3/6/2005
Two Billion People Need Access To Basic Sanitation By 2015
To Meet UN Target
Nearly 2 billion people must
be provided safe water and basic sanitation by 2015 to meet
the United Nations Millennium
Development
Goal (MDG) of halving the number lacking access, the UN public
health and children’s agencies said this week
That number would work out to 138 million people per year at
an annual cost of $11.3 billion, “a minimal investment
compared with the potential to reduce human illnesses and death
and invigorate economies,” the UN World Health Organization
(WHO) and the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said in a new
report.
Meeting the target by the MDG deadline year of 2015 would add
$84 billion per year to developing economies by averting deaths,
lowering health care costs and increasing productivity, says
the report, called “Water for Life — Making it
Happen.”
It is being released in preparation for World Environment Day
on 5 June. In September the UN General Assembly will review
the world’s progress towards the MDGs, which were agreed
at a summit in 2000.
The report analyzes the essential investments and strategies
needed to increase access to water and basic sanitation from
today.
“
Access to basic sanitation and adequate drinking water makes
people healthier and more economically and socially productive,” said
WHO Director-General Lee Jong-wook. “Yet we are not seeing
nearly enough money invested in this primary building block
of development.”
UNICEF Executive Director Ann Veneman said, “While the
world is on track to meet its safe water targets, progress
on basic sanitation, in terms of the number of people who need
to gain access to sanitation facilities each year for the first
time, needs to accelerate by at least 58 per cent between now
and 2015 to meet the Millennium target.”
Sanitation problems are particularly acute in South Asia and
sub-Saharan Africa, the report says. South Asia needs to reach
42 million additional people with sanitation services every
year to reach the target. In sub-Saharan Africa, 27 million
people every year need access to expanded services, it says.