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Human Development Report 2006

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Unlike wars and natural disasters, the lack of water does not receive media attention. ... UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan. Connection between the MDGs and Water ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Human Development Report 2006


1
Human Development Report 2006
  • Overview Beyond Scarcity
  • Power, Poverty and the Global Water Crisis

2
The Water Crisis is a Silent Crisis
  • Unlike wars and natural disasters, the lack of
    water does not receive media attention.
  • Yet it is claiming more lives through disease
    than war claims through guns.
  • It reinforces the inequality between the rich and
    poor.
  • We need to address this crisis in order to give
    millions of people better health and education,
    and to get them out of poverty.

3
Water for Life, Water for Livelihoods
  • This report has two themes--Water for life and
    water for livelihoods.
  • The 1st explores the importance of giving people
    access to clean water, removing waste water, and
    providing sanitation.
  • What are the consequences of NOT providing these
    services?
  • How do you make them universally available?
  • The 2nd is concerned with how countries share
    water across national borders, and also within
    each country.

4
Is There a Shortage of Water?
  • The report says, no.
  • The problem lies in inequalities in power and in
    poverty, not in physical availability.
  • Some facts
  • 1.1 billion people in developing countries have
    inadequate access to water.
  • 2.6 b. people lack basic sanitation.
  • This is because of political choices, not lack of
    water.
  • In Asia, Latin America, and Africa, some people
    have several hundred liters of water a day, while
    others have less than the 20 liters a day per
    person which is the minimum required to meet
    basic human needs.
  • Women and young girls suffer most, because they
    spend hours carrying water from wells to their
    homes.

5
Agriculture, Industry
  • Here again, water distribution is unequal.
  • Some farmers in India have access to water 24
    hours a day through irrigation pumps that take
    water from aquifers.
  • Others only get rainwater.
  • The root problem is institutional and political
    (i.e., government decision-making and preference
    given to some over others).

6
Consequences of Water Insecurity
  • Lack of water violates basic principles of social
    justice. These include
  • Equal citizenship even if a person has the right
    to vote, he/she is not an equal citizen if he/she
    doesnt have access to water
  • Social minimum 20 liters a day per person.
  • Equality of opportunity a child without access
    to clean water falls sick and cant go to school.
    So he/she doesnt have the same opportunities as
    a rich kid.
  • Fair distribution.
  • Access to safe water is a fundamental human
    right. UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan.

7
Connection between the MDGs and Water
  • Halving the proportion of world population
    without access to safe drinking water and basic
    sanitation by 2015 is part of Goal 7 (Ensure
    environmental sustainability)
  • Even if the targets are achieved, there will
    still be over 800 m. people without water and 1.8
    b. people without sanitation in 2015.
  • But even so, the date 2015 is importantit will
    be a means of judging the leaders of the world
    who signed the MDG pledge in 2000. Did they
    deliver?

8
Looking back
  • A 100 years ago, people in London, New York, and
    Paris were dying of dysentery, diarrhoea, and
    typhoid fever.
  • Child death rates were as high then as they are
    in Africa today.
  • Reforms in water and sanitation changed this
    picture.
  • Water purification was the single most important
    reason for the drop in child mortality in the
    U.S. in the early 20th c.

9
Water Use Some Numbers
  • Most of the 1.1 b. people with insufficient
    access to clean water get only 5 liters a day.
  • People in Europe use an average of 200 liters a
    day, and in the U.S. 400 liters a day.
  • More water is lost through dripping taps than is
    available to the 1.1 b. people without water!
  • Unclean water and lack of sanitation kills 1.8
    million children a year (diarrhoea).

10
The Poor Pay More for Water
  • The poor not only get less water than the rich,
    but they also pay more for the water that they do
    get.
  • In the slums of Jakarta, Manila, and Nairobi,
    people pay 5-10 times more than the rich in those
    cities.
  • The poor also spend more on water as a percentage
    of their household income (10 in Nicaragua, as
    against 3 in the UK)

11
The MDGs should be a floor, not a ceiling
  • What does this mean?
  • Achieving the MDGs should be a minimum, not a
    distant target.
  • By present trends, Africa will attain its goal in
    2040 (for clean water) and 2076 (for sanitation).
  • The Arab states are 27 years behind their goal.
  • This leaves millions of people behind.
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