The Hamilton Spectator

A quarter of world population lacks safe drinking water: UN

Almost half lack access to basic sanitation

- EDITH M. LEDERER

A report issued on the eve of the first major UN conference on water in over 45 years says 26 per cent of the world’s population doesn’t have access to safe drinking water and 46 per cent lacks access to basic sanitation.

The UN World Water Developmen­t Report 2023, released Tuesday, painted a stark picture of the huge gap that needs to be filled to meet UN goals to ensure all people have access to clean water and sanitation by 2030.

Richard Connor, editor-in-chief of the report, told a news conference that the estimated cost of meeting the goals is between $600 billion and $1 trillion (U.S.) a year.

But equally important, Connor said, is forging partnershi­ps with investors, financiers, government­s and climate change communitie­s to ensure that money is invested in ways to sustain the environmen­t and provide potable water to the two billion people who don’t have it and sanitation to the 3.6 million in need.

According to the report, water use has been increasing globally by roughly one per cent per year over the last 40 years “and is expected to grow at a similar rate through to 2050, driven by a combinatio­n of population growth, socio-economic developmen­t and changing consumptio­n patterns.”

Connor said that actual increase in demand is happening in developing countries and emerging economies where it is driven by industrial growth and especially the rapid increase in the population of cities. It is in these urban areas “that you’re having a real big increase in demand,” he said.

With agricultur­e using 70 per cent of all water globally, Connor said, irrigation for crops has to be more efficient — as it is in some countries that now use drip irrigation, which saves water.

“That allows water to be available to cities,” he said.

As a result of climate change, the report said, “seasonal water scarcity will increase in regions where it is currently abundant — such as Central Africa, East Asia and parts of South America — and worsen in regions where water is already in short supply, such as the Middle East and the Sahara in Africa.”

On average, “10 per cent of the global population lives in countries with high or critical water stress” — and up to 3.5 billion people live under conditions of water stress at least one month a year, said the report issued by UNESCO, the UN Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organizati­on.

On average, ‘10 per cent of the global population lives in countries with high or critical water stress’

 ?? RAJESH KUMAR SINGH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Hindu devotee walks after collecting water from Sangam, the confluence of rivers the Ganges and the Yamuna, in Prayagraj, India, on Wednesday.
RAJESH KUMAR SINGH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Hindu devotee walks after collecting water from Sangam, the confluence of rivers the Ganges and the Yamuna, in Prayagraj, India, on Wednesday.

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