The World Bank has said countries need
to quadruple spending to $150 billion a year to deliver universal safe
water and sanitation, helping to reduce childhood disease and deaths
while boosting economic growth...
Specifically, the report pointed out
that Nigeria provided piped water to fewer than 10 per cent of city
dwellers in 2015, down from 29 per cent 25 years earlier.
Also, in Haiti, only seven per cent of households have piped water, compared to 15 per cent previously.
Also, in Haiti, only seven per cent of households have piped water, compared to 15 per cent previously.
Investments should be better coordinated
and targeted to ensure services reach the most vulnerable, and
governments need to engage the private sector more closely to meet the
high costs, Reuters quoted the World Bank to have stated in a report.
“Millions are currently trapped in
poverty by poor water supply and sanitation,” Senior Director of the
World Bank’s global water practice, Guangzhe Chen said.
“More resources, targeted to areas of high vulnerability and low access,
are needed to close the gaps and improve poor water and sanitation
services.”
The high cost of clean water risks jeopardizing the ability of countries to meet the United Nations’
Sustainable Development Goal of providing access to safe and affordable
sanitation for all by 2030, said the World Bank.
More than three quarters of those
without piped water supplies live in rural areas, where only 20 percent
have access to “improved sanitation” said the report. In cities, poor
people are up to three times less likely to have piped water than people
in better off areas.
The risk of Diarrhea diseases and
malnutrition caused by unsafe water and poor sanitation is creating a
“silent emergency”, with stunted growth affecting more than 40 per cent
of children under five in countries including Guatemala, Niger, Yemen
and Bangladesh, said the report.
It said under-nutrition could have
long-term effects on children, including poor mental development and
reduced ability to work, which would eventually affect economic
development.
Some countries fail to maintain infrastructure or struggle to cope with growing populations.
“Water and sanitation services need to improve dramatically or the consequences on health and well-being will be dire,” Nigeria’s Country Director for the World Bank, Rachid Benmessaoud said.
It urged governments to better inform people and encourage more household water treatment.
“Water and sanitation services need to improve dramatically or the consequences on health and well-being will be dire,” Nigeria’s Country Director for the World Bank, Rachid Benmessaoud said.
It urged governments to better inform people and encourage more household water treatment.
Providing piped water in cities could
generate economies of scale, the bank said, urging greater
private-sector involvement in urban water provision where recovering
costs may be easier.
Researchers, decision makers and aid specialists are meeting in Stockholm for the annual World Water Week where they will focus on how to reduce waste in water use.
Water and sanitation improvements should be linked to health programmes to better tackle disease and malnutrition, said the World Bank report.
Researchers, decision makers and aid specialists are meeting in Stockholm for the annual World Water Week where they will focus on how to reduce waste in water use.
Water and sanitation improvements should be linked to health programmes to better tackle disease and malnutrition, said the World Bank report.
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