Poor targeting of aid for sanitation and water is undermining all development efforts, leaving the poorest of the poor entrenched in poverty, said international development agency WaterAid following the release of a new report today.
The UN-Water Global Annual Assessment of Sanitation and Drinking Water (GLAAS), produced by the WHO and UN-Water, shows that just 42% of aid given to water and sanitation actually goes where it is needed - to low income countries. Only four of the top ten donors provide 50% or more of their development assistance to low income countries resulting in the lion's share of aid not reaching the poorest communities:
Over 2006-2008 Jordan received an average of $500 in aid for every person without access to water, while Chad only received $3
Over 2006-2008 Georgia received an average of $250 in aid for every person without access to sanitation, while Nepal only received $1
The report is available to download here: http://www.who.int/water_sanitation_health/glaas/en/
Figures in the report also show that despite diarrhoea being the second biggest killer of children under five, funding for water and sanitation – which could prevent 88% of these deaths - has declined as a share of overall aid and remains a low political priority when compared to other sectors such as health and education.
The report also warns that there remains a huge financial gap to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). An extra $18.4bn is needed globally each year between now and 2015 to meet the water and sanitation goals.
"Here is a global catastrophe which kills more children than HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis combined and which is holding back all development efforts including health and education," said Barbara Frost, Chief Executive of WaterAid.
"There are 2.6 billion people worldwide who have no access to safe sanitation and, if we continue as we are, in sub-Saharan Africa the MDG target will not be met until the 23rd century. Yet political leaders are failing to address this deadly crisis. Once again it is the poorest of the poor who are simply being ignored."
The GLAAS report comes just two days before the first ever High Level Meeting on Sanitation and Water, where ministers and policy makers from over 30 countries will have the opportunity to commit to financial and political action which would begin to reverse years of neglect. The meeting is part of an international ‘Sanitation and Water for All’ initiative being launched this Friday in Washington DC prior to the World Bank spring meetings.
WaterAid is calling on leaders at this High Level Meeting to make strong and concrete commitments to tackle the global water and sanitation crisis, ensuring that:
No credible national sanitation and water plan fails through lack of finance
Money goes to where it’s needed; so that 70% of aid goes to low income countries
Governments join the Sanitation and Water for All initiative to accelerate progress
Increasing investment in sanitation and water will bring substantial health, education and economic benefits.
WHO estimated in 2008 that more than 2.2 million child deaths per year could be prevented with safe water, sanitation and hygiene; and in a separate study, the WHO found that $1 investment in water and sanitation offers an $8 return.
"The way forward is clear," said Frost. "We have a report that says what needs to be done and we have an historic meeting that can deliver the necessary decisions. Such decisions could stop millions of children from dying, free up hospital beds and give girls in particular the opportunity to get an education. Come Friday, ministers must show global leadership and demonstrate their commitment to eradicating poverty by prioritizing sanitation and water in the wider development agenda."
Media contacts:
For more information, copies of the GLAAS report, to speak to a spokesperson or for high res images of WaterAid's work, please contact: Chloe Irvine on +44 77716 545 44 chloeirvine@wateraid.org, or Jonathan Rich on +1-347-262-9115
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