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by ElBarto
2654 days ago
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"In 2015, nearly 21 million people relied on community water systems that violated health-based quality standards" The number given for water access issues in China was 3.5% of the population (which is 'infrequent'...) That's why I ventured that the situation there is not that bad proportionally to population. Why arguing on something that isn't even the main point of my initial comment... It's exhausting. It also feels like an attempt at denying issues. |
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The primary problem in the US is aging infrastructure in sparsely populated rural areas, as stated in the study the USA Today article quotes from. Nearly the entire US gets a good violations score in terms of low instance counts, except for Oklahoma (they show an extreme number of violations), rural West Texas (also intense), and a few isolated rural pockets in eg California and Idaho (~1/10th or fewer the violation counts of the OK & W.TX examples). The OK and West TX examples are no doubt caused by the polluting energy industries there.