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Water & the Johannesburg Summit
Putting words into action, by Ian Johnson
August 26, 2002-As world leaders prepare for the upcoming World
Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, they must sharpen
their focus on one issue that runs through all of the discussions
on sustainability-water.
Water is literally a matter of life and death. Some 12 million
people die each year from a lack of water, including 3 million children
who die tragically from waterborne diseases. Today, some 1.1 billion
people in the world lack access to clean water, while 2.4 billion
people live without
decent sanitation, and 4 billion without sound wastewater disposal.
Access to clean water can be the key to climbing out of grinding
poverty. Go into the favelas of Brazil, the slums of India, or the
bairros populares of Mozambique-everywhere you see the same thing.
It is the poor who do not have access to water. It is the poor who
are at the end of every empty pipe. It is the poor who must buy
water from vendors at many times the price paid by better-off people
who have service.
Demand for water in our growing world is rising rapidly. While
world population tripled in the last century, the use of water grew
six fold. The increased use has come at a high cost. Some rivers
no longer reach the sea. Half of the world's wetlands disappeared
in the last century, and 20 percent of freshwater fish are now endangered
or extinct.
Action on water in Johannesburg will be critical in the international
community's effort to meet the Millennium Development Goals, which
call for reducing child mortality, halving the proportion of people
worldwide who do not have sustainable access to clean water by 2015,
and to manage the underlying natural resource base more sustainably.
Reaching those goals will require new thinking on water that improves
the health of people in developing countries, boosts economic growth
through more effective water management in irrigated agriculture,
by industries and cities, and improves peace and security in water-scarce
regions.
Improving the way we manage water used in agriculture is especially
key because more than 70 percent of the water used in the world
today goes to irrigating crops and other agro-industrial uses. Better
management of that water would free up the flows to be used for
other purposes such as drinking water.
Thankfully, there are signs of hope. In India, an innovative project
that channels water to poor areas has improved agricultural output
by giving seasonal workers the opportunity to work in off-peak seasons.
The progress is astonishing. In the newly irrigated areas, some
26 percent of the population now rank as poor, compared to 69 percent
in areas that did not receive new water flows.
In Central America, a handwashing initiative overcame the region's
lack of clean water by aggressively promoting effective handwashing
with cheap soap. The partnership between four soap companies, NGOs,
development agencies, and the ministries of health of several Central
American countries, dramatically reduced diarrheal disease among
children under five, which had been acause of death for the age
group.
Lastly though, if conflict over water is possible, water can also
be the focus for cooperation and peace. In Africa, the 10 countries
that line the Nile river have risen above their national differences
and improved the security of the region by mobilizing behind the
Nile Basin Initiative. Launched in 1999, the initiative aims to
improve the management of the Nile's waters for the benefit of the
people living along the river basin, whose number is expected to
double from 300 million today to 600 million in 30 years.
We know then that action on water at the international and local
levels can help in the fight against global poverty. But success
does not come free. It will require fundamental changes in water
sector policies and institutions in many countries along with big
increases in investment. The World Bank estimates that $380 billion
will be needed in water investment during the next 13 years in order
to meet the 2015 Millennium Development Goals. That would mean a
70 percent increase over recent spending on water supply and sanitation.
Meeting the world's water needs by 2015 will require us all to
improve our management of water resources and services. Governments
must give the different user groups in society incentives to use
water more wisely, to avoid waste and pollution. They also need
to work for development and sharing of water resources in such a
way that they will be available for
productive uses in all segments of society. They must ensure that
the poor have access to safe, affordable water supply and sanitation
services by reducing costs and allowing alternative service providers
to compete.
In urban areas, subsidies should be targeted to the poorest and
contracts should be written so that poor communities are better
served. In small towns and rural areas, this means empowering communities
by giving them the ownership rights and authority they need to choose
service providers.
The rise in worldwide demand for water is not leveling off. During
the next 30 years, water use will grow by 50 percent, putting half
of the world's population in countries where water is scarce, especially
in Africa, the Middle East and South Asia. And you can be sure that
it will not be the well-to-do that will be short on water. Without
action now, it will surely be the poorest countries and poorest
people who will continue to suffer.
The writer is the World Bank's Vice-President for Environmentally
and Socially Sustainable Development. This piece appeared as an
opinion-editorial in several newspapers around the world.
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