Water: a crisis of governance
says second UN World Water Development Report
Although unevenly distributed, the world has plenty
of freshwater. However, mismanagement, limited resources and environmental
changes mean that almost one-fifth of the planet’s population still lacks access
to safe drinking water and 40 per cent lack access to basic sanitation says the
United Nations World Water Development Report 2. The
triennial report is the most comprehensive assessment to date of freshwater
resources. It was presented to the media in Mexico City today on the eve of the
Fourth World Water Forum (Mexico City, March 16-22). Entitled “Water, a shared
responsibility”, this edition focuses on the importance of governance in
managing the world’s water resources and tackling poverty.
Governance
systems, it says, “determine who gets what water, when and how, and decide who
has the right to water and related services.” Such systems are not limited to
‘government,’ but include local authorities, the private sector and civil
society. They also cover a range of issues intimately connected to water, from
health and food security, to economic development, land use and the preservation
of the natural ecosystems on which our water resources depend.
The
report highlights that
• Although significant and steady progress is
being made, and that “at the global scale there is plenty of freshwater”,
WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme estimates indicate that 1.1 billion people
still do not have access to an adequate supply of drinking water and some 2.6
billion do not have access to basic sanitation. These people are among the
world’s poorest. Over half of them live in China or India. At this rate of
progress, regions such as sub-Saharan Africa will not meet the UN Millenium
Development Goal of halving, by 2015, the proportion of people without
sustainable access to safe drinking water. The MDG target of halving, by 2015,
the proportion of people without basic sanitation will not be met globally if
present trends persist. According to the report “mismanagement, corruption, lack
of appropriate institutions, bureaucratic inertia and a shortage of new
investments in building human capacity as well as physical infrastructure” is
largely responsible for this situation.
• Poor water quality is a key
cause of poor livelihood and health. Globally, diarrhoeral diseases and malaria
killed about 3.1 million people in 2002. Ninety percent of these deaths were
children under the age of five. An estimated 1.6 million lives could be saved
annually by providing access to safe drinking water, sanitation and hygiene.
• Water quality is declining in most regions. Evidence indicates that
the diversity of freshwater species and ecosystems is deteriorating rapidly,
often faster than terrestrial and marine ecosystems. The report points out that
the hydrological cycle, upon which life depends, needs a healthy environment to
function.
• Ninety percent of natural disasters are water-related
events, and they are on the increase. Many are the result of poor land use. The
tragic and developing drought in East Africa, where there has been huge felling
of forests for charcoal production and fuel wood, is a poignant example. The
report also cites the case of Lake Chad in Africa, which has shrunk by some 90
percent since the 1960s, mainly because of overgrazing, deforestation and large
unsustainable irrigation projects. Two out of every five people now live in
areas vulnerable to floods and rising sea-levels. The nations most at risk
include Bangladesh, China, India, the Netherlands, Pakistan, the Philippines,
the United States of America and the small island developing states. The report
stresses that changing climate patterns will further exacerbate the situation.
• The world will need 55 percent more food by 2030 This translates into
an increasing demand for irrigation, which already claims nearly 70 percent of
all freshwater consumed for human use. Food production has greatly increased
over the past 50 years, yet 13 percent of the global population (850 million
people, mostly in rural areas) still do not have enough to eat.
• Half
of humanity will be living in towns and cities by 2007. By 2030, this will have
risen to nearly two thirds, resulting in drastic increases in water demand in
urban areas. An estimated two billion of these people will be living in squatter
settlements and slums. It is the urban poor who suffer the most from lack of
clean water and sanitation.
• Over two billion people in developing
countries do not have access to reliable forms of energy. Water is a key
resource for energy generation, which in turn is vital for economic development.
Europe makes use of 75 percent of its hydropower potential. Africa -- where 60
percent of the population has no access to electricity – has developed only 7
percent of its potential.
• In many places of the world, a colossal 30
to 40 percent or more of water goes unaccounted for, through water leakages in
pipes and canals and illegal connections.
• Although there are no
accurate figures, it is estimated that political corruption costs the water
sector millions of dollars every year and undermines water services, especially
to the poor. The report cites a survey in India for example, in which 41 percent
of the customer respondents had made more than one small bribe in the past six
months to falsify metre readings; 30 percent had made payments to expedite
repair work and 12 percent had made payments to expedite new water and
sanitation connections.
Recognising the vital part freshwater plays in
human security and development, the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation, adopted
by Member States and the World Summit on Sustainable Development (Johannesburg,
2002), called on countries to develop integrated water resources management and
water efficiency plans by 2005. The report indicates that only about 12 percent
of countries have done so to date, although many have begun the process.
Financial resources for water are also stagnating. According to the
report, total Official Developpment Assistance (ODA) to the water sector in
recent years has averaged approximately US$3 billion a year with an additional
US$1.5 billion allocated to the sector in non-concessional lending, mainly by
the World Bank. However, only a small proportion (12 percent) of these funds
reach those most in need. And only about ten percent is directed to support
development of water policy, planning and programmes.
Added to this,
private sector investment in water services is declining. During the 1990s the
private sector spent an estimated US$25 billion in water supply and sanitation
in developing countries, mostly in Latin America and Asia. However, many big
multinational water companies have begun withdrawing from or downsizing their
operations in the developing world because of the high political and financial
risks.
Although their performance has often failed to meet the
expectations of developing country governments and donor countries, the report
stresses that it “would be a mistake” to write off the private sector.
Financially strained governments with weak regulations, it finds, “are a poor
alternative for addressing the issue of poor water resources management and
inadequate supplies of water services”.
Water usage increased six-fold
during the 20th century, twice the rate of population growth. Our ability to
meet the continually increasing global demand, says the report, will depend on
good governance and management of available resources.
“Good governance
is essential for managing our increasingly-stretched supplies of freshwater and
indispensable for tackling poverty,” says UNESCO Director-General Koïchiro
Matsuura. “There is no one blueprint for good governance, which is both complex
and dynamic. But we know that it must include adequate institutions –
nationally, regionally and locally, strong, effective legal frameworks and
sufficient human and financial resources.”
It also requires “essential
freedoms, like the freedom of speech and the right to organize,” says the
report, which stresses that: “If citizens cannot access basic information on
water quality and quantity, it seriously curtails their chances of halting
environmentally unsound water projects or to hold relevant government agencies
accountable.”
The UN World Water Development Report is the joint effort
of 24 UN agencies and entities involved in water resources management*. It is
produced on their behalf by the UN World Water Assessment Programme whose
secretariat is based at UNESCO, which considers freshwater resources a top
priority. Its 15 chapters, each prepared by the various participating agencies,
present a detailed analysis of the situation in all of the world’s regions,
backed up by the latest available data, maps and graphs, along with 17 case
studies and numerous examples of good and bad practice in water governance.
“Water, a shared responsibility”, will be formally presented by the
UNESCO Director-General, on behalf of the United Nations, to the Fourth World
Water Forum in Mexico City on 22 March, World Water Day.
Resources: 4th World Water Forum in Mexico City,
Mexico
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