Water productivity, total (constant 2010 US$ GDP per cubic meter of total freshwater withdrawal) - Country Ranking

Definition: Water productivity is calculated as GDP in constant prices divided by annual total water withdrawal.

Source: Food and Agriculture Organization, AQUASTAT data, and World Bank and OECD GDP estimates.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Luxembourg 1,348.11 2017
2 Monaco 1,252.09 2017
3 Singapore 675.97 2017
4 Qatar 654.70 2017
5 Equatorial Guinea 572.81 2017
6 Denmark 433.57 2017
7 Ireland 428.01 2017
8 Switzerland 419.76 2017
9 United Kingdom 360.52 2017
10 Antigua and Barbuda 330.57 2017
11 Malta 290.29 2017
12 Israel 269.35 2017
13 Sweden 222.65 2017
14 Congo 220.64 2017
15 Bahrain 216.22 2017
16 Lithuania 170.97 2017
17 Slovak Republic 167.28 2017
18 Angola 160.17 2017
19 Latvia 158.99 2017
20 Norway 148.26 2017
21 United Arab Emirates 147.49 2017
22 Kuwait 145.91 2017
23 Germany 144.13 2017
24 Djibouti 143.79 2017
25 Brunei 138.89 2017
26 Seychelles 133.68 2017
27 Czech Republic 124.40 2017
28 Belgium 119.08 2017
29 Austria 114.26 2017
30 Puerto Rico 113.28 2017
31 Gabon 106.06 2017
32 Comoros 103.62 2017
33 Cyprus 102.82 2017
34 Netherlands 100.75 2017
35 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 98.41 2017
36 Benin 95.66 2017
37 France 95.38 2017
38 Australia 89.13 2017
39 Botswana 80.20 2017
40 Croatia 78.79 2017
41 St. Kitts and Nevis 76.27 2017
42 Barbados 69.35 2017
43 Cabo Verde 68.53 2017
44 Trinidad and Tobago 67.99 2017
45 Iceland 66.91 2017
46 Grenada 66.43 2014
47 Papua New Guinea 60.51 2017
48 Fiji 59.53 2017
49 Dem. Rep. Congo 58.92 2017
50 Japan 56.06 2017
51 Italy 55.53 2017
52 Uganda 55.07 2017
53 Lesotho 54.06 2017
54 Korea 53.32 2017
55 Poland 51.25 2017
56 Rwanda 51.16 2017
57 Slovenia 50.04 2017
58 Malaysia 49.66 2017
59 Panama 49.48 2017
60 Côte d'Ivoire 45.37 2017
61 St. Lucia 45.36 2017
62 Canada 45.34 2017
63 Jordan 44.46 2017
64 Oman 44.16 2017
65 Bosnia and Herzegovina 43.03 2017
66 United States 42.72 2017
67 Spain 40.61 2017
68 Belarus 40.39 2017
69 Namibia 39.81 2017
70 Nigeria 38.71 2017
71 Finland 37.90 2017
72 Ghana 36.65 2017
73 Saudi Arabia 31.14 2017
74 Cameroon 30.79 2017
75 Hungary 29.62 2017
76 Romania 29.49 2017
77 Lebanon 28.22 2017
78 Montenegro 27.17 2017
79 Mongolia 27.08 2017
80 Brazil 26.89 2017
81 Dominica 25.84 2017
82 Central African Republic 25.61 2017
83 Portugal 23.01 2017
84 Colombia 22.33 2017
85 Sierra Leone 21.97 2017
86 Liberia 21.96 2017
87 Russia 21.60 2017
88 China 21.36 2017
89 Mauritius 20.66 2017
90 Togo 20.65 2017
91 Guatemala 19.80 2017
92 New Zealand 19.38 2017
93 Costa Rica 19.18 2017
94 Guinea 18.73 2017
95 Algeria 17.70 2017
96 Kenya 17.62 2017
97 Greece 17.51 2017
98 Belize 17.35 2017
99 Bolivia 17.17 2017
100 South Africa 16.69 2017
101 Paraguay 16.40 2017
102 Burkina Faso 16.30 2017
103 Turkey 16.00 2017
104 Argentina 15.89 2017
105 Uruguay 15.04 2017
106 Zambia 14.52 2017
107 The Gambia 14.50 2017
108 Honduras 14.22 2017
109 Estonia 14.00 2017
110 Mexico 13.98 2017
111 Cuba 12.81 2017
112 Peru 12.56 2017
113 Mozambique 11.66 2017
114 El Salvador 11.60 2017
115 Chad 11.32 2017
116 Burundi 11.07 2017
117 Ukraine 11.04 2017
118 Jamaica 10.76 2017
119 Haiti 10.66 2017
120 Tanzania 10.43 2017
121 Albania 10.28 2017
122 Yemen 10.24 2017
123 Ecuador 10.12 2017
124 Morocco 10.08 2017
125 Moldova 10.08 2017
126 North Macedonia 10.03 2017
127 Bulgaria 9.62 2017
128 Cambodia 9.44 2017
129 Tunisia 9.34 2017
130 Senegal 9.14 2017
131 Nicaragua 9.04 2017
132 Georgia 8.85 2017
133 Dominican Republic 8.75 2017
134 Kazakhstan 8.64 2017
135 São Tomé and Principe 8.36 2017
136 Suriname 8.04 2017
137 Serbia 7.78 2017
138 Thailand 7.55 2017
139 Ethiopia 7.34 2017
140 Chile 7.10 2017
141 Guinea-Bissau 6.74 2017
142 Sri Lanka 6.74 2017
143 Bhutan 6.71 2017
144 Zimbabwe 6.31 2017
145 Bangladesh 6.25 2017
146 Niger 6.15 2017
147 Libya 5.99 2017
148 Egypt 5.58 2017
149 Malawi 5.01 2017
150 Iran 4.87 2017
151 Iraq 4.84 2017
152 Mauritania 4.79 2017
153 Indonesia 4.27 2017
154 Azerbaijan 4.03 2017
155 Armenia 3.97 2017
156 Eswatini 3.92 2017
157 Philippines 3.79 2017
158 India 3.76 2017
159 Guyana 3.19 2017
160 Mali 2.82 2017
161 Nepal 2.81 2017
162 Vietnam 2.68 2017
163 Sudan 2.59 2017
164 Lao PDR 2.25 2017
165 Myanmar 2.04 2017
166 Uzbekistan 1.54 2017
167 Pakistan 1.51 2017
168 Turkmenistan 1.45 2017
169 Timor-Leste 1.35 2017
170 Somalia 1.28 2017
171 Afghanistan 1.03 2017
172 Kyrgyz Republic 0.95 2017
173 Tajikistan 0.91 2017
174 Madagascar 0.90 2017

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Development Relevance: While some countries have an abundant supply of fresh water, others do not have as much. UN estimates that many areas of the world are already experiencing stress on water availability. Due to the accelerated pace of population growth and an increase in the amount of water a single person uses, it is expected that this situation will continue to get worse. The ability of developing countries to make more water available for domestic, agricultural, industrial and environmental uses will depend on better management of water resources and more cross-sectoral planning and integration. According to World Water Council, by 2020, water use is expected to increase by 40 percent, and 17 percent more water will be required for food production to meet the needs of the growing population. The three major factors causing increasing water demand over the past century are population growth, industrial development and the expansion of irrigated agriculture. There is now ample evidence that increased hydrologic variability and change in climate has and will continue to have a profound impact on the water sector through the hydrologic cycle, water availability, water demand, and water allocation at the global, regional, basin, and local levels. Properly managed water resources are a critical component of growth, poverty reduction and equity. The livelihoods of the poorest are critically associated with access to water services. A shortage of water in the future would be detrimental to the human population as it would affect everything from sanitation, to overall health and the production of grain.

Limitations and Exceptions: A common perception is that most of the available freshwater resources are visible (on the surfaces of lakes, reservoirs and rivers). However, this visible water represents only a tiny fraction of global freshwater resources, as most of it is stored in aquifers, with the largest stocks stored in solid form in the Antarctic and in Greenland's ice cap. The data on freshwater resources are based on estimates of runoff into rivers and recharge of groundwater. These estimates are based on different sources and refer to different years, so cross-country comparisons should be made with caution. Because the data are collected intermittently, they may hide significant variations in total renewable water resources from year to year. The data also fail to distinguish between seasonal and geographic variations in water availability within countries. Data for small countries and countries in arid and semiarid zones are less reliable than those for larger countries and countries with greater rainfall. Caution should also be used in comparing data on annual freshwater withdrawals, which are subject to variations in collection and estimation methods. In addition, inflows and outflows are estimated at different times and at different levels of quality and precision, requiring caution in interpreting the data, particularly for water-short countries, notably in the Middle East and North Africa. The data are based on surveys and estimates provided by governments to the Joint Monitoring Programme of the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF). The coverage rates are based on information from service users on actual household use rather than on information from service providers, which may include nonfunctioning systems.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Water productivity is an indication only of the efficiency by which each country uses its water resources. Given the different economic structure of each country, these indicators should be used carefully, taking into account a country's sectorial activities and natural resource endowments. GDP data are from World Bank's national accounts files. Water withdrawals can exceed 100 percent of total renewable resources where extraction from nonrenewable aquifers or desalination plants is considerable or where water reuse is significant. Withdrawals for agriculture and industry are total withdrawals for irrigation and livestock production and for direct industrial use (including for cooling thermoelectric plants).

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Base Period: 2010

Periodicity: Annual