Tidal Wave


Oct 20th, 2009 12:30 PM EST
By Chris Scott

John Sauer, Communications Director for partner organization Water Advocates, has a column in today’s Huffington Post studying all of the attention and traction clean water efforts have been getting recently (including the Dow Live Earth Run for Water which we’ve covered here on the ONE Blog). It’s a pretty good recap of some of the big initiatives currently at play, leading Sauer to ask: “Will this”buzz” result in substantially more people getting access to water and sanitation?”

Excerpts below, full piece here:

With over 2 million people dying of preventable illnesses linked to lack of access to water, sanitation and hygiene every year, it is critical that the response to this crisis be as large as the need. At present this is not the case—the response is abysmally below the need. Let’s take a look.

Annually about $6 billion in development aid goes to water and sanitation programs globally, but $18 billion is the estimated amount required each year to meet the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) target for water and sanitation. This is a significant gap that only a coordinated global strategy can address.

The U.S. is not the global leader that it needs to be on this issue. It trails Japan and Germany in development aid to water and sanitation issues, spending only about $432 million in 2007 according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). By contrast, Japan spent $1.9 billion and Germany $593 million.

Efforts have been made to increase U.S. leadership but they have not been successful yet. The most notable push is from Senator Durbin and 24 other senators (a quarter of the Senate) who are hoping to pass legislation (S.624) that aims to reach 100 million people with first-time access to safe drinking water and sanitation by 2015. Water and sanitation organizations suggest that the U.S. government contribution should be $1.5 billion per year.

TAGS: NGO Partner, ONE, Water Advocates, Water and Sanitation

 

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