For millions of people across the world, access to clean water so they can drink, cook and wash, is a daily struggle. In many rural, impoverishe...

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For millions of people across the world, access to clean water so they can drink, cook and wash, is a daily struggle. In many rural, impoverished communities, fetching water is an arduous task that falls upon women and children. In Africa and Asia, women and children must walk 3.7 miles on average to get their water. Collectively, women spend over 200 million hours every day just collecting water. That's more than just a major inconvenience, it’s an incredible amount of lost economic potential. This time-consuming, physically exhausting endeavor prevents women from working at jobs and keeps children away from school, impacts that continue a cycle of poverty and socioeconomic exclusion. For the women and children who live in one small village in Kenya, their walk to water is more than five miles. And the water they gather isn’t even clean; it comes from a dirty river containing harmful bacteria. Read the rest of my recent article about water scarcity on AlterNet.

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