Providing sanitary water supply


  • Improving unsanitary water supply
  • Offering adequate clean water
  • Providing sufficient clean water

Description

Providing safe and clean drinking water.

Context

In the developing world, although increasing efficiency in the use of household and municipal water is necessary, expanding the quantitative supply of water for drinking and sanitation purposes is of utmost importance. Progress achieved with regard to drinking water and sanitation varies significantly from region to region, albeit for different reasons. Currently, an estimated 1,000 million people are without safe water supplies and 1,700 million people are without sanitation.

Implementation

This strategy features in the framework of Agenda 21 as formulated at UNCED (Rio de Janeiro, 1992), now coordinated by the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development and implemented through national and local authorities.

The period 1981 to 1990 was the International Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation Decade. WHO played an important role in the 'Decade', in developing human resources, in information exchange and appropriate technology and by establishing guidelines for drinking water quality. Technical backup and advice is provided by WHO's Community Water Supply and Sanitation (CWS) unit. The major part of WHO's technical cooperation in environmental health in developing countries is in fact directed to community water supply and sanitation. UN agencies have worked to make safe drinking water available to 1,300 million people in rural areas in the decade 1984-94.

Much effort has been directed towards supplying drinking water and sanitation facilities in urban areas. The coverage of urban areas (excluding China) in terms of drinking water supply is likely to reach 78% by 1990, as compared with 76% in 1980. This accompanies an estimated 49% increase in the urban population of developing countries (excluding China). During the same period, the percentage of the rural population supplied increased from 31 to 49%, while the total population rose by 17%. In Africa, because of the rapid growth in urban population – from 158.5 million in 1985 to a projected 332 million by the year 2000 – progress in providing water has been particularly slow. On the basis of current trends, the number of urban dwellers without an adequate supply of water may even increase, from 25.7 million in 1980 to more than 87.4 million by the year 2000. The drinking water supply in Africa is expected to remain inadequate for about 50% of the rural population, or about 240 million people.

In the Asia and Pacific region (excluding China), the urban population provided with adequate water supply is expected to double between 1980 and 2000. Nevertheless, the number of urban dwellers without an adequate supply of drinking water is estimated at some 300 million people, out of an estimated urban population of 763 million. Progress in the rural supply of water seems to have been quite significant. On the basis of current trends, it is expected that in Asia and the Pacific, as many as 78% of the rural population could be supplied with at least minimum water requirements.

In Western Asia, urban dwellers are expected to achieve full drinking water and sanitation coverage by 1990. However, only 57% of the rural population are expected to have adequate drinking water, as compared with 48% in 1980. At the current pace of expansion, service coverage will have reached 60% of the population by the year 2000.

In Latin America and the Caribbean, efforts at improving water supply and sanitation coverage started earlier than in the other developing regions, with emphasis on urban coverage. By 1980, an estimated 83% of the urban population had water supply services. Coverage of rural areas remained low at 41% and large pockets of the urban poor in the region remain without adequate water and sanitation services. By the year 2000, in view of the rapidly expanding urban populations, the number of urban dwellers without an adequate supply of drinking water is expected to rise to 45 million, from 40.5 million in 1990. With regard to the rural population, at the current rate of progress, coverage will have reached 56%.

At the country level, significant improvements in access to safe water from 1980 to 1990 have been made in inter alia: Sri Lanka (41% rise); Bangladesh (40% rise); Oman (39% rise); Burkina Faso (38% rise); Benin (37% rise); Lesotho (33% rise); India, and Zimbabwe (32% rise).

Facilitated by

  1. Using indigenous methods to maximize local involvement in drinking water supply and sanitation
  2. Using a participatory approach to water management
  3. Training women in water management
  4. Training in water sanitation
  5. Strengthening water monitoring management at all levels
  6. Strengthening water management agencies
  7. Strengthening national capacities for improving water supply
  8. Rehabilitating defective water systems
  9. Providing international support for drinking water supply and sanitation programmes
  10. Promoting local environmental care programmes
  11. Monitoring water related disease transmission
  12. Modernizing sanitary facilities
  13. Managing fresh water use
  14. Involving local people in water management
  15. Informing about unsafe water
  16. Expanding water services for rural and low-income peri-urban areas
  17. Expanding technical cooperation among developing countries on water and sanitation
  18. Expanding rainwater catchment systems
  19. Expanding public participation of women in water projects
  20. Establishing staff development plans to meet present and future requirements
  21. Establishing protected areas for sources of drinking water
  22. Encouraging rational water use
  23. Eliminating guinea worm disease
  24. Developing water curricula
  25. Developing low-cost approach to improving drinking water supply
  26. Decentralizing decisions to the lowest appropriate level
  27. Controlling water-borne diseases
  28. Constructing quality water system
  29. Conducting public education programmes on drinking water supply and sanitation
  30. Augmenting present water supply
  31. Assisting water agencies to become more cost-effective
  32. Assessing water supply monitoring results annually
  33. Adopting sustainable sanitation policy

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