World Sub-Saharan Asia wealth of Asia regions & Caribbean Asia Africa Asia Asia Africa Asia Asia regions Asia Africa Independent States
Develop region
Figure 20 Trends in the proportion of the population using a piped water connection, other improved drinking water sources or an unimproved source, by MDG region in 1990 and 2006
*Oceania is not included due to lack of complete data.
23
87 per cent of the worlds population uses an improved drinking water source
20 15 10 5 0 -5 +20 +1 +4 +8 +13 +13 +4 +9 -1 92 92 90 88 87 86 84 +13 +1 99 87 +10
100 94
Coverage (%)
80 60 40 20 0 Commonwealth of Independent States Northern Africa Sub-Saharan Africa Latin America & Caribbean Western Asia Southern Asia South-eastern Asia Eastern Asia Oceania Developing regions Developed regions World
58 50
Figure 21 Improved drinking water coverage, by region in 2006 and percentage-point change 1990-2006
Less than 50% 50% - 75% 76% - 90% 91% - 100% No or insufficient data
24
Trends indicate that most countries are on track to meet the MDG drinking water target, except in sub-Saharan Africa
On track
Coverage in 2006 was less than 5 per cent below the rate it needed to be for the country to reach the MDG target, or coverage was higher than 95%
Not on track
Coverage in 2006 was more than 10 per cent below the rate it needed to be for the country to reach the MDG target, or the 1990-2006 trend shows unchanged or decreasing coverage
Coverage in 2006 was 5 per cent to 10 per cent below the rate it needed to be for the country to reach the MDG target
No or insufficient data
Table 8 Region
Regional and global progress towards the MDG drinking water target Drinking water coverage (%) Coverage needed to be on track in 2006 (%) 1990 2006
93 88 84 86 68 74 73 71 98 77 49 51 94 92 92 90 88 87 86 84 99 87 58 50 95 92 89 90 78 82 82 80 99 84 65 67
Progress
On track On track On track On track On track On track On track On track On track On track Not on track Not on track
Commonwealth of Independent States Northern Africa Latin America & Caribbean Western Asia Eastern Asia Southern Asia South-eastern Asia Developing regions Developed regions World Sub-Saharan Africa Oceania
25
98 81
97 73
96 87
95 80
95 84
92 81
91 81
94 76
100 97
96 78
46 37
3.5
Urban
Rural
Population (billions)
Urban
Improved Unimproved
2006
137 million people in urban areas do not use an improved source of drinking water
3.5
746 million people in rural areas do not use an improved source of drinking water
Population (billions)
3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 1990
Population (billions)
Urban
Improved Unimproved
2006
Rural
Improved
Urban-rural disparities in the use of improved drinking water sources are highest in Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa
Less than 50% 50% - 75% 76% - 90% 91% - 100% No or insufficient data
Less than 50% 50% - 75% 76% - 90% 91% - 100% No or insufficient data
27
1,200
1, 047
1,000
Urban dwellers are more than twice as likely as rural dwellers to have piped water connections
% 100 80 60 40 20 0 Commonwealth of Independent States Latin America & Caribbean Eastern Asia Southern Asia Western Asia Northern Africa South-eastern Asia
57 63 48 42 93 98 87 62 53 51 35 14 27 31 70 78 78
Population (millions)
800
595
600
91
90
90
400
200
10
Urban
Rural
Figure 30 Population that gained access to a piped connection in their dwelling, plot or yard and to other improved sources, 1990-2006
Other improved sources: Sources of drinking water likely to be protected from outside contamination, particularly faecal matter, but excluding piped connections into dwelling, plot or yard. They include public taps or standpipes, tube wells or boreholes, protected dug wells, protected springs and rainwater collection.
Use of other improved drinking water sources remains high globally and has increased since 1990. Populations in Southern Asia rely heavily on these drinking water sources, where use has increased from 54 per cent to 65 per cent since 1990. In sub-Saharan Africa, use has increased from 33 per cent to 42 per cent during the same period. In South-eastern Asia, use of other improved drinking water sources has declined slightly, though more than half the population (54 per cent) depends on them. In all other regions, use of these sources is decreasing most notably in Northern Africa, where use declined from 30 per cent in 1990 to 14 per cent in 2006.
Rural dwellers are more than twice as likely as urban dwellers to rely on other improved sources of drinking water
% 100 75 50 25 9 0 Commonwealth of Independent States Latin America & Caribbean Southern Asia South-eastern Asia Sub-Saharan Africa 7 44 74
67 39 44 46 41 25 5 Northern Asia 24 2 Developing regions Western Asia Eastern Asia 23 19 11 49 24 2 Developed regions World Rural 47
19
18
Urban
Figure 31 Coverage of other improved sources of drinking water, urban and rural, by region in 2006
The lowest rung of the drinking water ladder is use of unimproved drinking water sources. Thirteen per cent of the worlds population 884 million people now consumes drinking water from unimproved sources. This represents a reduction of 10 percentage points since 1990. Sub-Saharan Africa has the largest population using unimproved water sources, but figures have dropped for this region from 51 per cent in 1990 to 42 per cent in 2006. Oceania is the only developing region that has failed to lower use of unimproved drinking water sources since 1990. Half of the 9.2 million people in that region continue to use unimproved sources.
884 million people about half of whom live in Asia still use an unimproved drinking water source
Sub-Saharan Africa, 328 Southern Asia, 207 Eastern Asia, 162 South-eastern Asia, 78 Western Asia, 21 Latin America & Caribbean, 47 Commonwealth of Independent States, 16 Northern Africa, 12 Developed regions, 8 Oceania, 5
Figure 32 Population using an unimproved drinking water source, by region in 2006 (millions) 30
Table 9
Countries in which more than 5 per cent of the urban population uses bottled water as their main drinking water source
Country Bottled water users (%) Urban Rural
Dominican Republic Lao Peoples Democratic Republic Thailand Guatemala Guyana Turkey Yemen Haiti* Albania Ghana** Philippines* Serbia Cambodia Indonesia
67 52 45 31 28 26 25 15 12 12 10 7 7 6
34 6 18 10 14 3 1 8 1 1 1 4 1 1
Source: MICS, DHS, Encuesta Nacional de Salud Materno Infantil (ENSMI) and Pan Arab Project for Family Health (PAPFAM) surveys, 2002-2005 * All or part of the water is sold from refilling stations that fill bottles with tap water. ** Data for Ghana only describe use of sachet water (300 millilitre plastic bags of water).
31
Table 10 Countries with the largest proportion of population that gained access to an improved drinking water source, 1990-2006
Proportion of the population that gained access to an improved drinking water source since 1990 (%)
66 61 59 59 53 52 51 49 49 47
Table 11 Countries not on track to meet the MDG drinking water target with the largest proportion of population that gained access to an improved drinking water source, 1990-2006
Proportion of the population that gained access to an improved drinking water source since 1990 (%)
37 33 31 29 28
32
33
Table 12
Mongolia Viet Nam Guinea-Bissau Lao PDR Cambodia Jamaica Guyana Honduras Thailand Uganda India Haiti Somalia Gambia Malawi Algeria Iraq Nepal
0 6 26 30 34 46 46 55 56 61 67 67 69 78 80 83 85 87
95 90 1 64 60 36 10 22 11 37 9 2 8 0 11 1 5 7
1 6 3 0 0 30 43 23 1 1 2 30 13 3 9 15 4 1
2 14 0 1 2 2 1 6 15 1 6 1 4 0 0 1 1 5
0 10 6 7 12 2 6 0 13 1 1 0 9 0 1 0 8 0
2 3 71 2 0 1 1 1 6 2 17 0 4 19 2 0 0 3
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0
0 2 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 3 3 1 0 1 1 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Note: Multiple responses were possible, so totals do not add up to 100 per cent. Source: MICS and DHS surveys in 2005 and 2006.
34
Table 13
Distribution of those usually responsible for collecting water, by percentage of women, men, girls and boys
Men (%)
1 5 11 6 4 8 8 7 8 6 13 25 48 50 54 59 49 75 75
Girls (%)
5 4 1 6 8 5 5 8 6 9 4 15 5 5 5 4 6 1 1
Boys (%)
0 1 0 1 2 1 1 1 2 3 1 14 3 6 7 4 13 1 2
Source: MICS and DHS surveys from 35 developing countries in 2005 and 2006
Women shoulder the largest burden Women shoulder the largest burden in collecting water in collecting water
4% Boys % ls 7
Gir
35
Table 14
Practices of disposing the faeces of young children (less than 36 months of age), by selected developing countries
Inadequate
Put/rinsed in drain or ditch (%) Left in the open (%) Other (%)
20 23 37 18 36 61 27 52 65 44 41 65 70 53 76 45 79 83 37 42 34
2 1 1 2 10 3 9 4 1 0 1 9 9 1 1 7 4 0 2 0 7
4 11 19 38 29 12 35 2 14 30 37 16 3 28 11 24 4 11 57 25 45
2 22 7 15 4 2 5 15 5 3 14 1 6 9 6 15 8 5 1 19 3
49 37 29 26 20 18 14 14 9 8 7 7 5 4 3 2 2 0 0 0 0
23 6 7 1 1 4 10 13 6 15 0 2 7 5 3 7 3 1 3 14 11
36
Table 15
Percentage of urban and rural populations using improved drinking water sources over 30 minutes away (round-trip)
37
JMP methodology
The JMP
The WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation is the official United Nations mechanism tasked with monitoring progress towards the MDG drinking water and sanitation target. In fulfilling this mandate, the JMP publishes updated estimates every two years on the various types of drinking water sources and sanitation facilities being used worldwide. This JMP report presents global, regional and national estimates of the use of improved drinking water sources and improved sanitation facilities in 2006. These coverage estimates show what proportion of the population remained without improved drinking water sources and improved sanitation in 2006 and what the increase in use has been since the MDG baseline in 1990. In addition, the changes in coverage between 1990 and 2006 are used to assess progress towards the 2015 MDG targets for drinking water and sanitation. In line with the MDG indicator definition, which stipulates use of improved facilities as a proxy for access to improved facilities, the JMP measures and reports on the actual use of facilities. It is worth noting that the household surveys on which the JMP relies also measure use and not access since access involves many additional criteria other than use. Measurability of many of these other criteria at the national scale, which is the scale required by the JMP, poses a huge challenge.
Regional averages
Regional coverage estimates are calculated when the available data cover at least 50 per cent of the population in a region. For this report, insufficient data were available to disaggregate each of the rungs of the sanitation ladder for the developed regions, the Commonwealth of Independent States and Oceania. The MDG regional groupings (see map on the inside back cover) have been used in all regional analyses and tabulations.
Population estimates
The population estimates in this report, including the proportion of people living in urban and rural areas, are those published by the United Nations Population Division (2006 revision). These estimates may differ from national estimates.
38
An improved drinking water source is defined as a drinking water source or delivery point that, by nature of its construction and design, is likely to protect the water source from outside contamination, in particular from faecal matter. The JMP uses the following classifications to differentiate improved from unimproved drinking water sources. Improved drinking water sources Piped water into dwelling, plot or yard Public tap/stand pipe Tube well/borehole Protected dug well Protected spring Rainwater collection Unimproved drinking water sources Unprotected dug well Unprotected spring Cart with small tank/drum Tanker truck Surface water (river, dam, lake, pond, stream, canal, irrigation channel) Bottled water3
An improved sanitation facility is defined as one that hygienically separates human excreta from human contact. The JMP uses the following classifications to differentiate improved from unimproved sanitation facilities. However, sanitation facilities are not considered improved when shared with other households, or open for public use. Improved sanitation facilities Flush or pour-flush to: - piped sewer system - septic tank - pit latrine Ventilated improved pit latrine Pit latrine with slab Composting toilet Unimproved sanitation facilities4 Flush or pour-flush to elsewhere 5 Pit latrine without slab or open pit Bucket Hanging toilet or hanging latrine No facilities or bush or field (open defecation)
Since the last report, the JMP database has been updated with data from over 120 new surveys and censuses covering 84 countries: Albania, Algeria, Angola, Argentina, Armenia, Bangladesh, Belarus, Bhutan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cambodia, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, China, Colombia, Congo, Costa Rica, Cte dIvoire, Djibouti, Dominican Republic, Egypt, El Salvador, Ethiopia, Gambia, Georgia, Ghana, Greece, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, India, Indonesia, Iraq, Israel, Jamaica, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Lao Peoples Democratic Republic, Lesotho, Malawi, Mexico, Moldova (Republic of ), Mongolia, Montenegro, Morocco, Namibia, Nepal, Niger, Pakistan, Panama, Peru, Portugal, Romania, Rwanda, Sao Tome and Principe, Senegal, Serbia, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Africa, Spain, Suriname, Swaziland, Syrian Arab Republic, Tajikistan, Thailand, The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Togo, Trinidad and Tobago, Uganda, Ukraine, United Republic of Tanzania, Uzbekistan, Venezuela, Viet Nam, Zambia, Zimbabwe
3
4 5
Bottled water is considered to be improved only when the household uses water from an improved source for cooking and personal hygiene; where this information is not available, bottled water is classified on a case-by- case basis. Shared or public facilities are not considered improved. Excreta are flushed into the street, yard or plot, open sewer, a ditch, a drainage way or other location.
39
40
Drinking water and sanitation coverage: country estimates by type of drinking water and sanitation facilities (1990 and 2006)
Sanitation coverage (%)
Population
Open defecation
Open defecation
Open defecation
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
Piped into dwelling, yard or plot Improved Improved Improved Improved Improved Other improved Other improved Other improved Unimproved Unimproved Unimproved Unimproved Unimproved Shared Shared Shared
Unimproved
Improved
Country, area or territory 11 98 92 87 81 100 100 3 27 28 20 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 49 41 0 78 0 0 6 0 100 0 0 0 0 0 100 100 0 100 99 100 0 68 90 76 78 31 24 22 0 0 0 1 100 100 68 78 78 80 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 43 48 6 5 87 100 100 100 100 100 0 0 0 0 25 30 72 75 13 98 89 9 86 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 32 22 22 20 0 0 0 0 96 79 17 4 94 69 25 6 20 46 20 7 20 27 8
2
Afghanistan 23 36 46 52 64 94 91 37 54 100 100 35 39 87 90 67 64 50 47 85 88 66 66 54 52 84 91 88 97 20 25 45 53 66 73 96 97 100 100 100 94 100 100 100 100 98 2 85 20 65 15 88 30 58 12 76 100 100 0 0 100 100 0 0 98 2 98 2 95 76 19 5 19 40 59 82 66 16 18 16 35 51 100 100 0 0 100 0 100 100 100 0 0 100 0 100 100 0 100 100 0 100 100 100 0 0 100 0 100 100 100 0 0 100 0 100 99 97 2 1 74 22 96 99 97 2 1 64 98 83 15 2 45 35 80 97 76 21 3 22 50 72 95 5 95 5 99 98 98 86 92 94 96 100 100 100 100 90 100 100 100 100 56 48 99 99 91 99 62 35 38 1 38 61 15 36 49 39 51 33 79 2 2 23 20 8 37 34 63 0 40 60 1 38 61 40 39 55 100 0 0 0 0 100 100 32 100 0 7 14 1 1 2 2 14 8 4 2 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 15 28 1 1 1 100 0 0 0 0 0 100 100 100 87 6 13 55 26 19 72 13 15 1 81 85 16 98 1 0 0 38 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 4 0 99 12 1 48 40 12 68 26 6 1 0 88 94 99 97 5 3 72 25 3 81 16 3 2 0 97 97 98 97 77 87 100 100 9 16 45 83 81 100 100 100 100 70 100 100 18 32 100 100 97 100 2 0 2 1 97 37 26 63 0 17 83 3 19 78 42 13 17 22 45 25
Year 1990 1 2 8 14 2 -
Urban (%) 18
41 18 11 0 0 77 56 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 35 14 0 0 0 -
1 2 11 16 6 -
36 2 3 1 0 0 11 20 19 9 7 0 0 0 0 20 0 0 34 37 0 1 1 -
34 9 5 0 0 63 30 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 29 11 0 -
2006
26,088
30 32 42 26 20 7 25 21 7 -
Albania
1990
3,289
2006
3,172
Algeria
1990
25,283
2006
33,351
Andorra
1990
53
2006
74
Angola
1990
10,534
2006
16,557
Anguilla
1990
2006
12
1990
62
2006
84
Argentina
1990
32,581
2006
39,134
Armenia
1990
3,545
2006
3,010
Aruba
1990
64
2006
104
Australia
1990
16,873
2006
20,530
Austria
1990
7,729
2006
8,327
Azerbaijan
1990
7,212
2006
8,406
Bahamas
1990
255
2006
327
Bahrain
1990
493
2006
739
Bangladesh1
1990
113,048
2006
155,991
Barbados
1990
271
2006
293
Belarus
1990
10,260
2006
9,742
Belgium
1990
9,933
2006
10,430
Population
Open defecation
Open defecation
Open defecation
Other improved
Other improved
Other improved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
Piped into dwelling, yard or plot Improved Improved Improved Improved Improved Shared Shared Shared
Improved
Belize 48 34 40 100 100 7 11 56 65 39 46 42 58 75 85 50 66 66 74 66 70 14 19 6 10 13 20 41 56 77 80 44 58 37 38 21 26 71 8 16 90 6 78 6 72 84 55 22 10 29 100 100 0 0 100 100 0 0 99 99 47 51 16 40 88 26 62 12 47 76 26 50 24 31 2 2 38 38 0 0 0 1 80 43 37 20 5 61 56 29 45 61 61 47 51 16 39 84 46 38 16 1 69 70 97 32 65 3 1 67 68 32 30 39 69 53 1 1 53 49 84 60 97 27 70 3 0 66 34 66 62 26 36 38 1 28 71 29 34 72 70 71 65 49 70 100 100 58 66 48 100 96 4 0 3 97 99 100 96 4 0 72 25 3 97 99 88 4 5 3 6 13 12 15 85 88 2 2 2 5 11 30 67 67 65 52 37 55 15 12 56 64 43 98 97 1 2 97 1 2 97 1 98 98 98 97 1 2 97 1 2 97 1 98 98 2 2 1 1 66 28 30 29 35 51 30 0 0 42 34 52 66 29 44 16 28 97 88 9 3 17 41 42 77 14 9 58 91 93 85 8 7 8 46 46 66 17 17 54 83 28 26 2
Year 1990 8 0 55 53 44 13 5 3 6 60 38 0 90 28 62 10 48 48 4 96 30 0 88 13 75 12 24 69 7 93 0 98 72 26 2 82 17 1 99 99 60 60 82 84 100 100 100 100 23 41 41 44 62 47 58 100 100 21 40 19 23 1 96 4 3 99 97 4 69 45 24 31 75 11 14 86 41 54 22 0 1 4 4 7 13 18 20 6 7 9 12 23 15 19 9 49 22 27 51 53 19 28 19 72 47 2 79 9 70 21 14 67 19 16 81 71 9 10 14 0 0 24 36 15 12 0 0 0 0 58 38 40 34 1 46 32 0 0 57 33 39 44 4 24 10 1 0 12 0 3 4 0 0 0 0 12 8 1 2 31 0 1 0 0 10 4 27 14 22 57 2 55 43 11 54 35 6 35 65 37 59 11 50 15 22 92 22 30 37 37 100 100 96 96 2 6 44 41 19 34 42 99 99 5 25 1 4 27 57 1 56 43 7 56 37 17 51 63 32 2 0 4 2 3 1 4 5 1 3 4 3 4 4 5 2 13 2 4 0 100 73 78 98 91 96 99 100 94 40 62 100 100
Urban (%) 47
94 85 13 71 54 0 53 34 35 40 0 0 88 83 3 1 77 6 14 49 33 94 84
5 11 15 1 4 4 2 5 5 5 4 5 7 6 17 5 8
9 5 31 11 16 4 22 35 18 14 0 0 1 1 15 13 48 53 0 52 35 0 0 48 30 10 17
79 65 12 45 26 0 36 14 11 9 0 0 78 69 3 1 68 4 7 35 22 80 66
2006
282
30 23
2
Benin
1990
5,179
2006
8,760
Bermuda
1990
60
2006
64
Bhutan
1990
547
2006
649
Bolivia
1990
6,669
2006
9,354
1990
4,308
2006
3,926
Botswana
1990
1,367
2006
1,858
22 24 26 2
Brazil
1990
149,522
2006
189,323
1990
17
2006
22
Brunei Darussalam
1990
257
2006
382
Bulgaria
1990
8,819
2006
7,693
Burkina Faso
1990
8,871
2006
14,359
12 14 29 16 27 8
Burundi
1990
5,692
2006
8,173
Cambodia
1990
9,698
2006
14,197
Cameroon
1990
12,239
2006
18,175
Canada
1990
27,701
2006
32,577
Cape Verde
1990
355
2006
519
1990
3,008
2006
4,265
Chad
1990
6,113
43
2006
10,468
Population
Open defecation
Open defecation
Open defecation
Other improved
Other improved
Other improved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
Piped into dwelling, yard or plot Improved Improved Improved Improved Improved Shared Shared Shared
Improved
Year 1990 2 0 16 11 4 3 48 61 52 0 22 36 5 5 18 13 0 0 3 3 19 11 55 0 0 10 17 2 2 13 0 2 54 21 68 0 100 100 0 100 100 18 29 1 28 10 25 0 25 0 100 71 29 0 0 0 100 91 9 0 100 0 100 0 100 0 100 100 0 0 100 100 0 100 100 0 0 100 100 5 78 49 29 22 74 17 91 5 31 65 0 98 71 27 2 85 14 1 99 0 98 2 1 99 2 66 13 53 34 35 46 19 81 41 29 65 5 60 35 22 45 33 67 1 96 95 1 4 97 1 2 98 96 88 74 14 12 96 2 88 12 5 95 100 1 87 13 6 100 94 5 35 3 32 65 27 44 29 45 71 19 33 0 0 1 1 25 25 99 99 99 99 100 100 100 100 53 42 100 100 76 77 81 88 91 1 1 0 0 6 15 15 3 3 30 33 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 41 55 0 0 15 5 2 4 4 9 81 3 78 19 13 72 15 3 48 85 31 49 0 3 0 0 1 1 6 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 3 0 0 3 3 2 5 2 2 91 23 68 9 31 62 7 2 62 2 93 34 1 77 63 14 23 87 6 7 13 1 1 93 28 85 58 12 26 21 91 100 92 95 8 12 98 98 95 95 100 100 98 98 1 25 100 100 11 57 74 50 72 2 68 36 32 32 76 13 11 12 3 4 89 81 39 2 81 62 19 19 72 16 12 15 7 4 88 32 74 59 1 5 7 1 2 24 3 3 8 13 1 1 2 2 1 12 15 3 4 3 55 37 18 45 49 18 33 12 24 3 1 67 61 43 2 72 46 26 28 92 3 5 2 1 95 25 97 74 25 51 38 13 15 81 72 37 9 0 1 2 20 24 1 1 5 5 0 0 0 0 74 62 0 0 12 12 3 15 12 1 49 22 27 51 84 7 9 6 3 45 91 91 48 98 97 98 98 99 98 91 95 99 98 99 49 62 95 95 77 82 100 100 97 97 81 79 27 100 100 69 81 98 98 85 92 72 99 71 98 100 100 95 95 100 100 100 100 100 100 90 82 100 100 79 98 100 100 98 97 82 98
Urban (%) 83
4 7 10 11 1 2 37 2 2 15 18 1 1 0 1 5 14 15 3 3
12 5 44 25 6 5 76 63 34 4 0 2 1 24 28 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 65 59 0 0 15 8 2 9 7
4 1 4 3 16 6 5 0 9 0 2 1 41 30 0 0 0 0 0 0 20 10 0 0 13 10 4 17 6
2006
16,465
30 25 29 29 2
China
1990
1,149,069
2006
1,320,864
Colombia
1990
34,875
2006
45,558
Comoros
1990
527
2006
818
Congo
1990
2,422
2006 75 51 62 40 45 54 57 73 75 67 69 75 73 58 62 28 33 85 86 76 87 68 73 55 68 55 63
3,689
Cook Islands
1990
18
2006
14
Costa Rica
1990
3,076
2006
4,399
35 12 1 6 22
2
Cte d'Ivoire
1990
12,780
2006
18,914
Croatia
1990
4,517
2006
4,556
Cuba
1990
10,605
2006
11,267
Cyprus
1990
681
2006
846
Czech Republic
1990
10,303
2006
10,189
1990
20,143
2006
23,708
26 6 31 32
1990
37,942
2006
60,644
Denmark
1990
5,140
2006
5,430
Djibouti
1990
561
2006
819
Dominica
1990
69
2006
68
Dominican Republic
1990
7,295
2006
9,615
Ecuador
1990
10,272
2006
13,202
Population
Open defecation
Open defecation
Open defecation
Other improved
Other improved
Other improved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
Piped into dwelling, yard or plot Improved Improved Improved Improved Improved Shared Shared Shared
Improved
Year 1990 8 0 16 16 33 29 22 32 8 3 73 46 11 17 20 92 99 100 98 98 2 0 0 8 0 27 53 6 31 52 11 4 0 0 0 1 1 43 40 10 13 0 0 46 53 0 0 10 71 14 39 0 100 97 0 100 97 0 97 38 59 9 58 22 36 9 81 5 76 19 2 5 47 8 39 53 87 5 0 100 96 4 0 100 0 100 96 4 0 100 0 100 100 0 0 100 0 95 0 100 0 100 0 100 85 15 0 100 57 51 7 44 49 47 57 51 7 44 49 48 4 31 1 30 69 9 33 58 42 41 27 26 4 0 4 96 0 13 87 13 19 0 99 75 24 1 90 10 0 100 96 0 99 51 48 1 80 20 0 96 100 26 57 0 57 43 8 52 40 18 60 43 14 25 0 0 0 27 100 99 99 37 50 96 94 100 100 11 15 100 99 96 96 40 43 3 3 47 69 13 13 0 0 1 1 21 6 1 3 0 0 31 8 0 1 4 4 38 39 0 39 61 6 37 57 24 26 43 20 55 42 0 42 58 6 37 57 40 43 17 60 30 43 0 0 56 11 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 11 8 0 0 55 42 0 42 58 4 39 57 40 43 60 6 68 38 30 32 62 22 16 9 0 1 84 36 90 80 46 46 0 3 94 94 2 8 55 55 100 100 97 97 30 55 91 92 100 100 3 6 93 97 97 97 10 48 16 32 52 45 24 31 8 0 4 69 88 59 1 98 82 16 2 89 9 2 2 13 0 98 33 85 52 7 6 8 0 0 6 6 0 2 24 23 1 1 19 34 3 92 39 53 8 61 33 6 2 29 1 5 94 68 37 99 90 94 45 45 62 74 100 100 97 1 50 32 32 96 100 100 100 99 99 52 51 81 87 100 100 40 37 99 100 74 96 43 43 100 100 100 100 100 100 95 95 91 91 100 100 100 86 90 99 100 97 97 98 98
Urban (%) 43
18 0 35 9 100 95 0 0 96 74 0 0 5 7 1 1 0 0 31 32 7 1 -
4 5 7 9 4 4 5 5 3 7 37 34 2 2 29 51 -
35 29 0 1 49 49 4 6 0 0 2 18 32 29 0 0 2 2 25 10 4 5 0 0 41 19 0 2 3 3 -
11 0 20 4 89 85 0 0 91 64 0 0 2 4 0 0 0 0 24 20 3 0 -
2006
74,167
33 35 20 4
2
El Salvador
1990
5,110
2006
6,762
Equatorial Guinea
1990
340
2006
496
Eritrea
1990
3,158
4,692
Estonia
1990
1,566
2006
1,340
Ethiopia
1990
51,148
2006
81,021
10 12 5 28 2
Fiji
1990
724
2006
833
Finland
1990
4,986
2006
5,261
France
1990
56,735
2006
61,330
French Polynesia
1990
195
2006
259
Gabon
1990
918
2006
1,311
Gambia
1990
962
2006
1,663
Georgia
1990
5,460
2006
4,433
Germany
1990
79,433
2006
82,641
4 8 10 10 -
Ghana
1990
15,579
2006
23,008
Gibraltar
1990
27
2006
29
Greece
1990
10,161
2006
11,123
Grenada
1990
96
2006
106
Guadeloupe
1990
391
45
2006
442
Population
Open defecation
Open defecation
Open defecation
Other improved
Other improved
Other improved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
Piped into dwelling, yard or plot Improved Improved Improved Improved Improved Shared Shared Shared
Improved
Country, area or territory 100 70 91 34 26 30 81 27 21 82 58 79 86 94 100 100 18 21 9 20 84 77 0 2 96 33 88 100 0 0 1 3 1 100 91 2 91 47 86 94 87 81 53 41 14 6 4 10 0 14 12 0 0 9 9 100 2 100 96 92 93 100 100 97 98 73 98 98 100 100 99 99 61 70 93 97 94 93 63 60 8 4 0 0 31 23 7 3 3 5 68 53 29 11 28 20 8 17 23 0 0 8 7 0 0 3 2 0 0 0 0 16 41 25 28 39 13 4 53 6 0 1 10 4 5 16 39 78 100 100 100 100 44 52 73 67 86 75 80 100 100 82 82 100 100 88 14 28 93 94 95 100 100 52 49 26 34 96 96 86 99 99 100 100 100 100 89 90 97 99 97 96 1 3 7 3 9 2 86 0 0 0 0 0 0 100 98 0 0 100 98 1 0 96 1 0 96 2 12 56 48 8 44 1 46 54 83 3 1 3 1 84 69 15 16 92 55 11 71 7 64 29 80 66 8 63 2 61 37 72 47 4 86 10 76 14 89 38 10 65 7 58 35 71 0 0 100 100 0 0 100 0 0 100 100 0 0 100 5 0 100 93 7 0 100 4 2 91 72 19 9 96 2 5 74 67 7 26 84 9 9 60 42 18 40 68 72 49 30 51 4 47 49 11 47 42 58 22 29 24 9 11 18 22 9 8 19 20 16 16 1 35 38 48 2 46 52 9 43 48 40 52 49 17 2 91 61 30 9 67 26 7 11 93 85 4 0 38 12 9 0 0 0 0 10 8 0 7 14 6 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 11 52 18 47 1 46 53 10 47 43 8 41 57 48 3 0 11 9 11 2 0 0 0 0 28 18 18 18 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 65 9 59 1 58 41 9 61 30 39 27 1 70 46 33 12 26 80 20 12 29 55 100 100 100 100 4 18 42 37 78 69 83 84 100 100 71 38 28 35 1 34 65 10 35 55 22 53 6 45 19 10 8 1 94 67 27 6 78 18 4 7 1 2 96 52 90 79 6 2 3 1 8 11 6 2 5 1 5 6 5 13 12 12 2 19 11 72 34 38 28 49 30 21 6 3 4 5 79 87 58 0 100 0 0 1 100 24 99 98 2 4 6 36 47 26 11 6 31 11 12 0 0 0 0 6 3 8 19 22 11 5 3 0 0 27 0 0 0 1 2 100 89 99 72 91 82 98 62 70 91 95 98 100 100 100 90 96 92 89 99 99 99 88 100 100 100 100 100 100 98 97 100 100 99 99 100 100 99 98 33 9 52 38 47 1 63 51 58 28 0 0 0 0 89 74 44 39 7 0 1 0 0 0
Guam
Year 1990
Urban (%) 91
5 6 8 15 3 9 20 13 5 8 5 10 7 6 18 14 14 1
1 1 4 4 40 40 30 9 3 34 11 10 0 0 0 0 8 4 6 13 17 4 3 3 0 0 14
21 6 39 26 34 1 48 34 39 16 0 0 0 0 73 58 36 29 2 0 0 0 0 0
2006
171
94
24 44 13 -3 40
2
Guatemala
1990
8,908
41
2006
13,029
48
Guinea
1990
6,033
28
2006
9,181
33
Guinea-Bissau 30 28 29 39 40
1990
1,017
28
2006
1,646
30
Guyana
1990
731
2006
739
Haiti
1990
7,110
2006
9,446
Honduras
1990
4,891
2006
6,969
47
Hungary
1990
10,365
66
2006
10,058
67
Iceland
1990
255
91
2006
298
93
16 20 12 11 4 -
India
1990
860,195
26
2006
1,151,751
29
Indonesia
1990
182,847
31
2006 67 70 67 57
228,864
49
1990
56,674
56
2006
70,270
Iraq
1990
18,515
2006
28,506
Ireland
1990
3,515
2006
4,221
61
Israel
1990
4,514
90
2006
6,810
92
Italy
1990
56,719
67
2006
58,779
68
Jamaica 63 66 72 83
1990
2,369
49
2006
2,699
53
Japan
1990
123,537
2006
127,953
Jordan
1990
3,254
2006
5,729
Population
Open defecation
Open defecation
Open defecation
Other improved
Other improved
Other improved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
Piped into dwelling, yard or plot Improved Improved Improved Improved Improved Shared Shared Shared
Improved
Kazakhstan 58 18 21 35 52 98 98 38 36 15 21 69 4
2
Year 1990 6 16 32 38 30 28 22 12 17 82 5 15 11 1 54 76 100 0 0 73 34 32 2 96 95 0 2 50 64 0 100 0 14 0 0 76 28 42 48 100 100 100 87 0 0 0 2 96 96 70 9 95 76 28 46 4 4 64 66 28 4 4 5 24 72 52 0 0 100 39 26 47 41 2 76 98 99 96 83 33 60 100 100 81 100 100 7 5 7 7 95 20 23 2 8 100 100 46 63 17 0 0 32 42 34 69 4 76 60 31 52 0 0 63 22 43 36 29 0 0 61 53 59 24 2 1 4 17 67 40 0 0 0 0 29 39 19 28 59 36 15 49 12 17 1 1 7 0 0 34 64 71 18 0 0 52 62 49 68 2 2 23 22 0 0 96 4 72 8 34 24 36 2 20 27 1 0 100 98 2 0 100 98 2 57 49 28 68 55 13 32 71 28 52 0 52 48 64 15 34 3 31 66 57 7 74 5 69 26 78 2 0 100 0 100 0 100 0 100 0 96 59 37 4 99 0 96 99 82 100 100 43 59 49 97 97 100 100 15 18 50 51 95 95 100 100 53 59 100 100 14 53 8 45 47 21 39 40 60 87 5 13 37 25 28 39 40 4 4 4 5 1 83 33 50 17 52 37 11 5 89 94 3 25 44 1 2 5 0 0 11 41 51 3 3 0 0 27 37 7 7 1 1 0 0 40 32 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 9 0 0 33 17 4 2 0 0 3 4 0 0 23 53 22 31 47 36 29 35 13 0 41 65 32 46 24 33 13 20 67 24 24 52 7 26 41 48 26 20 20 93 38 71 30 34 24 7 96 96 100 100 6 10 46 62 93 42 30 39 15 49 12 37 51 19 38 43 77 2 2 57 37 19 48 10 30 11 19 70 20 21 59 71 8 3 41 18 44 24 26 2 2 2 1 3 4 5 10 16 13 18 4 3 4 1 91 24 67 9 58 38 4 3 0 0 1 96 97 98 1 91 31 60 9 66 30 4 3 0 0 1 96 97 96 1 1 8 12 13 25 5 5 26 15 10 76 93 4 4 0 0 7 29 6 7 3 37 32 29 99 83 58 47 46 49 75 87 69 93 100 100 19 59 21 1 54 89 93 100 100 28 14 43 28 98 98 77 76 8 22 90 85 76 77 97 99 86 100 100 100 100 93 85 72 72 100 100 80 76 92 96 100 100 100 98 50 86 100 100
Urban (%) 56
2 0 24 14 65 53 0 56 0 51 51 0 0 77 45 35 13 21 35 28 -
97 97 39 42 22 33 93 48 78 36 40 32 97 97 100 100 8 12 46 60 94 59 35 45 -
2 2 33 37 4 8 3 2 10 11 14 19 16 22 4 3 4 -
1 1 8 10 17 12 4 4 12 10 60 68 3 3 0 0 11 32 7 7 2 26 34 30 -
0 0 20 11 57 47 0 46 0 43 0 0 67 37 31 11 15 28 21 -
2006
15,314
Kenya
1990
23,447
2006
36,553
21 19 11 32 19 9 34 29 -
Kiribati
1990
72
2006
94
Kuwait
1990
2,143
2006
2,779
Kyrgyzstan
1990
4,395
2006
5,259
1990
4,076
2006
5,759
Latvia
1990
2,663
2006
2,289
Lebanon
1990
2,974
2006
4,055
Lesotho
1990
1,601
2006
1,995
Liberia
1990
2,137
2006
3,579
1990
4,364
2006
6,039
Lithuania
1990
3,698
2006
3,408
Luxembourg
1990
382
2006
461
Madagascar
1990
12,033
2006
19,159
Malawi
1990
9,446
2006
13,571
Malaysia
1990
18,103
2006
26,114
Maldives
1990
216
2006
300
Mali
1990
7,669
2006
11,968
Malta
1990
360
47
2006
405
Population
Open defecation
Open defecation
Open defecation
Other improved
Other improved
Other improved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
Piped into dwelling, yard or plot Improved Improved Improved Improved Improved Shared Shared Shared
Improved
Country, area or territory 95 19 35 100 100 87 96 79 100 79 52 4 0 0 42 42 74 53 20 58 10 3 11 95 100 0 0 0 6 6 9 10 82 0 46 63 84 100 16 27 67 77 5 0 30 36 30 12 0 0 18 54 37 57 80 57 93 62 72 89 100 100 97 70 79 42 7 5 6 33 43 7 17 98 100 53 61 83 58 75 41 34 25 35 52 74 24 50 65 72 2 0 17 18 100 100 0 25 17 58 43 20 43 7 28 11 0 0 3 30 21 24 36 61 46 9 30 98 83 15 2 0 72 22 50 28 18 2
Marshall Islands 67 40 41 44 42 72 76 26 22 47 47 100 29 35 36 100 64 96 96 96 80 85 53 47 85 73 66 36 45 100 100 59 57 100 57 57 51 53 12 14 48 59 21 35 25 31 28 36 100 100 9 16 69 81 85 86 53 59 90 91 85 100 100 100 100 0 100 100 0 100 100 0 0 100 94 49 45 6 88 97 44 53 3 70 99 69 30 1 28 90 98 84 14 2 13 29 42 80 16 64 20 2 78 80 86 18 68 14 1 46 47 71 17 54 29 2 24 26 100 87 13 0 15 43 58 94 75 19 6 9 49 58 100 98 2 0 100 100 98 2 0 100 100 98 2 0 66 30 96 90 35 55 10 6 42 48 97 51 46 3 0 21 21 64 100 100 0 0 100 0 0 100 96 17 4 12 73 15 43 47 10 85 90 85 7 31 3 14 15 6 10 12 11 29 37 10 10 98 2 95 5 6 6 94 94 20 61 39 8 0 0 3 1 4 4 1 0 26 44 4 5 4 3 4 0 0 28 28 93 7 14 12 46 86 88 54 98 2 2 73 12 15 91 4 5 1 8 85 95 27 91 0 0 0 0 2 0 5 0 21 3 1 10 19 32 14 0 0 3 5 94 7 6 47 25 28 76 12 12 1 13 12 72 88 74 100 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 5 0 0 100 100 17 95 94 8 48 20 14 73 31 86 96 96 25 54 19 15 81 8 18 6 24 100 100 88 23 34 100 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 5 0 0 100 100 95 94 70 35 30 14 40 46 23 37 40 12 26 18 54 60 47 44 10 7 6 6 0 0 5 23 3 3 6 2 11 2 4 3 9 4 7 30 11 70 5 36 59 11 26 63 9 31 27 8 41 37 33 11 45 8 0 0 33 45 80 86 22 19 10 4 4 4 6 18 55 0 4 9 2 10 0 0 12 28 32
Year 1990 5 97 3 4 12 49 96 88 51
Total (thousands) 47 36 75 0 0 59 7 0 27 1 68 34 63 28 8 86 69 89 57 0 0 45 27
Urban (%) 65
75 20 24 94 94 56 81 29 25 79 50 91 96 96 52 72 31 23 82 26 35 9 27 100 100 42 48
8 9 6 6 1 1 6 28 3 8 11 3 11 5 6 5 14 7 9
25 40 15 0 0 18 16 71 75 15 9 6 4 4 2 3 21 52 1 4 8 2 9 0 0 28 29
32 52 0 0 25 2 0 13 0 38 14 48 22 6 65 51 84 50 0 0 23 14
2006
58
14 16 39 -1 2
Mauritania
1990
1,945
2006
3,044
Mauritius
1990
1,057
2006
1,252
Mexico
1990
84,002
2006
105,342
1990
96
2006
111
Moldova
1990
4,389
2006
3,833
Monaco
1990
30
2006
33
Mongolia
1990
2,216
2006
2,605
Montenegro
1990
587
2006
601
Montserrat
1990
11
2006
Morocco
1990
24,808
2006
30,853
34 68 20 25 9 18
Mozambique
1990
13,544
2006
20,971
Myanmar
1990
40,147
2006
48,379
Namibia
1990
1,417
2006
2,047
Nauru
1990
2006
10
Nepal
1990
19,114
2006
27,641
Netherlands
1990
14,952
2006
16,379
New Zealand
1990
3,411
2006
4,140
Nicaragua
1990
4,141
2006
5,532
Population
Open defecation
Open defecation
Open defecation
Other improved
Other improved
Other improved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
Piped into dwelling, yard or plot Improved Improved Improved Improved Improved Shared Shared Shared
Improved
Country, area or territory 59 21 37 33 7 100 100 93 100 100 35 52 21 29 89 11 12 29 62 56 84 83 25 12 14 99 0 0 1 1 8 86 13 3 3 7 1 100 100 0 55 85 76 7 8 1 48 68 6 0 0 0 45 24 93 96 80 99 100 100 76 88 77 22 53 88 98 87 99 49 50 28 28 23 15 19 7 61 40 9 0 27 38 3 8 61 60 48 23 25 16 17 7 4 1 0 0 24 12 11 10 22 16 47 28 40 9 62 7 61 10 35 65 14 48 97 93 61 61 60 84 74 90 37 69 97 99 95 99 100 100 96 96 0 0 1 100 3 2 94 1 0 96 3 0 73 27 4 88 24 64 55 8 75 8 67 2 8 63 44 19 37 14 12 46 16 30 54 75 10 6 52 29 23 48 77 18 22 28 0 28 72 52 27 12 32 4 28 68 40 27 12 32 4 28 68 39 3 4 81 79 2 19 92 3 0 21 94 6 89 27 98 2 90 47 5 87 19 68 13 90 44 4 81 8 73 19 86 97 76 90 76 96 78 67 67 88 89 73 85 71 81 97 99 100 100 88 88 50 15 73 8 65 27 26 55 19 81 97 0 0 100 100 0 0 100 0 0 100 10 4 4 12 10 10 4 4 5 6 12 13 3 3 0 0 100 100 0 0 100 0 0 100 2 97 3 2 98 58 94 6 1 1 12 0 24 4 10 19 19 6 7 5 9 9 1 1 1 0 0 9 9 5 2 100 0 2 15 98 85 0 0 100 0 0 0 100 0 100 0 2 2 8 6 0 4 4 2 0 17 0 8 5 2 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0 0 100 100 58 35 30 2 28 70 4 43 53 28 27 10 47 18 35 25 100 100 78 96 61 14 40 54 52 63 41 41 34 42 15 36 46 72 88 98 100 100 52 54 47 20 34 4 30 66 14 36 50 27 31 9 50 33 22 54 9 32 68 58 29 25 19 42 25 27 3 1 12 14 2 5 6 1 1 0 1 0 1 6 10 1 1 38 41 1 37 62 4 37 59 17 41 26 1 91 80 65 100 100 98 98 100 100 85 96 95 73 79 100 96 88 88 78 94 88 92 92 96 100 100 98 99 100 100 97 97 93 99 38 41 16 1 3 4 30 32 0 0 22 4 7 10 10 46 48 31 38 38 57 57 10 28 24 4 0 0 0 0 47 45 17 35 49 31 37 89 95 72 77 65 71 31 35 31 34 54 72 13 13 49 59 69 73 49 63 61 62 48 58 72 98 92 96 74 81 54 54
Niger
Year 1990
Urban (%) 15
95 92 36 29 0 0 32 74 45 0 20 20 9 0 75 35 24 14 12 2 0 0 -
3 6 17 21 3 5 10 2 2 2 3 3 5 9 12 2 2
10 7 30 29 0 0 16 6 3 10 6 39 33 16 36 35 32 27 7 13 17 2 1 0 0 0 26 26
84 80 27 20 0 0 12 54 31 0 18 18 6 0 35 10 16 8 7 1 0 0 -
2006
13,737
7 16 0 63 40 28 18 32 31 43 12 62 2
Nigeria
1990
94,454
2006
144,720
Niue
1990
2006
1990
44
2006
82
Norway
1990
4,241
2006
4,669
Oman
1990
1,843
2006
2,546
Pakistan
1990
112,991
2006
160,943
Palau
1990
15
2006
20
Panama
1990
2,411
2006
3,288
1990
4,131
2006
6,202
Paraguay
1990
4,248
2006
6,016
Peru
1990
21,762
2006
27,589
Philippines
1990
61,226
2006
86,264
Poland
1990
38,111
2006
38,140
Portugal
1990
9,983
2006
10,579
Puerto Rico
1990
3,528
2006
3,969
Qatar
1990
467
2006
821
Republic of Korea
1990
42,869
2006
48,050
Romania
1990
23,207
49
2006
21,532
Population
Open defecation
Open defecation
Open defecation
Other improved
Other improved
Other improved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
Piped into dwelling, yard or plot Improved Improved Improved Improved Improved Shared Shared Shared
Improved
Year 11 19 21 29 41 23 18 53 0 6 1 65 6 37 9 16 2 0 10 62 82 1 0 0 18 42 64 64 10 44 40 0 35 35 90 38 18 11 100 100 69 70 29 81 93 9 95 94 11 14 1 16 55 67 44 5 6 58 56 13 26 26 1 47 0 0 31 30 71 19 7 3 31 35 100 100 33 52 54 96 20 100 100 100 100 98 98 51 64 66 4 22 23 3 44 29 25 26 0 0 14 0 0 17 19 1 30 0 0 0 0 2 2 16 10 5 0 0 53 0 0 9 4 0 6 0 0 0 0 4 1 3 4 96 96 96 98 100 18 9 9 88 100 100 5 99 99 18 18 7 45 49 4 96 42 3 20 8 5 9 9 3 13 6 18 19 47 3 29 12 7 70 30 53 68 4 4 4 4 2 0 9 24 43 9 0 0 40 1 1 82 82 6 14 11 7 30 7 62 60 26 88 22 43 81 34 45 1 11 60 14 56 0 0 41 15 2 0 0 63 0 0 0 6 18 18 18 6 65 0 100 94 0 100 89 0 0 17 32 1 31 68 1 0 0 1 98 63 35 2 99 7 65 18 47 35 77 9 51 4 47 49 67 3 3 63 60 3 37 89 12 83 17 66 17 86 10 87 13 12 88 9 100 1 89 11 9 91 100 2 98 2 2 98 17 2 98 2 2 98 1 99 1 1 99 21 96 1 99 1 1 99 96 18 61 1 60 39 5 60 35 65 21 34 6 63 0 63 37 2 63 35 65 31 0 88 52 36 12 82 15 3 97 93 3 86 49 37 14 76 18 6 93 70 94 73 5 20 35 32 29 28 41 46 21 23 90 89 44 59 77 81 39 42 51 53 50 50 30 41 100 100 56 56 50 51 14 17 30 36 52 60 100 84 98 89 63 45 3 94 76 94 76 100 94 100 100 100 100 100 100 83 20 100 100 100 100 99 97 93 78 91 50 97 97 97 97 88 32 90 99 98 98 99 99 82 22 94 32 100 93
Russian Federation
1990
Urban (%) 73
12 11 4 14 15 3 26 14 22 23
13 13 53 62 4 4 2 0 13 21 33 5 36 0 0 71 68 9 11 8
6 4 0 59 39 24 0 27 0 0 54 12 10
2006
143,221
Rwanda
1990
7,294
2006
9,464
1 21 16 14 2 16 19
1990
41
2006
50
Saint Lucia
1990
138
2006
163
1990
109
2006
120
Samoa
1990
161
2006
185
San Marino
1990
24
2006
31
1990
116
Saudi Arabia
2006 1990
155
16,256
2006
24,175
Senegal
1990
7,896
2006
12,072
Serbia
1990
9,569
2006
9,851
Seychelles
1990
72
2006
86
Sierra Leone
1990
4,087
2006
5,743
Singapore
1990
3,016
2006
4,382
Slovakia
1990
5,256
2006
5,388
Slovenia
1990
1,927
2006
2,001
Solomon Islands
1990
314
2006
484
Somalia
1990
6,717
2006
8,445
South Africa
1990
36,577
2006
48,282
Population
Open defecation
Open defecation
Open defecation
Other improved
Other improved
Other improved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
Piped into dwelling, yard or plot Improved Improved Improved Improved Improved Shared Shared Shared
Improved
Country, area or territory 100 99 99 36 32 75 46 80 57 100 100 100 100 100 72 81 37 32 51 92 62 49 64 60 6 68 93 62 5 1 8 1 2 84 74 22 95 72 26 39 46 86 20 21 36 45 28 9 12 0 0 12 7 38 16 26 5 59 100 100 88 94 82 94 85 97 16 4 5 69 74 62 75 60 93 47 8 46 45 54 19 20 20 19 25 4 63 30 33 5 2 0 38 51 41 0 0 12 6 18 6 15 3 8 11 43 17 36 5 12 31 35 11 17 0 0 9 0 0 100 93 93 81 78 84 96 28 14 12 81 86 87 94 70 97 5 8 11 3 11 8 88 0 100 0 100 88 94 74 14 40 0 40 65 21 36 0 36 49 23 56 11 45 44 4 0 99 84 15 1 100 15 1 97 35 62 3 98 20 2 94 13 81 6 95 12 7 58 23 35 42 67 2 5 83 68 15 17 89 3 4 70 51 19 30 83 0 0 100 99 1 0 100 0 0 100 99 1 0 100 100 100 94 96 95 92 95 92 64 25 24 98 98 93 92 95 96 96 96 0 0 100 100 0 0 100 0 0 100 6 100 0 0 100 100 0 0 100 0 0 100 100 4 4 4 5 5 5 4 46 44 7 7 2 2 2 2 30 13 51 15 36 49 25 35 40 28 60 64 5 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 3 12 5 9 2 2 0 1 0 2 2 2 17 3 79 46 33 21 71 21 8 9 2 92 89 1 9 1 90 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 20 24 23 0 0 3 0 0 0 32 22 64 13 51 36 27 43 30 36 14 70 30 50 10 15 57 19 38 43 34 30 36 37 10 64 53 26 24 60 46 100 100 100 100 69 88 91 72 96 81 32 8 3 39 78 96 96 93 92 44 64 69 72 66 2 79 3 76 21 7 75 18 7 3 1 82 23 89 86 55 9 62 4 58 38 10 57 33 7 0 8 67 85 68 2 3 10 21 4 5 3 3 4 7 2 16 6 7 7 6 8 1 1 1 0 100 100 0 0 99 1 0 0 0 100 13 100 100 1 0 100 0 0 99 1 0 0 0 100 91 98 85 78 99 97 87 100 100 100 100 96 95 93 98 99 100 77 79 86 100 100 92 97 95 99 92 98 100 100 100 100 0 0 14 9 26 23 9 8 0 0 0 0 8 7 6 1 0 11 18 2 13 61 22 4 4 0 1 4 14 26 25 77 17 15 27 42 68 74 23 24 83 84 68 76 49 51 32 25 29 33 58 70 21 27 30 41 0 0 23 24 9 13 60 66 59 68 45 47
Spain
Year 1990
Urban (%) 75
0 0 16 2 48 53 21 25 0 0 0 0 19 0 0 24 0 1 48 74 78 0 0 46 14 4 2 -
3 4 9 23 4 4 3 4 4 6 3 25 22 7 7 4 4 2 2 -
0 0 11 8 29 28 4 7 0 0 0 0 5 4 5 0 0 5 16 3 10 4 4 0 1 2 6 11 9 -
0 0 15 2 38 37 5 20 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 18 0 0 40 59 56 0 0 20 5 2 1 -
2006
43,887
13 24 14 6 9 48 31 4 5 6 28 25 -
Sri Lanka
1990
17,114
2006
19,207
Sudan
1990
25,933
2006
37,707
Suriname
1990
402
2006
455
Swaziland
1990
865
2006
1,134
Sweden
1990
8,559
2006
9,078
Switzerland
1990
6,834
2006
7,455
1990
12,721
2006
19,408
Tajikistan
1990
5,303
2006
6,640
Thailand
1990
54,291
2006
63,444
1990
1,909
2006
2,036
Timor-Leste
1990
740
2006
1,114
Togo
1990
3,961
2006
6,410
Tokelau
1990
2006
Tonga
1990
95
2006
100
1990
1,224
2006
1,328
Tunisia
1990
8,219
2006
10,215
Turkey
1990
57,345
2006
73,922
Turkmenistan
1990
3,668
51
2006
4,899
Population
Open defecation
Open defecation
Open defecation
Other improved
Other improved
Other improved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
Unimproved
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
Piped into dwelling, yard or plot Improved Improved Improved Improved Improved Shared Shared Shared
Improved
Country, area or territory 100 18 11 87 80 100 100 31 3 4 46 46 84 37 28 28 48 1 8 99 99 64 6 27 41 10 1 2 70 72 11 3 2 7 6 24 59 24 39 63 66 1 1 0 0 12 35 73 59 30 28 82 10 42 57 52 92 89 66 50 58 78 81 22 30 89 81 8 22 78 20 23 16 33 35 25 47 61 38 23 8 44 70 11 46 27 42 45 46 54 18 88 49 39 48 15 90 57 33 10 12 39 11 48 8 11 34 50 42 22 19 16 0 100 96 4 0 0 100 0 7 22 59 27 21 48 6 99 87 12 1 17 48 6 99 84 15 1 42 54 55 14 41 45 28 31 100 100 100 100 97 97 90 62 88 84 79 88 49 55 65 63 36 61 8 41 51 45 97 97 97 97 86 85 80 87 38 59 84 57 53 41 95 87 4 49 33 14 11 32 65 6 10 88 100 100 39 2 90 49 13 43 6 7 70 13 7 53 13 2 82 11 3 85 3 0 100 3 0 100 3 0 94 3 0 94 36 19 46 59 10 39 49 29 0 0 100 98 2 0 100 0 0 22 24 0 0 2 2 3 5 34 39 34 33 100 6 0 0 100 98 2 0 100 0 0 100 46 44 0 0 0 0 1 1 10 17 6 15 17 5 14 3 1 1 20 0 100 70 30 0 78 22 0 2 0 100 82 98 0 100 0 0 2 0 100 98 0 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 18 1 1 4 7 3 3 0 3 10 3 97 51 46 3 75 22 3 1 2 0 97 97 0 1 1 0 98 93 83 95 95 36 34 99 99 99 99 91 95 47 21 56 69 14 30 38 51 35 37 79 10 60 1 59 40 2 62 36 30 39 2 64 49 29 34 60 22 39 0 39 61 2 41 57 27 43 3 43 27 29 10 11 6 5 5 5 9 9 1 1 2 2 1 3 7 9 17 18 6 92 8 7 7 93 20 93 84 8 89 11 10 17 90 83 74 26 16 39 40 1 12 0 0 44 43 1 1 0 0 7 3 53 45 25 28 36 24 10 7 0 6 0 100 0 0 2 100 77 98 0 0 0 2 100 92 94 78 90 100 97 100 100 100 100 90 81 100 100 100 100 97 98 93 93 87 98 90 68 86 90 99 98 100 100 98 22 15 0 0 0 0 11 14 0 0 0 0 33 16 3 50 46 45 33 48 39 48 41 58 11 13 67 68 79 77 89 90 19 25 75 81 89 92 40 37 19 24 84 94 20 27 0 0 68 72 21 28 39 35 29 36
Year
1990
Total (thousands) 12
Urban (%) 43
12 13 3 2 3 3 11 13 0 0 2 2 1 4 18 20 22 23
22 11 39 41 1 5 0 0 45 43 0 0 0 0 5 2 17 40 19 18 32 19 12 6 0 5
20 13 0 0 0 0 9 11 0 0 0 0 30 12 2 40 35 28 22 34 26
2006
25
20 21
2
Tuvalu
1990
2006
10
Uganda
1990
17,841
2006
29,899
1990
51,536
Ukraine
2006
46,557
1990
1,867
2006
4,248
80 13 17 7 28 47 39 27 13
1990
57,238
2006
60,512
1990
25,494
2006
39,459
1990
256,098
2006
302,841
Uruguay
1990
3,106
2006
3,331
Uzbekistan
1990
20,515
2006
26,981
Vanuatu
1990
149
2006
221
1990
19,731
2006
27,191
Viet Nam
1990
66,173
2006
86,206
1990
14
2006
15
1990
2,154
2006
3,889
Yemen
1990
12,314
2006
21,732
Zambia
1990
8,122
2006
11,696
Zimbabwe
1990
10,487
2006
13,228
Drinking water and sanitation coverage: regional estimates by type of drinking water and sanitation facilities (1990 and 2006)
Drinking water coverage (%)
Urban Rural Total Urban Rural
Population
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
% of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998)
Piped into dwelling, yard or plot Open defecation Other improved Other improved Other improved Unimproved Unimproved Unimproved Unimproved Improved Improved Improved Improved Shared Shared
Open defecation
Open defecation
Unimproved
Unimproved
Improved
Improved
Shared
Sub-Saharan Africa
Year 1990
Urban (%) 28
22 19 10 4 24 7 6 8 6 4 1 0 20 20 7 6 5 6 0 0 12 7 8 5
11 8 2 0 3 4 24 15 12 10 0 0 6 2 0 0 10 7 6 5
20 24 44 59 43 59 10 23 40 58 56 64 44 43 35 52 81 81 96 96 28 39 36 45
9 11 5 7 1 1 2 6 4 5 2 4 1 1 3 4 3 3 5 3 5
25 26 21 25 51 38 7 8 21 13 24 18 34 36 19 21 19 16 4 4 27 21 24 19
46 39 30 9 5 2 81 63 35 24 18 14 21 20 43 23 42 35 37 31
26 31 62 76 48 65 21 33 50 67 79 84 52 52 68 79 90 89 99 99 41 53 54 62
14 18 5 6 4 7 6 10 5 7 4 6 5 6 6 9 5 8
24 23 17 14 44 25 8 9 17 8 10 5 48 48 10 8 10 11 1 1 22 15 17 12
36 28 16 4 4 3 65 48 28 18 7 5 17 7 31 23 24 18
2006
788,214
19 32 25 19 36 63 17 25 10 12 25 22
Northern Africa
1990
118,032
2006
155,087
Eastern Asia
1990
1,220,373
2006
1,402,837
Southern Asia
1990
1,192,558
2006
1,612,840
South-eastern Asia
1990
440,574
2006
565,105
Western Asia
1990
137,541
2006
200,205
Oceania
1990
6,449
2006
9,175
1990
444,277
2006
565,049
1990
281,428
2006
278,295
Developed regions
1990
934,265
2006
1,016,093
Developing regions
1990
4,079,192
2006
5,298,512
World
1990
5,294,885
2006
6,592,900
1 2 3
The figures for Bangladesh have been adjusted for arsenic contamination levels based on the national surveys conducted and approved by the Government. Countries with a negative growth rate, reflected in the columns titled % of population that gained coverage (1990-2006) with respect to median population (Year 1998). Figures have been estimated by JMP to ensure compatibility, thus they are not necessarily the official statistics of the concerned country, area or territory, which may use alternative rigorous methods.
53
In charting progress towards the MDGs, the United Nations has classified the worlds countries into three regions: developed regions, developing regions and the Commonwealth of Independent States. The developing regions are further divided into subregions shown on this map. A complete list of countries included in these subregions can be found at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/default.htm
54
Commonwealth of Independent States Developed regions Eastern Asia Latin America & Caribbean Northern Africa Oceania Southern Asia South-eastern Asia Sub-Saharan Africa Western Asia
Photo credits: Cover Watercan/George Yap; Page 1 UNICEF/HQ06-1843/Josh Estey; Page 3 UNICEF/HQ95-1110/Giacomo Pirozzi; Pages 4-5 UNICEF/HQ95-0078/Jonathan Shadid; Page 9 UNICEF/HQ98-0939/Giacomo Pirozzi; Page 14 2006/Ann Thomas; Pages 16-17 UNICEF/HQ04-0941/Shehzad Noorani; Page 21 UNICEF/HQ00-0578/Shehzad Noorani; Page 22 UNICEF/ HQ95-0455/David Barbour; Pages 28-29 UNICEF/HQ07-1137/Shehzad Noorani; Pages 30-31 UNICEF/HQ04-0081/Christine Nesbitt; Page 33 UNICEF/HQ98-0502/Giacomo Pirozzi; Page 35 UNICEF/HQ05-1712/Asad Zaidi; Page 37 UNICEF/HQ04-0938/ Shehzad Noorani; Pages 40-41 UNICEF/HQ07-1350/Giacomo Pirozzi; Back cover UNICEF/HQ00-0509/Radhika Chalasani
SANITATION
2008
July 2008
INTERNATIONAL YEAR OF