The Guardian (Nigeria)

Globally, three billion people at health risk due to scarce data on water quality

- By Chinedum Uwaegbulam

GLOBALLY, over three billion people are at risk of disease because the water quality of their rivers, lakes and groundwate­r is unknown, due to a lack of data.

Besides, a fifth of the world’s river basins are experienci­ng dramatic fluctuatio­ns in water availabili­ty and 2.3 billion people are living in countries categorise­d as “water- stressed,” including 721 million in areas where the water situation is “critical,” according to recent research carried out by the United Nations Environmen­t Programme ( UNEP) and partners.

Historical­ly, there has been little data on the global state of freshwater ecosystems. To fill the gap, UNEP used Earth Observatio­n technologi­es to track, over long time periods, the extent to which freshwater ecosystems are changing. Researcher­s surveyed more than 75,000 bodies of water in 89 countries and found that more than 40 per cent were severely polluted.

The numbers, presented last week at a high- level UN meeting on the water- related goals of the 2030 agenda, suggest the world is falling behind on a global push to provide safe drinking water to all of humanity. UNEP’S data indicates that the world is not on track to achieve sustainabl­e water management by 2030 and efforts would have to double over the next nine years to achieve Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal ( SDG) 6 – which calls for “the availabili­ty and sustainabl­e management of water and sanitation for all.”

Coordinate­d by UN- Water, UNEP, along with seven other United Nations agencies, is part of the Integrated Monitoring Initiative, a global programme designed to support countries with monitoring and reporting progress towards the SDG 6 targets. UNEP is responsibl­e for three of the 11 indicators – on ambient water quality, on integrated water resource management, and on freshwater ecosystems. The data that UNEP has collected is now being analysed to track how environmen­tal pressures such as climate change, urbanisati­on, and land use changes, among others, impact the world’s freshwater resources. Andersen said the informatio­n would help inform environmen­tal decisionma­king at the highest levels. To speed up national action on water, the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal six accelerati­on Framework, was launched in 2020. It seeks to mobilize action across government­s, civil society, the private sector and the United Nations to align efforts, optimize financing, and enhance capacity and governance to manage water resources.

Each year, the United Nations marks March 22, World Water Day World Water Day, to raise awareness of the critical role of water in food security, energy production, industry, and other facets of human, economic and social developmen­t. This year, the theme for the day is “valuing water.” Effective and equitable water management is recognised as having catalytic effects across the entire2030 Agenda.

“Our planet is facing a triple crisis of climate change, biodiversi­ty loss and pollution and waste. These crises are taking a heavy toll on oceans, rivers, seas and lakes,” said UNEP Executive Director, Inger Anderson. “Collecting regular, comprehens­ive and upto- date data is vital to managing our water resources more sustainabl­y and ensuring access to safe water for all.”

 ??  ?? Communitie­s face water scarcity
Communitie­s face water scarcity

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