By the time you finish reading this paragraph, one more child will
have died from something that's been preventable for over a century.
Nearly 40 percent of the world's population is still unable to secure a
safe glass of water or access a basic toilet. While we continue to rally
around the goal of ensuring safe water and sanitation for all, the real
question we are left asking ourselves: how do we truly confront this in
a way that results in realizing our vision within our lifetime?
Even today, as solutions are known and available, lack of access to
safe water and sanitation continues to claim more lives through disease
than any war claims through guns.
This painful reality has driven philanthropic efforts to help stop
the suffering. There are conferences, master plans, frameworks,
legislation, new institutions, and even more resolved resolutions. Money
is raised, wells are dug, ribbons are cut. But even after decades of
charity, subsidies, multilateral aid, and investments on the part of
governments and outside non-governmental organizations (NGOs), the
system remains inefficient and largely misses the goal of providing
relief for those at the base of the economic pyramid (BOP) in their
daily need to secure water. The intentions are good, but the relief is
not trickling down.
On average, those living in slums pay 7-15 times more per liter of
water than owners of nearby five-star hotels. This is because subsidies
are largely delivered through unrealistically low water tariffs -- if
you are too poor to afford a water connection, you can't capture the
subsidy. Similarly, if you are a poor day laborer in Port-au-Prince and
you want a drink of safe water to quench your thirst, you will pay 250
times more than the cost of New York City tap water. Those who lack cash
pay with their time -- hours each day spent scavenging for water from
public taps that frequently run dry, rivers, or even drainage ditches.
There are nearly a billion people in this trap of water insecurity and
about 2.5 billion lack a sanitary toilet.
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