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WATER
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FAECES,
FOOTBALL AND THE ENVIRONMENTAL FUTURE: WSSCC SAYS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
THROUGH SANITATION IS GOLDEN GOAL:
13/06/2008
(MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / 13
June 2008 --
Geneva - Over 500,000 tonnes of
faeces are openly defecated every day to the environment
around the world. That's enough to fill the 30,000-seat Stade de Genève, where
the Euro 2008 football tournament
kicked off last weekend, three times over.
But
the global sanitation
crisis is not a mere game: it pollutes the very environment upon which humans
depend. Providing toilets and
protecting the environment would be a winning combination for people
and planet, says the Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council (WSSCC).
"Each
year, more than 200 million tonnes of human waste go uncollected and untreated
around the world, fouling the environment and exposing millions of people to
disease and squalor," says Jon Lane, WSSCC Executive
Director. "On World Environment Day, midway through the International Year
of Sanitation, WSSCC is
calling for governments, stakeholders and individuals around the world to
accelerate the work to end
these ongoing human and environmental catastrophes."
Doing
so, he says, requires neither colossal sums of money nor breakthrough scientific
discoveries.
Using
existing, proven approaches and
technologies, and for about US$ 10 billion a year – less than 1 percent of
global military expenditure –
the world could meet the Millennium Development Goal sanitation target to
halve, by 2015, the proportion of
people without sustainable access to basic sanitation.
And
around ten years later,
everyone could have a toilet to use. "Achieving universal sanitation can,
with proper financing, be
accomplished through hard work on the ground, plain talk about toilets, strong
leadership at all levels, and
by creating demand for toilets among the 2.6 billion poor people who need
them," says Lane.
Toilets,
washing facilities, garbage removal, wastewater disposal, stormwater drainage:
sanitation services such as
these are a prerequisite for clean, healthy household and community living
environments, particularly
in dense settlements.
Such
sanitation services are also vital to safeguard environmental quality more
broadly, especially the quality of water resources.
The
cost is high, conversely, where sanitation services
are lacking.
Water
pollution stemming from poor sanitation costs Southeast Asia more than US$ 2
billion per year, and in Indonesia
and Vietnam creates environmental costs of more than US$ 200 million annually,
primarily from the loss of productive land.
A
healthy living environment depends on sanitary toilets
In
teeming informal settlements across the globe, the sanitation crisis is keenly
felt.
With
no way to safely dispose of
either faeces or garbage, around a billion slum dwellers must resort to “flying
toilets” (also known as
“wrap and throw”) and to dumping trash in public spaces.
This
situation is not limited to urban settlements;
in impoverished city suburbs, small market towns, large villages and periurban
settlements across the
developing world, the public environment is full of waste.
The
contents of bucket-latrines and pits, even of sewers, are often emptied into the
streets.
A
recent study of Indonesia,
for example, found that roughly one in ten people are exposed to open sewers and
the open dumping of solid
waste, and more than four in ten to open defecation sites.
Poor
sanitation creates a host of health
hazards as well as a bleak and disheartening visual landscape.
Roads
are full of mud, puddles, and piles
of garbage and debris, not to mention disease-carrying insects, microbes and
rodents.
The
odours are often
unpleasant.
Imagine
a community of 10,000 inhabitants, 30 percent of whom practice open
defecation.
Since
each person produces 150
grams of faeces a day, open defecation would result in 450 kg daily or more than
3 tonnes a week – or 100
full dump trucks’ worth of human excrement annually – deposited in the
community.
Living
in a squalid environment harms physical and psychological health; is
stigmatising; often presents
employment challenges; and deepens human poverty.
A
healthy living environment, one that supports
human dignity and is free of disease-transmitting agents and conditions, is
impossible without sanitation
services.
Sanitary
toilets aid environmental sustainability
Human
waste enters water sources and land through open defecation, dumping of buckets,
inadequate disposal via
sewer pipes into water courses and onto unused land, and leakage from pit
latrines.
In
the developing world,
roughly 90 percent of sewage is discharged untreated into rivers, polluting
waters and killing plants
and fish.
In
Southeast Asia alone, 13 million tonnes of faeces are released to inland water
sources each year, along with 122
million m3 of urine and 11 billion m3 of greywater.
This
presents a major health
threat to people who depend upon open streams and wells for their drinking water
as well as an economic blow
to people whose livelihoods depend upon fisheries.
Upstream
water users find better quality water,
whereas downstream users find “sewage sinks”.
Water
quality is worse near densely populated areas.
Reusing
waste has many benefits
Sanitation
involves a range of actions, but for a healthy environment – in communities as
well as in the larger
natural world – the top priority is separating excreta, with its host of
biological pathogens, from contact
with human beings as well as plant and animal life.
In
areas where it is practised, ending open defecation
is a critical first step.
But
to fully realise the health, social, and economic benefits, the management
of wastes must be considered.
Conventional
sewerage can now be supplemented with ecological
sanitation technologies that make use of the nutrients in human waste.
These
range from simple “arbor-loos”
(where a tree is planted on the latrine pit) to urine-diverting toilets that
produce fertiliser from urine
and safely composted faeces.
Anaerobic
digestion of sewage to produce biogas for energy is another option.
In
China today, for example, 90 percent of human excreta is used in agriculture;
the task is to make sure that
raw sewage is not put on the fields.
Chinese
farming communities have proved open to the idea of urine-diverting,
or “dry”, toilets that facilitate the re-use of excreta as fertiliser.
To
support the awareness-raising effort on this and other key sanitation messages,
the UN-Water Task Force
on Sanitation has launched an advocacy and media
kit in English, French and Spanish.
Task
Force Members include the
United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), World Health Organization (WHO), Water
and Sanitation Programme (WSP),
UNEP, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), United Nations Human
Settlements Programme (UN–HABITAT), United Nations University (UNU), and
WSSCC.
World
Environment Day, commemorated each year on 5 June and supported by the United
Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP), is one of the principal vehicles through which the United
Nations stimulates
worldwide awareness of the environment and enhances political attention and
action.
The
Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council (WSSCC) is a global
multi-stakeholder partnership organisation that works
to improve the lives of poor people. WSSCC enhances collaboration among sector
agencies and professionals around sanitation
and water supply and contributes to the broader goals of poverty eradication,
health and environmental improvement, gender
equality and long-term social and economic development. With members in more
than 80 countries, WSSCC has the legitimacy
and flexibility of a non-governmental organisation, while its institutional
host, the World Health Organization, adds United
Nations credibility to WSSCC's work. Through Networking & Knowledge
Management, Advocacy & Communications and the
Global Sanitation Fund, WSSCC is at the forefront of knowledge, debate and
influence on the achievable and inseparable trinity
for development: water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) for all.
For
more information, please contact: Mr. David Trouba, WSSCC Programme Officer
Communications, Tel. +41 22 917
8409, E-mail troubad@who.int, or Ms. Tatiana Fedotova, WSSCC Communications
Officer, Tel. +41 22 917 86 74, E-mail: fedotovat@who.int. Main sources for this
release: UN, UNEP, WSSCC, WSP/World
Bank.
Labels:
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