HomeUnited NationsStep up investment to ensure water plus sanitation access for all

Step up investment to ensure water plus sanitation access for all

The study examines WASH gain access to in more than 120 nations and reveals that over 75 percent reported insufficient funding to implement related plans and strategies.   Just over two thirds of nations have implemented measures to achieve populations disproportionately affected by weather change. However , only about a 3rd monitor progress or allocate funding to them.  

‘An urgent crisis’ 

“We are facing an urgent crisis: poor entry to safe drinking water, sanitation and hygiene claim millions of lives each year, while the increasing regularity and intensity of climate-related severe weather events continue to hamper the delivery of secure WASH services, ” said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the particular WHO Director-General.   Making certain everyone on the planet has access to clean water and sterilization is one of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which have a deadline of 2030.   The findings come in a report published by WHO SEEM TO and UN-Water, which brings together UN organizations and other organizations working on the issue.  

‘Seriously off-track’ 

“The world is seriously off-track to achieve SDG 6 upon water and sanitation for all those, by 2030. This leaves billions of people dangerously exposed to infectious diseases , especially in the aftermath of disasters, including climate change-related events, ” said Gilbert F. Houngbo, the UN-Water Chair and Director General of the International Labour Business ( ILO ).   The data from their report will certainly inform the UN 2023 Water Meeting , which will be held in UN Headquarters in New York in March.     Although 45 % of countries are on track to achieve drinking water targets by the end of the decade, only a quarter are likely to meet sanitation targets.  

Reaffirming global commitment 

It will mark the first time within 50 years that the global community will review progress and commit to renew activity on water and sterilization.   Data through the Global Analysis and Assessment of Sanitation and Drinking-Water (GLAAS) report further implies that most national policies and plans neither address the climate change risk to WASH services, nor how to make technology and management systems more climate resilient.   The partners call for all countries and stakeholders to increase support for CLEAN service delivery through strengthened governance, financing, monitoring, rules, and capacity development.  

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