UN Backs New Int’l Decade for Water for Sustainable Development

Published on by in Non Profit

UN Backs New Int’l Decade for Water for Sustainable Development

The proposal for a new International Decade, which has to be eventually approved by the 193-member General Assembly, was initiated by the president of Tajikistan, Emomali Rahmon, backed by UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon

"It would complement and support the achievement of the proposed Sustainable Development Goals - for water," he said.

The proposal for a new International Decade, which has to be eventually approved by the 193-member General Assembly, was initiated Tuesday by the president of Tajikistan, Emomali Rahmon, at a ‘Water for Life" high-level international conference in the capital of Dushanbe.

Tajikistan, which has taken a leading role in highlighting the significance of water as a source of life, also sponsored the International Decade of Water For Life (2005-2015) "to raise awareness and galvanize action."

The proposed new International Decade will be a successor to Water for Life which concludes in December this year.

Ban told delegates water's place in the SDGs go well beyond access — taking into account critical issues such as integrated water resources management, efficiency of use, water quality, transboundary cooperation, water-related ecosystems, and water-related disasters.

"Water, like other areas of the post-2015 development agenda, is intricately interconnected with other challenges," he noted.

John Garrett, senior policy analyst of development finance at the London-based WaterAid, told IPS: "We at WaterAid are glad to see U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon highlighting in Tajikistan the human right to water and sanitation, and the enormous need that still exists for these essential services among the world's poorest and most marginalised populations."

The new SDGs, he pointed out, represent a once-in-a-generation chance to reach everyone, everywhere with clean water, decent toilets and a way to keep themselves and their surroundings clean.

"A new decade for action on Water for Sustainable Development would continue a much-needed focus on the enormous challenges ahead," he said.

However, he cautioned, the action should also focus on sanitation and hygiene, because without these, clean water is neither achievable nor sustainable, and neither are the health benefits nor economic progress that results.

Over the years, the United Nations has continued to place water-related issues on its socio-economic agenda: the first-ever International Year of Water Cooperation; World Water Day commemorated every year on Mar. 22; and the annual World Toilet Day on Nov. 19.

Ban said the world achieved the Millennium Development Goal target for safe and sustainable drinking water five years ahead of schedule.

In the course of one generation, 2.3 billion people - one-third of humanity - have gained access to an improved drinking water source.

The United Nations General Assembly declared access to clean drinking water and safe sanitation to be a human right, he pointed out.

Torgny Holmgren, executive director at the Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI), told IPS his organisation welcomes Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's strong support for water as a key ingredient in all efforts towards sustainable development.

It is clear that the global community increasingly realises the challenges caused by growing water stress and unwise water management, he added.

"A dedicated Sustainable Development Goal, explicitly addressing the multifaceted nature of water - as a social issue, an economic issue, an environmental issue, as well as the main cause of disasters on our planet - is an imperative, but by no means sufficient, step towards the world we want."

Source: IPS

Read More Related Content On This Topic - Click Here

Media

Taxonomy