40 million Filipinos lack reliable water supply

Around 40 million of the Philippines' 115 million population lack access to reliable water supply, according to the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR). DENR Undersecretary Carlos Primo David stated that climate change or pollution could compromise water sources for millions. DENR chief Juan Miguel Cuna highlighted the challenge of water bankruptcy facing the country.

At a press conference in Manila, Philippines, ahead of World Water Day on March 22, DENR Undersecretary for Integrated Environmental Science Carlos Primo David highlighted that around 40 million people lack reliable water access out of the country's 115 million population. “This is a huge percentage. We want to build them a resilient system wherein they have continuous access to water,” he said on Tuesday. He noted that climate change or pollution threatens water sources for millions and identified funding shortages as a key barrier. “I won’t lie to you, it’s funding. The fiscal space of the government in the past few years has been narrow,” David explained, estimating P200 billion needed nationwide, or about P1,000 per person for long-term solutions. DENR Secretary Juan Miguel Cuna acknowledged a potable water access crisis. “The Philippines is facing a challenge of water bankruptcy, where national consumption is based on nature’s ability to replenish. We are meeting this challenge with science, and they have a clear tactical roadmap,” he stated. To address it, a P485-million investment in water regulation will benefit over 440,000 people by end-2026, including desalination and filtration systems in 59 barangays and climate-resilient infiltration galleries using georesistivity, surveys, and geospatial data. “From installing the desalination and filtration systems across 59 barangays to developing climate resilient infiltration galleries that tap into subsurface river flows, we are engineering a future where no community is left behind,” Cuna added.

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Villagers in San Ignacio, Chile, celebrate the inauguration of new rural drinking water service benefiting 281 families, with Public Works Ministry official.
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Public works ministry awards rural water service for 281 families in San Ignacio

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Chile's Public Works Ministry (MOP) signed on Sunday the adjudication of a new rural sanitary service in San Ignacio, Ñuble, benefiting 281 families with continuous drinking water. The project is part of seven ongoing works reaching 444 rural households in the region. Seremi Luis Carrasco described the progress as a concrete change in people's lives.

Ahead of World Water Day, analyst José David Name Cardozo highlights Colombia's huge debt to water resources, amid droughts, floods and poor management. This quarter's rains signal ecosystem imbalance rather than abundance, with Ideam warning of possible El Niño in late 2026.

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A Criteria study for Andess shows 57% of Chileans drink tap water directly, up from 37% two years ago, with growing confidence in its quality. Citizens have adopted water-saving habits like closing taps while brushing teeth and shortening showers. Challenges now focus on water treatment and sanitation systems.

South Africa’s water sector lost nearly R19 billion in 2023/24 due to leaks, illegal connections and billing issues, Auditor-General Tsakani Maluleke’s report reveals. With 47% of treated water wasted before reaching users amid ageing infrastructure and governance failures, the findings underscore the urgency behind the National Water Crisis Committee launched in February.

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eThekwini municipality in Durban and Mangaung in Bloemfontein have the highest rates of water loss in South Africa, with over 40% of purified tap water going to waste annually. Data from the Department of Water and Sanitation shows eThekwini loses 40.4% to physical leaks, the largest volume nationwide. Mangaung's rate stands at 41.2%.

The National Water Resources Board is considering cloud-seeding operations over the Angat Watershed as water levels at the dam drop below the minimum operating level. The dam serves as Metro Manila’s main source of potable water. As of Friday, its water elevation reached 178.55 meters.

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