Trust in Chile's tap water rises to 57%

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.

The 'Barómetro de la Crisis Hídrica' study by Criteria for Andess shows trust in Chile's tap water has risen sharply. Two years ago, 37% drank it directly; now it's 57%. This reflects a social norm of water conservation, achieved without coercion through information and reliable systems, writes Cristián Valdivieso, Criteria director, in La Tercera. Chileans close taps while brushing teeth, shorten showers and avoid unnecessary uses. Yet, over half admit dumping residues down drains, signaling new challenges. Valdivieso argues the focus must shift from individual consumption to the system: capturing, purifying, treating and sanitizing water. Climate change, denser cities and development habits add pressure. Responsibilities are shared: individuals must mind waste impact; sanitary companies invest in resilient infrastructure and public education; the State regulates and oversees. Chile stands out regionally for voluntary behavior change, fostering trust that drives action.

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Bangladeshi villagers drawing clean, arsenic-free water from a safe well, with graph showing 50% drop in chronic disease deaths from 20-year study.
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Twenty-year Bangladesh study links cleaner water to sharp drop in chronic disease deaths

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A 20-year study in Bangladesh has found that reducing arsenic levels in drinking water was associated with as much as a 50 percent reduction in deaths from heart disease, cancer and other major chronic illnesses. Researchers followed nearly 11,000 adults and reported that participants who switched to safer wells eventually had mortality risks similar to people who were never heavily exposed to arsenic. The findings, published in JAMA, underscore the global health benefits of tackling arsenic contamination in drinking water.

Researchers in Guatemala's Western Highlands discovered a stark mismatch between public perceptions of drinking water safety and actual contamination levels. Bottled water, widely trusted as the safest option, proved most prone to harmful bacteria, while protected municipal wells emerged as the cleanest sources. The findings, published in the Journal of Water and Health, underscore risks to public health from unsafe water.

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In many Cuban homes, water is a scarce luxury that does not flow regularly from taps. Families organize their day around its unpredictable arrival, collecting every drop in available containers. This shortage impacts daily hygiene and mood, turning essentials into acts of saving.

Colombia's Water Regulation Commission (CRA), Housing Ministry, and Superservicios unveiled a new tariff framework for drinking water and basic sanitation affecting 5,000 providers. The change excludes projected investments from tariffs, billing only those completed year-to-year. Andesco raised concerns over the lack of a transition period and potential tariff hikes.

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A mystery illness has claimed 12 lives in Chayansa village, Palwal district, Haryana, over the past 15 days. Health officials have identified Hepatitis B and C in some cases, and 23 out of 107 water samples failed quality tests due to bacterial growth and low chlorination. The exact cause of the deaths remains under investigation.

Chile holds nearly 40% of the world's astronomical observation capacity, which could exceed 60% early next decade with telescopes like the Giant Magellan Telescope. Óscar Contreras-Villarroel, vice president and Chile representative for the project, stresses protecting dark skies and installation sites through consistent regulations.

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São Paulo's main reservoir system, Cantareira, saw a 0.1% drop in stored volume on January 1, 2026, reaching 20.1%, despite recent rains. This triggered the 'restriction' level, capping water withdrawals at 23 cubic meters per second, supplemented by the Rio Paraíba do Sul. Officials state there is no immediate risk of water rationing.

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