Why it's time to democratize water data

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Why it's time to democratize water data

An article by The Water Network advisor William Sarni  -  " Why it's time to democratize water data"

where he says, 'imagine if everyone had access to water quantity and quality data on a real-time or near-real-time basis. I believe we are getting closer as a result of access to technology and catalyzed by a pressing need from the private and public sectors, along with civil society'.

The "democratization of water data" is not only timely but essential if we are to move from 19th-century water policies and 20th-century infrastructure to 21st-century solutions.

We are still challenged to deliver safe drinking water to everyone. A few statistics frame the challenge: globally, 884 million people worldwide don’t have regular access to safe drinking water; 2.4 billion people lack improved sanitation facilities resulting in about 842,000 deaths per year, of which 361,000 are children under age 5.

In the U.S., an estimated 1 million to 3 million people don’t have access to safe drinking water and almost 2,000 water systems (or about 6 million people) were tested for lead concentrations exceeding U.S. Environmental Protection Agency standards, according to USA Today.

What would democratizing water quantity and quality data facilitate? The potential to provide the following benefits.

How do we get there? Several trends are driving this move towards democratizing access to water data.

The first and most obvious is the accelerating adoption of smart phones and access to the internet. To illustrate these trends, in Africa, by 2019, there will be 930 million people with cell phones, of which three-quarters will have internet access and 50 percent of the world’s population will be online by 2018.

The second trend that is emerging in the U.S. is a recognition that the public sector must do better to provide access to local, state and federal databases. The recent White House Moonshot for water and roundtable discussions on open access to data illustrate this trend.

Read detailed article at Green Biz 

 

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