Daily Archives: April 5, 2012

Drinking water news: The Importance of World Water Day.

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News Postings
Vol. 1 No 34
Public release date:
Posted: 03/22/2012 1:21
Rep. Earl Blumenauer
U.S. Representative
from Oregon
The Importance of World Water Day

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The Importance of World Water Day

 
You and I, and those living in most developed nations, never have to walk far or work hard to find drinking water.
 
We never have to choose between clean drinking water and dirty water — or between dirty water that may make us sick, and no water at all. For many of us, freshwater is so abundant it’s hard to even imagine what life would be like without it.
 
However, not everyone in the world is as privileged as you and I. Every 20 seconds, a child dies from a water-related disease. Every single day, women spend 200 million hours collecting water. Every week, 3 million students miss school because they lack access to clean water or sanitation, and every year, inadequate sanitation costs India $53.8 billion, or 6.4 percent of its GDP.
 
Today, on World Water Day, I’m asking you to join me in raising awareness and help to break the poverty cycle for women and children whose days are otherwise filled by collecting dirty water, not going to school or successfully earning an income.
 
We know how to solve these problems. We simply need to make it a greater priority.
 
That’s why I have introduced H.R. 3658, the Paul Simon Water for the World Act of 2012. It comes with zero increase in federal spending, but enormous positive impacts on health, school attendance, food security and nutrition, environmental quality, empowering women, and economic development across the globe. All of which keeps us safer here at home, too.

 

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    Drinking water news: UN hits water target – But 1.8 billion people still drinking unsafe water.

    Save the water Contaminated water


    Save the Water™
    News Postings
    Vol. 1 No 33
    Public release date:
    23-Mar-2012
     
    UN hits water target, but 1.8 billion people still drink unsafe water

     

    The study’s co-authors were Kyle Onda and Joe LoBuglio, graduate research assistant and research manager, respectively, at the UNC Water Institute.
     
    Media note: Bartram can be reached at (919) 966-3934 or jbartram@unc.edu.
     
    Gillings School of Global Public Health contact: Chris Perry, (919) 966-4555, chris.perry@unc.edu

     

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    Drinking water news:

    UN hits water target, but 1.8 billion people still drinking unsafe water, study shows.


    Recent widespread news coverage heralded the success of a United Nations’ goal of greatly improving access to safe drinking water around the world.

     
    But while major progress has been made, a new study from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill indicates that far greater challenges persist than headline statistics suggested.
     
    Earlier this month (March 6), UNICEF and the World Health Organization issued a report stating that the world had met the U.N.’s Millennium Development Goal target of halving the proportion of people without access to safe drinking water, well in advance of a deadline.
     
    That goal aimed to boost access to improved drinking water sources, such as piped supplies and protected wells, between 1990 and 2015.
     
    However, the new UNC study estimates that 1.8 billion people – 28 percent of the world’s population – used unsafe water in 2010.
     
    That figure is 1 billion more than the official report’s estimate that 783 million people (11 percent of the globe) use water from what are classified as unimproved sources by WHO and UNICEF’s Joint Monitoring Program.
     
    The new study’s lead author, Jamie Bartram, Ph.D., professor of environmental sciences and engineering in the Gillings School of Global Public Health, said the WHO/UNICEF report highlighted the progress that could be achieved through concerted international action, but left outstanding the needs of millions of people who only have access to dangerous contaminated drinking water.
     
    If you look at the water people use and ask ‘Is this contaminated?’ instead of ‘Is this water from a protected source?’, the world would still be well short of meeting the Millennium Development Goal target,” said Bartram, also director of the Water Institute at UNC.
     
    “In many parts of the world, water from ‘improved sources’ – like protected village wells and springs – is likely to be microbiologically or chemically contaminated, either at the source or by the time people drink it,” he said. “In developing countries, whether you live in small village or a big city, safe water can be hard to come by: pipes and taps break, clean springs and wells become contaminated or people have to carry or store water in potentially unsanitary ways.”
     
    The study, “Global Access to Safe Water: Accounting for Water Quality and the Resulting Impact on MDG Progress,” was published March 14, 2012, in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.
     
    Bartram and colleagues analyzed water quality and sanitary risk information from an earlier study of five countries, and extrapolated the data to estimate global figures. Their study suggested that of the 5.8 billion people using piped or “other improved” water sources in 2010, 1 billion probably received faecally contaminated water. Adding that tally to the nearly 800 million people who collect water from unimproved sources would mean 1.8 billion people are drinking unsafe water.
     
    Furthermore, Bartram and colleagues estimated that another 1.2 billion people got water from sources that lack basic sanitary protection against contamination.
     
    “All told, we estimate 3 billion people don’t have access to safe water, if you use a more stringent definition that includes both actual water quality and sanitary risks,” Bartram said.
     
    He highlighted that the recent WHO/UNICEF announcement confirmed how much had been achieved since the Millennium Development Goals were adopted in 2000, and that this progress should lead to a progressive shift towards ensuring that every home, workplace and school has reliable water supplies that are – and remain – safe.
     
    However, he said the magnitude of the UNC study’s estimates and the health and development implications suggest that greater attention needs to be paid to better understanding and managing drinking water safety.

     
    The study’s co-authors were Kyle Onda and Joe LoBuglio, graduate research assistant and research manager, respectively, at the UNC Water Institute.
    Media note: Bartram can be reached at (919) 966-3934 or jbartram@unc.edu.
    Gillings School of Global Public Health contact: Chris Perry, (919) 966-4555, chris.perry@unc.edu


     

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