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Water Data : Bangladesh
 

BANGLADESH

Basic Water Information

           
           
Indicators   Data Year Source
Water Resources          
Total annual water resources (AWR)   1,211 cu. km.   9
Water from international rivers as share of annual          
water resources   91 %   9
Total resources per capita 8,808.0 cu. m. 2000 4,9
Reservoir capacity as percentage of AWR   0.28 % 1995 3
Water Use          
Total annual water withdrawals as share of AWR Total 1.2 % 1990 9
  Domestic 12 % 1990 9
  Industry 2 % 1990 9
  Agriculture 86 % 1990 9
Water withdrawals per capita   134 cu.m. 1990 9
Irrigated land as percentage of irrigation potential   49 % 1990 1
Groundwater withdrawals per capita   97.6 cu.m. 1990 9
Watershed Management          
Annual rate of change in forest cover (1990-2000)   1.3 % 2000 2
Water and Poverty          
Population with access to water supply Urban 99 % 2000 7
  Rural 97 % 2000 7
Population with access to sanitation Urban 82 % 2000 7
  Rural 44 % 2000 7
Incidence of diarrhoea in children under 5 years of          
age two weeks prior to the survey   6.1 % 2000 5
Number of deaths due to floods and droughts 1990-2001 1,929 persons   8
Economic losses due to floods and droughts 1990-2001 3,204 $ million   8
           
Sources:          
1. FAO Aquastat (http://www.fao.org/ag/agl/aglw/aquastatweb/main/html/aquastat.htm)        
2. FAO State of the World's Forests (http://www.fao.org/forestry/FO/SOFO/sofo-e.stm)        
3. Raskin, P et al. 1997. Water Futures: assessment of long range patterns and problems. Stockholm Environment Institute.  
4. United Nations (http://www.un.org/popin/data.htm)          
5. UNICEF (http://www.childinfo.org/index2.htm)          
6. World Bank (http://www.worldbank.org/data/databytopic/databytopic.html)        
7. World Health Organization (http://www.who.int/water_sanitation_health/Globassessment/GlasspdfTOC.htm)    
8. WHO Collaborating Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (http://www.cred.be/emdat/into.html)    
9. World Resources Institute (http://earthtrends.wri.org/)          
           
           
na - not available          
Updated: 22 March 2002          
 

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Water & disasters
Be informed & be prepared

In recent decades, people throughout the world have become increasingly alarmed over extreme weather events, which seem to be growing in frequency and adverse impact. Cyclones, storm surges, floods, droughts, avalanches, landslides or mudflows � all the water-related hazards pose an enormous risk to the millions who live in their path. Poor communities are particularly vulnerable: for them, natural hazards can swiftly lead to human catastrophes. It is now increasingly recognized that reducing this risk is a vital step towards meeting the Millennium Development Goals,

 

 

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