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ISSUE BRIEFING Water and Development The lack of access to water can have especially dire consequences for the more vulnerable members of society. Children and the elderly are more susceptible to the diseases that spread through unclean water and the relative poverty of women is reinforced when water is difficult to obtain. The girl or woman who has to fetch water several times a day, from a site far from her home, will not be able to attend school, may be exhausted from carrying the water, and will have little time left over for domestic and income-generating work. Halving the number of people who lack access to clean water and sanitation by 2015 is one of the Millennium Development Goals. Meeting this goal would have a huge impact on health, life expectancy, infant mortality, and education, but it will also require increased funding and redoubled efforts on the part of governments and civil society throughout the developed and developing worlds. Meeting the goal would save the lives of an estimated 1 million children over 10 years and would cost £5 billion. Water was the focus of the UN Development Programme’s 2006 Human Development report. The report rejects the idea that water shortages are a result of unavailable resources, and states that ‘the scarcity at the heart of the global water crisis is rooted in power, poverty and inequality.’ The same report introduces the concept of water security, ‘ensuring that every person has reliable access to enough safe water at an affordable price to lead a healthy, dignified and productive life, while maintaining the ecological systems that provide water and also depend on water.’ Sharing Water The amount of water that a person will use every day is strongly related to their geographic location. North Americans use 400 litres, Europeans use 200 litres, and a person in a developing country will only use 10 litres (the same amount of water that it takes to flush one British toilet and only half the amount that the UN Development Programme estimates is the minimum to meet the most basic human needs). The UN Environment Programme estimates that water consumption will increase by 40% over the next 20 years, but overuse and climate change have already begun to reduce and redistribute fresh water resources. It is likely that competing claims on these resources will play an increasingly large role in geopolitics as freshwater becomes more and more scarce. Some wealthy countries, like Kuwait, already import almost all of their water supply, but as access to water changes and/or shrinks, poorer countries will have a much more difficult time securing this basic resource for their populations. Problems related to shared water resources will not be new, nor will they be limited to disputes over access. Throughout history, water resources have been targets during conflict. Dams, reservoirs, pumping stations, irrigation systems and other water installations have come under attack as a way to end sieges and to weaken the resolve of civilians. Increasingly, there is the threat of terrorist attacks carried out against water targets, because of their essential role in modern life. Water conflicts tend to centre on three main issues: the amount of water (water quantity), infrastructure (dams, canals, etc.), and water quality. Water quantity rights form a major element of the conflict between Israel and its neighbours (including the Palestinian Territories). A significant amount of Israel ’s water comes from underground aquifers that are located in the West Bank and Israel’s appropriation of this resource has had the effect of restricting water use by Palestinians. Water from the Golan Heights (and specifically, the Sea of Galilee) is one of the reasons why both Israel and Syria continue their dispute over the area. Israel’s damming of the River Jordan exacerbates Israel’s conflict with Lebanon, which relies on the Jordan as its main source of fresh water. Turkey and Syria almost went to war in the late 1990s over plans to dam the Euphrates River. India and Bangladesh (formerly East Pakistan) have had ongoing arguments over control of the Ganges River since the partition of the subcontinent in 1948. In Africa, the dramatic reduction in size of Lake Chad over the past 45 years (it is now one-tenth of its size in 1963) could cause problems in relations between Niger, Chad, Cameroon and Nigeria and access to the water in the Nile River has been a source of both conflict (and cooperation) between the ten countries that make up that river’s basin. Pollution, as an element of water quality, is another problem to consider. Upstream countries may contaminate the water and differing water standards can be difficult to reconcile. Issues to Consider:
RESOURCES Key Stage 3 Environmental Concerns
Health & Sanitation
Human Rights
International Relations
Regional Perspectives
Key Stage 4 General
Environmental Concerns
Geography & Natural Resources
Human Rights
International Law
International Relations
Regional and Country Perspectives
A-Level & University General
Geography & Natural Resources
Health & Sanitation
Human Rights
International Law
International Relations
Regional Perspectives
SAMPLE RESOLUTION GA/3/1.1 Subject of Resolution: Access to Safe Drinking Water Submitted to: The Social, Humanitarian, and Cultural Committee Sponsored by: Malawi, Romania, Brazil, Saudi Arabia, Niger The Social, Humanitarian, and Cultural Committee of the General Assembly, Taking into consideration the entire set of Millennium Development Goals, Emphasising Goal No. 7 on ensuring environmental sustainability and especially Target 10, ‘Reduce by half the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water,’ Fully aware that progress on Target 10 would have a significant impact on the efforts to fulfil the rest of the Millennium Development Goals, Having examined the United Nations Children’s Fund and the World Health Organization’s ‘Mid-term Assessment of Progress: Meeting the MDG Drinking Water & Sanitation Target,’ the United Nations Development Programme’s ‘Human Development Report 2006: Beyond Scarcity: Power, Poverty and the Global Water Crisis,’ and other reports from within the UN system, Noting with approval the work that governments, civil society and intergovernmental organisations have done toward fulfilment of Target 10, Noting with regret the particular effect that lack of access to safe drinking water can have on the health and educational attainment of women and girl children, Recognising that lack of access to safe drinking water is a significant humanitarian problem and one which causes the unnecessary deaths of millions of people every year, including 1.5 million children under the age of five, Reaffirming the link between the fulfilment of human rights needs and both development and human security, 1. Declares that access to safe drinking water is a fundamental human right and must be fulfilled in a way that does not discriminate against any person with regard to race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status; 2. Calls upon member states to:
3. Further calls upon member states to take special consideration of the impact that access and lack of access to safe drinking water can have on women and children, particularly girl children, when developing plans for providing safe drinking water. |
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