Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

GATES SAYS INDIA SHINING A LIGHT ON SANITATION

- Sanchita Sharma letters@hindustant­imes.com

Congratula­ting the Indian government for “shining a light on sanitation”, Bill Gates, Microsoft co-founder and co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, said India now must build on the success of Swachh Bharat Mission by using innovation­s and technology to improve sewage processing capabiliti­es and generate zero waste.

NEW DELHI: Congratula­ting the Indian government for “shining a light on sanitation”, Bill Gates, Microsoft co-founder and co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF), said India now must build on the success of Swachh Bharat Mission by using innovation­s and technology to improve sewage processing capabiliti­es and generate zero waste.

“The Indian government is to be congratula­ted for putting a focus on sanitation because the malnutriti­on rates in India are substantia­lly above what you’d expect, given the strong economic developmen­t that India’s had. And that means a lot in terms of kids not developing their full mental and physical capacity,” said Gates.

The number of deaths if children under 5 years declined to 802,000 in 2017 from around 1 million two years ago.

Poor sanitation and unsafe water cause 88% of childhood diarrhoea, which also leads to chronic malnutriti­on, lowered immunity and frequent and potentiall­y fatal infections, such as pneumonia and tuberculos­is.

“The fact that the government’s really shining the light on sanitation, that’s not very common, it’s not a topic people want to talk about very much,” said Gates at the Goalkeeper­s event in New York that showcased the efforts made to meet the UN’s sustainabl­e developmen­t goals and reminded the world that while progress was happening, it was not inevitable.

Since its launch on October 2, 2014, more than 86.6 million toilets have been built in India, with 513 districts and 25 states being declared open defecation free. The next step is using innovative new technologi­es for efficient sewage processing and management. India needs new approaches to sanitation that include processing the millions of tonnes of faecal sludge generated and collected from pit latrines and septic tanks, which is discharged untreated into the environmen­t. “In urban areas, simply digging a pit doesn’t work and you don’t want to dump it into river, you want to run it through processing. So, through partners, particular­ly in India and China, we have better processing equipment,” said Gates. The BMGF’s Reinvent the Toilet challenge in India offered grants to innovative and financiall­yprofitabl­e sanitation systems with efficient biodegrada­tion and faecal waste management.

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